There is a silent generation across India whose youth was spent not in building careers, exploring opportunities or pursuing passions, but in waiting.
Waiting for notifications. Waiting for examinations. Waiting for results. Waiting for revised calendars. Waiting for appointments. Waiting for vacancies that never arrived.
The pursuit of a government job has gradually transformed from a career aspiration into a prolonged exercise in endurance.
From an early age, we are taught that a government job is the ultimate symbol of security, dignity and stability. Families encourage it, society glorifies it and an entire ecosystem thrives around it. Coaching centres promise dreams, social media celebrates perseverance and every setback is met with the same advice: “Keep trying. Your turn will come.”
So we persist.
Years pass.
We collect degrees, certificates and experiences while repeatedly proving that we are eligible enough to apply but never fortunate enough to be selected. Some examinations are postponed. Some are cancelled. Some recruitment processes remain trapped in litigation. Others disappear quietly into bureaucratic oblivion.
Meanwhile, life continues moving forward.
Friends establish careers, build businesses, move abroad and raise families. Aspirants, however, become experts in downloading notifications, refreshing websites and preserving folders full of documents that may never be used.
Perhaps the greatest irony of all is that the competition is no longer between peers. It has become a contest between generations.
An aspirant in their forties often finds themselves competing against candidates a decade or even two decades younger, despite having travelled through entirely different educational landscapes. Over the years, syllabi have been rewritten, examination patterns redesigned, eligibility criteria altered and evaluation methods transformed. Older candidates have had to repeatedly reinvent themselves, unlearn outdated methods and adapt to ever-changing rules, all while balancing family responsibilities, financial pressures and the realities of adulthood.
Meanwhile, younger aspirants enter the arena equipped with contemporary academic frameworks, digital resources and educational systems designed around the very patterns older candidates are still struggling to master. Their academic records are often measured under newer grading standards and higher percentages that are difficult to compare fairly with those of an earlier era.
Yet both generations are assembled at the same starting line and expected to compete as equals.
The paradox is undeniable. Those who have demonstrated the greatest resilience, adapting to decades of changing systems, are eventually told that they have become too old for the opportunities they spent years pursuing.
Then one ordinary day, after years of unwavering hope, a single sentence appears in a notification:
“Candidates exceeding the prescribed age limit are not eligible to apply.”
That is all.
No acknowledgement of the years invested. No recognition of delayed recruitments. No appreciation for resilience.
One simply graduates from “aspirant” to “overage.”
Perhaps the greatest satire is not that people become overage; it is that a system can consume the most productive years of a person’s life and then politely inform them that time has expired.
Government jobs should reward merit, not endurance. They should assess competence, not patience. They should create opportunities, not age out generations of hopeful citizens.
Becoming overage is not merely crossing an age threshold. For many, it is the quiet burial of a dream they were encouraged to believe in since childhood.
The syllabus evolved. The examination patterns evolved. The competition evolved. Entire generations evolved.
Only the age limit remained untouched.
And somewhere, an entire generation is still waiting for permission to begin life.
nabi.nazia@gmail.com
