“I feel my father did this one thing which was the reason for our success,” Woman shares the habit which helped her crack UPSC and her brothers IIT and IIM
What really shapes success in a family? Talent, discipline, luck, or something as ordinary and as powerful as the books that fill a home? That is the question many viewers have been asking after a widely shared Instagram clip featuring Anupma Chandra, who says the “secret” behind her family’s academic achievements was never some mysterious formula. According to her, it began with something far simpler: a childhood spent admiring homes that were full of books. In the video, Chandra speaks about how she cleared the civil services examination, while her two brothers went on to crack IIT and IIM. What makes her story stand out is not just the list of achievements, but the reason she believes they all ended up there. Scroll down to read more…
A childhood shaped by admiration for books
Chandra says that when she was young, her parents would often praise people whose homes were filled with books. As a child, she says, she absorbed that admiration and began to associate books with intelligence, discipline and possibility. That early impression stayed with her. In her telling, books were never just objects on a shelf. They were a sign of the kind of life worth aspiring to, a life built around learning, curiosity and long hours spent with ideas.
The line her father never let her forget
The most memorable part of her story is a line she says came from her father: if you ever want to become something in life, surround yourself with books. It is a simple sentence, but one that has clearly stayed with her for years. She remembers it as more than advice. It was, in her words, a way of life, one that encouraged the children to make friends with books, read regularly and believe that the effort would eventually pay off.That message, she says, shaped the atmosphere at home. Instead of treating reading as a chore, the family appears to have treated it as a natural part of growth. Over time, that mindset may have mattered as much as any study plan.
Why the video is resonating
Part of the reason the clip is connecting online is that it taps into something many people recognise: the idea that success often starts long before exams, interviews or entrance tests. It starts in the everyday environment a child grows up in: what they hear, what they see, and what they are encouraged to admire.Chandra’s story has struck a chord because it feels both personal and universal. Many families talk about education. Fewer make books feel like a way of life. Her account suggests that small cultural habits at home can leave a deep mark, sometimes across an entire generation. For viewers, the takeaway is straightforward and quietly powerful: ambition is easier to nurture in a house where learning feels normal, not extraordinary.
