Every morning at 4 AM, Gejo would sit with his tattered notebook and a single cup of black tea. He deconstructed editorials from The Hindu . He analyzed Supreme Court judgments not for their legal merit, but for their narrative flow. He practiced the “Para-Summary” technique until his palms were raw with pencil calluses.
Old Gejo would have vomited out sections 90, 90A, and 90B of the Income Tax Act. New Gejo paused. He breathed. He remembered Raman’s golden rule: “First, build the world. Then, place the law in it.” gejo's varc1000
“Dear Raman Sir and the VARC1000 family, I never wrote the CAT. But I learned that every exam, every negotiation, every life is a Reading Comprehension passage. The question isn’t whether you know the facts. The question is: can you read between the lines?” Every morning at 4 AM, Gejo would sit
Gejo listened. For the first time, he wasn’t learning what to say, but how . He breathed