Jaswinder Singh Kainaur
An
exemplary personality who did 28 jobs in 28 weeks in 28 States of India
Meet Jubanashwa Mishra from Bhubaneswar,
Odisha, who took 28 jobs in 28 weeks and covered 28 states of India. Determined
to not do a dull regular job after completing his engineering, Mishra took a
path rarely traveled
While most of us seek stability and a regular
paycheck, Jubanashwa Mishra took on an unplanned journey to 28 states in
India, doing arbitrary and odd jobs every week.
He has worked as a photographer, a tattoo
artist, a river rafting guide, a film executive, a tea factory worker, a waste
warrior, and much more. While every week most of us go to the same office to do
the same job, this man had no idea where he would be working the next week. His
first was a photographer. Here is portrait of that first job.
Mr. J. Mishra says:
“I did my
engineering like many people in India but I knew I never wanted to do a job. I
got the idea of job-hopping when I heard of a guy who did something similar —
doing 52 jobs in 52 weeks. I thought I’d use the same idea too and explore the
28 states in India.”
Inspired by the work of
Canadian Sean Aiken who first introduced the concept of one week one job, Mishra decided to follow the same
path.
Once Mishra had made up his
mind, there was no looking back. He didn’t even tell his parents about his
adventure; they got to know about what he was doing through a local news
article. Confused and worried in the beginning, the family finally accepted the
idea that Mishra was not going to take up a “settled” job.
How he went about his dream plan
Throughout his journey, Mishra was sure of
one thing— he wanted to take up jobs that would help him understand the culture
and traditions of the state he was going to. And so it came about that he took
up a job as a waste warrior and mountain cleaner in Himachal Pradesh, a tea
factory worker in Assam, a movie marketing executive in Maharashtra, a mud
artisan in West Bengal, a rafting trainee in Jammu & Kashmir, and so on.
Starting with his journey
as a photographer in Haryana in May 2013, Mishra’s journey has been full of
unforgettable experiences.
“I started
as a photographer in Haryana because those guys were the first ones to say yes
to my proposal,” laughs Mishra. But as he moved forward in his journey
and explored other states, people started approaching him with various job
offers. Some he did as a volunteer for free and for others he was paid a
substantial amount.
From being a news channel TRP analyst in Odisha
to emotional consultant in Karnataka, and even a tattoo artist in Goa,
Mishra tried his hand at many jobs. But the one he found the most challenging
was working as a playschool teacher.
“In one week I learnt enough to make a small tattoo on a
client. But it was being a playschool teacher in Andhra Pradesh which was most
challenging — handling three to four year old kids is not easy,” he says.
Supported by funds he
collected through a crowdfunding platform, Mishra traveled approximately 25,000
km by train, bus, taxi, flight, tram, auto, bike, rickshaw, boat, raft, and
even his own two feet.
“I was living my dream of meeting new people and
connecting with them. I didn’t care about how difficult the journey was. In the
end all that mattered was the experience I was gaining. There is so much to
learn and explore in our country. We should travel far and see amazing places,
cultures and people,” says Mishra.
Despite the fact that Mishra is highly
educated (being an engineer and then a Post Graduate from MICA,
Ahmedabad), Mishra did not restrict his job profiles to his capabilities.
Rather, he pushed himself and took up the most unexpected jobs.
While in Uttar Pradesh he
was a cremation assistant, in Chennai he was a snack seller on the beach. One
week he was running a contraceptive campaign in rural Bihar, and in another he
was working as a farmer in Uttarakhand.
The journey was a challenge of course. He was
constantly on the road, adjusting to different climatic conditions and
circumstances…his health finally took a toll and he was very ill for several
days. “I thought I was going to die. I was in bed for two weeks. But that was
the only break I took and I was back on my journey,” he says.
Mishra is now back
to his home in Bhubaneshwar and documenting his experiences in a book that
tells of his incredible journey.
“I
have been recently rejected by a publisher. But I am sure I will find one at
the right time,” he says.
Not willing to join the corporate sector,
Mishra has started a preschool called Paper Boat in Bhubaneswar. “It is a futuristic playschool where children
do not simply learn, they experience education through our theme-based learning
approach,” he says.
“Don’t be afraid to dream and then live
your dreams. People will tell you that it is difficult, but don’t hesitate.
Always listen to your heart,” is his advice to others out there who hope
to live their passion some day.
This is an amazing
story in his real life. He is very rare personality with a knowledge of multiple jobs. He may be role
model, if any wishes to follow him.
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