Started 2 days ago by Rohan Verma in CAT
I never saw myself as someone who could crack CAT. Coming from a non-engineering, Arts background, the exam always felt like unfamiliar territory — es...
Body
I never saw myself as someone who could crack CAT. Coming from a non-engineering, Arts background, the exam always felt like unfamiliar territory โ especially with all the Quant-heavy talk around it. Ironically, the one section I thought Iโd be comfortable with, VARC, turned out to be the hardest. Reading Comprehension would leave me exhausted. I'd finish a passage and still feel unsure about what Iโd read. The options felt like a blur, and I kept circling back, second-guessing everything. I wasnโt just struggling with accuracy โ I was struggling with belief.
One night, while taking a break from prep, I ended up watching a video on YouTube by Sumit Sir โ something about a 60-day challenge for CAT. His tone was calm but confident, and something about the way he said, โThereโs still timeโ stayed with me. It wasnโt motivational fluff โ it was practical, grounded advice that made sense. That night, I decided to stop overthinking and signed up for CATKingโs program.
What I liked about the course was its simplicity and structure. It didnโt push unrealistic schedules or pressure. Instead, it focused on small, consistent improvements โ daily RC practice, focused VARC drills, and those evening sessions that slowly rebuilt my confidence. Thereโs one thing Sumit Sir said that completely changed my approach to RCs: โRead it like a story. Donโt try to attack the passage โ try to understand it.โ That advice flipped a switch for me.
Gradually, the numbers started improving. My mock scores in VARC began to rise, my accuracy issues started fading, and for the first time, I wasnโt afraid of the section anymore. I even started enjoying it โ something I couldnโt have imagined just a few weeks earlier.
On the day of CAT, VARC turned out to be my best section. And for someone who had struggled so much with it, that felt like a personal victory. It wasnโt just about getting answers right โ it was about rewriting how I saw myself as a learner.
If youโre in the final stretch and feel like time is running out, take a breath. Sixty days is more than enough to change direction โ if you have the right plan and the will to follow it through. Iโm not sharing this as advice, but as someone whoโs been through the same doubt โ and came out stronger.
1 Replies