 So, now prillums is almost 2-3 days down the line and aspirants will be keenly preparing. So, what are your last minute tips for those aspirants who are taking the 20-21 prillums? As I said earlier, don't accept your defeat before you give the exam. I always say to my mentees, you just fight it, then you accept it. Like, you know, you don't want to be defeated before the war starts. So, that's the first and foremost thing. We are, we face prillums with fear of failure. That's the first thing we have to change. Anyway, it is 100 questions, fresh new questions, 2 hours. So, we have to be ready for it. Readying, making up our mind for facing one of the most toughest exam in the world. We have tension, but we have to accept there is tension. Because it's a universal phenomenon. So, accepting our opponent or accepting what it is waiting for is the first and foremost thing. Second thing is, you have to stop reading things in the day before the prillums. You know, by the night you have to close the books. Tomorrow morning or the day after the prillums, you have to go with a fresh mind. You don't want to hurry through all the notes you studied just before the exam. That is very counterproductive, I think. It doesn't matter actually. So, you have to wake up by 7 o'clock, you have to have the breakfast, drink a lot of water, go to the exam hall with a positive mind and just be in the exam hall for half an hour. At 9 o'clock you enter the hall, you sit and meditate. Fine, okay, I am going to give the exam. So, by 9.15, your tension will be over. This I tried and it was very fruitful for me. Third thing is, the moment you get the question paper, then stop overthinking something else. You have to be, you and your question paper, nothing else. You have to read the questions carefully. You have to read the options carefully. Earlier I said comparing the answer with the question and find the right answer. Done. Then you would quickly move out to the next question. Please don't sit with one question because that won't deal with anything. You first read, then read the option, go to the question again, again you read out. Two times read is enough. If your answer is not coming, leave it and move to the next. Otherwise you have to quickly, quickly go through the question paper. I had a friend who used to do only 60 questions because by two hours she didn't even read the rest of 40 questions. That's a huge mistake we are doing. Sometimes the questions we know will be the other questions. So there is no concrete rule that you have to do the first question, then move to the next. There is no rule like that. Maybe the first 10 questions might be from art and culture which would be extremely difficult. So maybe the last 30 questions would be very easy. You can do question paper from anywhere. Sometimes I used to start from 100. I used to come from behind. Sometimes I start from 50, 50 to 100, then 50 to 1. I used to do a lot of things because I am not stuck with a certain idea that I have to do from 1 to 100 and all. There is no rule like that. Another important thing is there are clues as we discussed earlier. There are clues inside the question paper. So if you consciously go and find out the clues, maybe they won't be there. But there are clues in question paper and you have to be prepared for it. And please don't mark the answer in question paper and then blackening it. Another friend did that. She used to mark every answer in the question paper thinking that she will blacken it after doing the 100 questions. It is the biggest mistake we are doing. So whenever you are sure about an answer A, B, C or D, you quickly mark it. Because we may not have the luxury to come back and again blacken it. And one another thing is like most of the times aspirants expect current affair question, geography question, history, environment. We studied it in that way. So we expect that in the question paper also we will be having question from history. We will be having question from modern India or something like that. No, there is nothing like that. Sometimes UPSC may mix geography and environment. Sometimes current affairs and science and technology. Sometimes ancient and art and culture. It will be mixture. So we can't compartmentalize questions into quality, economy, geography, etc. So we should be very ready for mixture of questions. You might be remembering right. There was in 2018 I think economy and environment they clubbed it together. And they asked 2017 or 2018. Three questions, three to four questions they clubbed economics and environment. So that was like really startling. But we should be ready for it. As in the Norse mythology there was a King Odin. King Odin used to advise King Thor that a wise king should be always ready for a war. Should not seek war but always ready for it. So UPSC aspirants should be always ready for the unexpected. Be prepared for the worst. Just one more point I want to ask is about seasat. You failed 2019 seasat. You bounced back and cleared 2020 seasat. 2020 seasat was difficult as compared to 2019. Still you cleared it with a good margin. So you told you took classes from Shankar. So what is your advice to those aspirants who find seasat as a difficult paper? A seasat is a particular paper where we can choose the questions. For example, as a person I am not comfortable with mathematics. I understood my weakness because maths is my difficult area. So rather than concentrating more on maths, I should concentrate more on comprehension which is my strong area and reasoning. Comprehension is a strong area for me because I used to read newspaper. So reading an article, comprehending it made me a better person to read comprehension questions. I concentrated like I made a strategy for seasat that in the first one hour I will do maximum comprehension questions. I made up my mind that I will do every comprehension question. So I did that and after the next one hour I will do reasoning and maths which is comfortable for me. For example, cube, average, age questions which are easier for me. But for some other aspirants I have a friend, his comfortable area was mathematics. So what he does is he first went through all the maths because that is his strong area. So seasat is all about finding your strength and weakness. If you are strong in reasoning, do reasoning questions first. If you are good in English comprehension, do it first. So anyway you have to do maximum 40 questions. That only we can do I think. 42, I think 50 questions max. That is the thing we can do in seasat. So find your strong areas. Anyhow all the best, very best to those aspirants who are taking problems.