There was a phase when Google was the only goal I could see.
I pushed myself through endless DSA problems, system design basics, and constant practice. Every day was about improving, learning, and getting closer to that one dream offer.
But when the moment of truth came, things didnโt go as expected.
I got rejected.
It hit hard. Not because of the rejection itself, but because I genuinely believed all that effort would directly lead to success. For a while, it felt like everything I built had fallen short.
But over time, I realized something important:
Effort is never wastedโit only gets redirected.
Everything I learned while preparing for Google didnโt disappear. It stayed with me. My problem-solving got sharper, my thinking got clearer, and my fundamentals became stronger.
Instead of stopping there, I kept going.
I shifted my focus to improving myself rather than chasing a single outcome. I continued practicing, revising, and learning from mistakes.
Then came another opportunityโMicrosoft.
This time, I wasnโt just preparing for an outcome. I was building on everything I had already learned. Every round felt like a reflection of the grind I had put in earlier.
And eventually, it happened.
*I got selected by Microsoft. *
Looking back, the journey makes more sense now.
The rejection wasnโt the end. It was part of the process that prepared me for something better aligned with my growth at that time.
What I learned from this journey:
- Rejection doesnโt define your capability
- Consistent effort compounds over time
- Every attempt builds you, even if it doesnโt immediately reward you
- Sometimes the right opportunity comes after the wrong outcome
If youโre going through a setback, remember this:
Youโre not starting overโyouโre building on experience.
Keep grinding. The result may not match your timeline, but it will match your growth. ๐
Top comments (1)
One thing I noticed is that the person who got rejected by Google and the person who got accepted by Microsoft werenโt exactly the same person.Between those two moments there were countless hours of learning, failing, improving, and refusing to quit. Thatโs the part most people never see.
Also, I have a feeling your persistence is a little stronger than your username suggests. ๐๐
Congratulations and thanks for sharing the journey.