Want
to make a radical shift to another career? Sushama Divekar found those who have
the guts and found the glory!

Once a doctor, always a doctor.’ You’re passé
if you think that. Now, there are many who are willing to take the challenge and
pursue a career that is radically different from the one they may have studied
for or even worked at for a few years.
So, what prompts this shift? Is it
smooth and easy? Would someone just give up a lucrative and established career
to pursue a path that could be a complete volte-face? And, is happiness in the
new profession really guaranteed?
We spoke with a cross section of
professionals from diverse backgrounds. People who stood out of the crowd... to
chase a belief and make a mark in a career that was far removed from what they
practised earlier.
Rewind
To The ‘Then’
In the first place, why did they pursue an
education that was run-of-the-mill? Says Mohan, a qualified doctor, who is now a
Creative Director with Saatchi & Saatchi, “In the 80s, being a doctor
or engineer was the ‘in’ thing. And coming from a family of docs
added to the pressure of specialising as one.”
Natasha Pratap, a
lawyer who worked with Clifford Chance, New York, USA, and is now running her
own creative writing boutique called ‘Words for any Occasion’, adds,
“Though most of my family is in the legal profession and I qualified from
Cambridge, I always thought about getting into creative writing or gender
studies.”
Aditi Govitrikar, a doctor and now a famous model, states,
“I always wanted to be a gynac. And, that’s what I did.”
Shilpa Mehta, formerly a lawyer with Gagrat & Co, is now a voice-over
artist and a popular actress, with parts in soaps like
Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi
and
movies like
Asoka
. For Shilpa, taking
up law was but natural: “I wanted to take up something academic. I was
always fond of sociology and psychology. So, it was an obvious career choice for
me,” she says.
Fast
Forward To The ‘Now’
However, things turned around. As
Natasha Pratap admits, “Somewhere inside there’s a voice telling you
what you’re meant to do. Over time, I developed courage to listen to that
voice more keenly. Legal studies did not excite me. I was a maverick of sorts
even at Cambridge. I wrote short stories and won prizes for creative writing
instead of winning any for law.”
For Ramani, a former World Bank
scholar, and now an Account Director with Saatchi & Saatchi, it was a quirk
of fate - more of a ‘man proposes and God disposes’ kind of
fate.
When Ramani returned to work in India according to his contract with
World Bank, he found corporate heads advising him to go back to the US. However,
his friends suggested that he use his international exposure to build strategies
for multinational brands that were entering India. Ramani chose to stay.
As for Mohan, he confesses that though he had enough patients as a doctor,
he did not have the required patience. As he prospered in his profession, he
found himself being more of a businessman than a doctor. His friend, an
engineer, who found success in the mad ad world, inspired Mohan to make the
switch.
It’s another story with banker-turned-chef Nikhil Chib.
Nikhil wanted to do something with his hands, so he left his job as an
investment banker with Citibank, New York, to explore a creative profession
— cooking. It started with party orders, then a small restaurant in Goa,
and now the very trendy Busaba in Mumbai.
We Are Happy And We Know It