"A wise king never seeks out war, but he must always be ready for it."
π―33β€βπ₯9π€£3π2π₯1
βOver the past 48 hours, VP Vance and I have engaged with senior Indian and Pakistani officials, including Prime Ministers Narendra Modi and Shehbaz Sharif, External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, Chief of Army Staff Asim Munir, and National Security Advisors Ajit Doval and Asim Malik.
I am pleased to announce the Governments of India and Pakistan have agreed to an immediate ceasefire and to start talks on a broad set of issues at a neutral site.
We commend Prime Ministers Modi and Sharif on their wisdom, prudence, and statesmanship in choosing the path of peace.β - Secretary Rubio ( US Embassy in India )
I am pleased to announce the Governments of India and Pakistan have agreed to an immediate ceasefire and to start talks on a broad set of issues at a neutral site.
We commend Prime Ministers Modi and Sharif on their wisdom, prudence, and statesmanship in choosing the path of peace.β - Secretary Rubio ( US Embassy in India )
π27π2
Final Advertisement_09May2025.pdf
8.4 MB
Cotton Corporation Vacancy only for BSc Agriculture graduates
π4β€1
Calendar-2026-Engl-150525_0.pdf
208.9 KB
Calendar-2026-Engl-150525_0.pdf
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
SHEHBAZ SHARIF : Asim Munir called me at 2:30 AM & informed me that India struck Nur Khan Air Base.
Shehbaz Sharif giving live proof of India's victory .
at about 2.30 am" "Shifa Salar General Saeed Asim Muneer told me on secure phone" "that Prime Minister India has just launched its ballistic missiles" "A Noor Khan has landed at airport and some other" "areas have also fallen"
Shehbaz Sharif giving live proof of India's victory .
at about 2.30 am" "Shifa Salar General Saeed Asim Muneer told me on secure phone" "that Prime Minister India has just launched its ballistic missiles" "A Noor Khan has landed at airport and some other" "areas have also fallen"
π₯8π€£5π2β€1π1π1
1. No Fear, No Doubt β Trust Your Preparation
Youβve done the hard work. Now is the time to trust yourself. Even if you feel unprepared, remember everyone feels that way. Walk in with confidence.
2. Donβt Try to Learn Anything New Now
Avoid cramming new topics. It can confuse or overwhelm you. Instead, revise what you already know and keep your mind calm.
3. Sleep Well Before the Exam
A fresh mind performs better than an exhausted one. Aim for 6β7 hours of good sleep before the big day.
4. Eat Light, Stay Hydrated
Avoid heavy or oily foods. Carry a water bottle, and have fruits or light snacks to stay energized.
5. Read Every Question Carefully
UPSC is famous for twist questions. Donβt rush. Underline keywords (like not, only, correct) mentally or on the question paper.
6. Smart Guessing Only
Use intelligent elimination; donβt make blind guesses. If you can eliminate 2 options, take the risk.
7. Time Management Is Key
Donβt get stuck on one question. Move ahead, come back later if needed. Keep an eye on the clock.
8. One Paper at a Time
After GS Paper 1, donβt overthink your performance. Reset your mind before CSAT.
9. Carry Your Essentials
Hall ticket, ID, pens, watch, water, mask (if required), and a calm mindset. Prepare your bag the night before.
10. Remind Yourself Why You Started
Think of the journey youβve taken. The dream youβre chasing. The βwhyβ behind this effort. Let that give you strength.
---
Affirmation:
"I am prepared. I am calm. I will give my best. I am not afraid."
Youβve got this.
Walk in like a warrior. Walk out like a topper.
Youβve done the hard work. Now is the time to trust yourself. Even if you feel unprepared, remember everyone feels that way. Walk in with confidence.
2. Donβt Try to Learn Anything New Now
Avoid cramming new topics. It can confuse or overwhelm you. Instead, revise what you already know and keep your mind calm.
3. Sleep Well Before the Exam
A fresh mind performs better than an exhausted one. Aim for 6β7 hours of good sleep before the big day.
4. Eat Light, Stay Hydrated
Avoid heavy or oily foods. Carry a water bottle, and have fruits or light snacks to stay energized.
5. Read Every Question Carefully
UPSC is famous for twist questions. Donβt rush. Underline keywords (like not, only, correct) mentally or on the question paper.
6. Smart Guessing Only
Use intelligent elimination; donβt make blind guesses. If you can eliminate 2 options, take the risk.
7. Time Management Is Key
Donβt get stuck on one question. Move ahead, come back later if needed. Keep an eye on the clock.
8. One Paper at a Time
After GS Paper 1, donβt overthink your performance. Reset your mind before CSAT.
9. Carry Your Essentials
Hall ticket, ID, pens, watch, water, mask (if required), and a calm mindset. Prepare your bag the night before.
10. Remind Yourself Why You Started
Think of the journey youβve taken. The dream youβre chasing. The βwhyβ behind this effort. Let that give you strength.
---
Affirmation:
"I am prepared. I am calm. I will give my best. I am not afraid."
Youβve got this.
Walk in like a warrior. Walk out like a topper.
β€36π13β€βπ₯8π7π₯6π3
Here are crisp, practical, and field-tested elimination techniques for UPSC Prelims that toppers and mentors consistently recommend:
---
1. Extreme Words are Red Flags
Eliminate options with absolute words like:
Always, Never, Only, Must, All, None
Why? UPSC prefers nuanced statements.
> Example:
Statement: βAll Fundamental Rights are available to foreigners.β
β Likely false. βAllβ is too strong. Some are not (e.g., Article 15).
---
2. Qualified Words Can Indicate Truth
Words like:
Some, May, Can, Generally, Often
β More likely to be correct
---
3. Eliminate What You Know is 100% Wrong
Even if you donβt know the correct answer, removing one or two definitely wrong options increases your odds.
---
4. Statement Matching Across Questions
If a statement appears in two questions with one confirmed as correct/incorrect, use it to eliminate or confirm answers.
---
5. Focus on Common Logic & Current Affairs Integration
Use your awareness to filter:
If a statement contradicts basic common sense, history, geography, economy, etc., itβs likely false.
UPSC often connects static with current β use recent events to reason.
---
6. Priority to Constitutional & Legal Sources
If a question has options mixing:
Constitutional provision
Government scheme
NGO claim β Prefer Constitution or statute-based options β more reliable.
---
7. Elimination via Interlinking Knowledge
Example:
> Q: Which of the following is a Ramsar Site?
If you remember 2 of 4 are NOT, eliminate them even if you donβt know the rest.
---
8. Avoid βToo Good to Be Trueβ Statements
UPSC rarely makes it that easy. Overly obvious or simplistic options are often traps.
---
9. Prefer Balanced, Moderate Statements
Avoid polarized ones. UPSC frames correct answers in a balanced, factual tone.
---
10. Intelligent Guessing (When You Eliminate 2 Options)
If youβre stuck but eliminated 2 options, guess between the remaining 2 β statistically better than leaving it.
---
1. Extreme Words are Red Flags
Eliminate options with absolute words like:
Always, Never, Only, Must, All, None
Why? UPSC prefers nuanced statements.
> Example:
Statement: βAll Fundamental Rights are available to foreigners.β
β Likely false. βAllβ is too strong. Some are not (e.g., Article 15).
---
2. Qualified Words Can Indicate Truth
Words like:
Some, May, Can, Generally, Often
β More likely to be correct
---
3. Eliminate What You Know is 100% Wrong
Even if you donβt know the correct answer, removing one or two definitely wrong options increases your odds.
---
4. Statement Matching Across Questions
If a statement appears in two questions with one confirmed as correct/incorrect, use it to eliminate or confirm answers.
---
5. Focus on Common Logic & Current Affairs Integration
Use your awareness to filter:
If a statement contradicts basic common sense, history, geography, economy, etc., itβs likely false.
UPSC often connects static with current β use recent events to reason.
---
6. Priority to Constitutional & Legal Sources
If a question has options mixing:
Constitutional provision
Government scheme
NGO claim β Prefer Constitution or statute-based options β more reliable.
---
7. Elimination via Interlinking Knowledge
Example:
> Q: Which of the following is a Ramsar Site?
If you remember 2 of 4 are NOT, eliminate them even if you donβt know the rest.
---
8. Avoid βToo Good to Be Trueβ Statements
UPSC rarely makes it that easy. Overly obvious or simplistic options are often traps.
---
9. Prefer Balanced, Moderate Statements
Avoid polarized ones. UPSC frames correct answers in a balanced, factual tone.
---
10. Intelligent Guessing (When You Eliminate 2 Options)
If youβre stuck but eliminated 2 options, guess between the remaining 2 β statistically better than leaving it.
π28β€2π1