From Psychosis to Professional Phoenix:
Lessons That Built My Comeback
Back in 2014, life hit me with a diagnosis of psychosis. It wasnât just a medical curveball; it shattered my world, forcing me to confront harsh realities head-on. But from that rock bottom, I extracted five unbreakable lessons that reshaped my mindset and path forward.
The Brutal Truths I Learned in 2014
1. No one comes to your help. When the chips are down, the world doesnât rally around you. Expecting handouts or pity? Forget it. Youâre on your own, and thatâs liberating once you accept it.
2. Itâs not an endâitâs a new beginning. Psychosis couldâve been my full stop. Instead, I flipped the script. Rock bottom became my launchpad, teaching me resilience isnât about avoiding falls; itâs about rising every time.
3. Social friends and professional friends are all fake. The cocktail buddies and LinkedIn connections? They vanish when you need them most. Surface-level ties crumble under pressureâreal bonds endure.
4. As a man, I need to take care of my family. Societal expectations or not, this hit home. No excuses. Family became my North Star, fueling my drive to provide, protect, and persevere.
5. Itâs only the family that matters. In the end, theyâre the ones who stay. Blood (or chosen family) over everything else. They saw me at my weakest and still believed.
These werenât abstract philosophiesâthey were survival code, forged in the fire of that year.
How I Clawed My Way Back to Work
Recovery wasnât linear; it was gritty, opportunistic, and relentless. From 2014 to now, hereâs the blueprint I followedâno magic, just hustle.
1. Built a network of knowledge workers. I didnât wait for invites. I sought out peers hungry for growth, trading insights like currency.
2. Shared all my professional learnings from 2014-17. Hoarding knowledge? Pointless. I gave freelyâblogs, talks, forumsâturning my pain into value for others.
3. Built a strong professional network of seekers. Not takers, but fellow grinders. This tribe amplified my opportunities.
4. Picked up every opportunity for stop-gap jobs (2014-15). Between gigs, I said yes to anythingâfreelance, odd IT tasks, multiple arrangements. Cashflow kept the lights on; pride took a backseat.
5. Got my graduation done by 2016 in distance mode. Credentials matter in a skeptical world. I powered through online, proving doubters wrong.
6. Worked hard from December 2015 till date. Non-stop. No vacations, no complaints. Consistency compounds.
Flashback to 2012-13:
I noticed people overthink opportunities, even when handed on a silver platter. Not me. Red carpet or dirt pathâif work knocked, I said, âYes, Iâll do it.â Blindly. That âsay yes first, fail fastâ attitude? Itâs my superpower.
Attitude Over Skills: The Real Game-Changer
Hereâs the kicker: I donât claim mastery in IT, ITSM, ServiceNow, or even AI.
Gaps? Plenty.
But skills alone donât build empires.
What carried me here is the grit to figure it outâdive in, stumble, learn, repeat.
⢠Say Yes First: Opportunities favor the bold. Hesitate, and theyâre gone.
⢠Fail First: Experiment without fear. Each flop is data.
⢠Figure It Out: No expert? Become one on the fly.
This mindset landed me where I amânot talent, not luck, but relentless action.
My One âWeaknessâ: Self-Respect, Not Ego
I have a trait that trips me up:
I donât tolerate ill-treatment or hidden motives. Call it ego? I call it self-respect. When I pour extra effortâbeyond my paycheck, purely to help, be kind, contribute to the greater goodâI expect acknowledgment. Positive vibes, respect earned.
Say yes to everything? Thatâs me betting on growth, building bonds.
But steal that growth? Ignore my input? I call it outâblack as black, white as white. Face-to-face, no sugarcoating.
Even to the top boss.
Trouble follows? Always. Demotions, arguments, exits. But life rolls on.
Forsake this? Never. Itâs my filter for genuine collaborators.
In a world of users, self-respect is armor.
Today, stronger than ever, Iâm proof: Psychosis doesnât define you. Attitude does. Family anchors you.
Say yes, demand respect, and build your comeback.

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