53.Story you read recently

Describe a story you read recently

You should say:

what it is about

when you read it

whether you liked it

what you learned from it

Ans-I follow an Instagram page that shares inspiring real-life stories, and one of them really stuck with me. It was about a young physicist called Sabrina Gonzalez Pasterski.

What really caught my attention was how her story started. When she was 14, she built a small airplane completely by herself and actually learned how to fly it. At some point, she wanted to study physics at MIT. At first, she wasn't accepted into MIT, which could've easily stopped her. But instead of giving up, she sent them a simple video of herself flying the plane she had built.That video caught their attention, and later she was accepted and went on to study physics there. You know, if she had given up at that moment and hadn't sent that video, she probably wouldn't have been accepted. And if that hadn't happened, she might not be where she is today. That part really hit me, because everything could have turned out very differently if she'd decided it wasn't worth trying again.

Later on, she started working on really complex ideas related to space and gravity. I can't say I fully understand the science behind it, but from what I figured out, her work is about how the universe behaves in extreme situations, like near black holes. She looks at problems in physics that scientists still don't fully understand. For example, some of them are connected to gravity and space, which even Einstein struggled to fully explain.

What I found especially inspiring is that she turned down offers from big tech companies. For example, Jeff Bezos personally reached out to her and invited her to work with him. For her, it wasn't about money or fame. It was more about curiosity and understanding how things actually work. She stayed focused on what really mattered to her, and in the end, it turned out to be the right decision.

This story taught me that sometimes one small decision can be a real turning point. If you stay true to what genuinely interests you and don't give up too early, things can turn out better than you ever expected.