What do we mean when we say “success”? Is it because we make a lot of money, live in a huge house, married the county’s hottest guy or lady, or drive the fastest automobile on the block?
Those aren’t exactly success indicators.
There is no one-size-fits-all approach to success. It’s possible that what works for you won’t work for someone else. There may not be a perfect recipe for success, but there are certain basic actions you can take to increase your chances of success in life, love, job, or whatever else is important to you.
A dream can manifest itself in a variety of ways. You might have taken your first ‘flying’ in your childhood bedroom with a wooden toy plane or in the backseat with a pilot you know. Our #bharatkibeti Captain Zoya Agarwal’s tale, on the other hand, is about improving her career and enlarging her mindset while defying typical marriage and child-rearing expectations.
A Born Dreamer
Zoya enjoyed astronomy and spent most of her time on her house’s terrace. She didn’t like toys or watching television as a child, but when she wanted a telescope, eight-year-old Zoya begged her parents to save money by skipping birthday celebrations for a couple of years. When she desired her wish to become a pilot as an only child in a strict middle-class family in the 1990s, her mother began to cry.
She spent three years after graduating from high school pursuing two full-time studies. She would focus on her course at St Stephen’s College from 6 a.m. to 3.30 p.m., then devote the second half of the day until 9.30 p.m. to aviation classes. Her dedication paid off, and she even won over her parents, who took out a loan to help her pay for her education and aviation exams.
In April 2004, when there was little work opportunity for pilots and Air India was the only airline flying international routes, Zoya passed the entrance examinations and was offered one of the ten pilot positions at Air India, despite the fact that 3,000 people applied.
When Jo Became The Youngest Woman Indian Pilot In 2013
Her trip, which began with her staring at the clouds and ended with her floating among them, was long and grueling, but it was fueled by hope, self-belief, and courage. Captain Zoya flew from Delhi to Dubai for the first time in 2013, becoming the world’s youngest woman to fly a Boeing 777-300ER jet, the world’s largest and most powerful commercial twin airliner.
Vande Bharat Mission – Covid 19 – Brave Zoya Agarwal
In the aftermath of the COVID-19 epidemic, she led the Government of India’s Vande Bharat Mission, which returned nearly 14,000 Indians who had been trapped overseas.
1st Female Aviator over North Pole – History Rewritten
This rising Indian female aviator achieved history on January 9, 2021, when she flew an AI176 across the world’s longest flight route. She set a world record as the captain of an all-female cockpit that flew across the Atlantic from San Francisco to Bengaluru, being the first woman to accomplish so. The four female captains in the cockpit, with 250 passengers on board, had the entire world watching their every move in the skies. From the minute the plane took off in San Francisco until it landed in Bengaluru, where the team was hailed by members of the press and others – all congregated and armed with cameras to capture the moment – everyone Zoya knew was following the voyage.
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