Need advice for family stay near Geeta University Panipat (Naultha)

Hi everyone,
I am joining Geeta University, Panipat for a job and planning to shift with my family. I am looking for a safe and decent 1BHK/2BHK flat or furnished room near Naultha/Geeta University area.
Please suggest:
Which nearby areas are good and safe for family?
Approx rent for furnished/semi-furnished flat?
Any owner contact or society recommendation?
Budget: Around up to 10k (depending on facilities).
Need a peaceful area with basic amenities and security.
Thanks in advance 🙏
(If anyone has leads, please DM.)

reddit.com
u/InformalAnswer6930 — 9 days ago
▲ 3 r/CareerAdvicePH+3 crossposts

  1. Choosing a course without knowing the outcome

Most students pick BBA/B.Tech/B.Com without asking: “Iske baad actual job kya milegi?”

  1. Preparing without direction

Random exams, random courses — but no clear plan. This leads to burnout and confusion.

  1. Ignoring skills till it’s too late

Degree complete hone ke baad realise hota hai ki practical skills hi nahi hain.

The truth is, it’s not lack of hard work — it’s lack of clarity.

You don’t need to figure out your whole life right now.

Just avoid these mistakes and plan your next step properly.

If you’re currently stuck or confused, drop your situation — I’ll try to help 👍

reddit.com
u/InformalAnswer6930 — 2 months ago

Most students don’t fail because they are not capable.
They fail because they make decisions without clarity.

I’ve seen this pattern again and again:

  • Choosing a course because friends are doing it
  • Preparing for exams without understanding the end goal
  • Running behind “safe options” without interest
  • Ignoring skills and focusing only on degrees

And 2–3 years later, the same students feel stuck.

Here’s a simple way to avoid this:

1. Don’t start with the course — start with the outcome
Ask yourself: what kind of life/job do I want?
Then reverse plan.

2. Always keep 2 paths
One primary goal + one backup
This removes pressure and improves decision making

3. Skills > Degree (in most cases)
Communication, problem solving, and practical exposure matter more than people think

4. Take small decisions, not life decisions
Instead of deciding your whole career, just decide your next 6 months properly

5. Talk to people who are 2–3 steps ahead
Not just friends — actual people who’ve been through that path

You don’t need perfect clarity.
You just need enough clarity to take the next step.

If you’re confused right now, that’s not a bad sign — it just means you’re thinking seriously about your future.

Feel free to ask your situation below, I’ll try to give a practical perspective.

reddit.com
u/InformalAnswer6930 — 2 months ago
▲ 2 r/careeradvice+1 crossposts

After talking to a lot of students, I keep seeing the same pattern:

  • Choosing courses because “everyone else is doing it”
  • Preparing for exams without knowing the end goal
  • Running behind “safe options” but not actually liking them
  • Ignoring skills and focusing only on degrees

And 2–3 years later… they feel stuck.

Here’s a simple way to avoid this:

  1. Don’t start with the course — start with the outcome
  2. Always keep a backup (it reduces pressure a lot)
  3. Skills matter more than people think (communication, practical exposure)
  4. Don’t try to decide your whole life — just plan the next 6–12 months properly

You don’t need perfect clarity right now.
You just need enough clarity to take the next step.

If you’re confused about your situation, drop it below — I’ll try to give a practical perspective 👍

reddit.com
u/InformalAnswer6930 — 2 months ago