
Review Resume Please
Needed a Resume review, and please let me know if you have any suggestions.
PS : ignore certifications sections please, working on adding some valuable ones

Needed a Resume review, and please let me know if you have any suggestions.
PS : ignore certifications sections please, working on adding some valuable ones
Hi everyone,
I genuinely need some objective advice because I feel too emotionally invested to think clearly.
I've been working in a service-based company as a Data Engineer for a little over 3 years at less than 10 LPA CTC
For the past 10 to 11 months, I have been working 12-14 hours daily without any raise. Always got some shitty excuse and now it has gone beyond my tolerance limit mentally and from health aspects
I even took around 10-12 days of leave during these 10 months hoping I'd recover, but I came back feeling just as exhausted. Lately, I've been constantly tired, struggling to focus, and it honestly feels like I haven't had proper rest in months. I'm even getting blood work done to rule out any underlying medical issues.
The biggest issue is that I haven't been able to prepare for interviews despite wanting to switch for quite some time. My weekdays are consumed by work, and my weekends mostly go into mentally recovering rather than studying.
Financially, I have enough savings to comfortably manage for 7 to 8 months.
This has compelled me to resign without any offer, will be serving 2 months NP, need genuine advice on this
Hi everyone,
I genuinely need some objective advice because I feel too emotionally invested to think clearly.
I've been working in a service-based company as a Data Engineer for a little over 3 years at less than 10 LPA CTC
For the past 10 months, I've been continuously staffed on back-to-back high-intensity projects with virtually no transition period. Most workdays have been 12-14 hours, and every new project requires quickly ramping up in a new domain while meeting aggressive timelines.
Initially, I kept telling myself it was just one difficult project, but it has now become the norm.
I even took around 10-12 days of leave during these 10 months hoping I'd recover, but I came back feeling just as exhausted. Lately, I've been constantly tired, struggling to focus, and it honestly feels like I haven't had proper rest in months. I'm even getting blood work done to rule out any underlying medical issues.
The biggest issue is that I haven't been able to prepare for interviews despite wanting to switch for quite some time. My weekdays are consumed by work, and my weekends mostly go into mentally recovering rather than studying.
I recently got assigned to yet another high-pressure project, and that was the point where I finally decided to speak to my management. They've asked me to formally document my concerns, and they're looking into whether a more sustainable assignment is possible.
Financially, I have enough savings to comfortably manage for several months, and if I resign, I'll also have a two-month notice period during which I'll continue receiving my salary.
**My dilemma is this:**
**If the company is unable to provide a more sustainable workload, would you resign and use the notice period to prepare and interview full-time? Or would you continue staying until you have another offer, even if it means continuing in the same cycle?**
Looking for a genuine advice , If you think resigning would be a mistake, please tell me why. Likewise, if you've been in a similar situation and resigned without an offer, I'd really like to hear how it worked out for you
Hi everyone,
I genuinely need some objective advice because I feel too emotionally invested to think clearly.
I've been working in a service-based company as a Data Engineer for a little over 3 years at less than 10 LPA CTC
For the past 10 months, I've been continuously staffed on back-to-back high-intensity projects with virtually no transition period. Most workdays have been 12-14 hours, and every new project requires quickly ramping up in a new domain while meeting aggressive timelines.
Initially, I kept telling myself it was just one difficult project, but it has now become the norm.
I even took around 10-12 days of leave during these 10 months hoping I'd recover, but I came back feeling just as exhausted. Lately, I've been constantly tired, struggling to focus, and it honestly feels like I haven't had proper rest in months. I'm even getting blood work done to rule out any underlying medical issues.
The biggest issue is that I haven't been able to prepare for interviews despite wanting to switch for quite some time. My weekdays are consumed by work, and my weekends mostly go into mentally recovering rather than studying.
I recently got assigned to yet another high-pressure project, and that was the point where I finally decided to speak to my management. They've asked me to formally document my concerns, and they're looking into whether a more sustainable assignment is possible.
Financially, I have enough savings to comfortably manage for several months, and if I resign, I'll also have a two-month notice period during which I'll continue receiving my salary.
**My dilemma is this:**
**If the company is unable to provide a more sustainable workload, would you resign and use the notice period to prepare and interview full-time? Or would you continue staying until you have another offer, even if it means continuing in the same cycle?**
Looking for a genuine advice , If you think resigning would be a mistake, please tell me why. Likewise, if you've been in a similar situation and resigned without an offer, I'd really like to hear how it worked out for you
Hi everyone,
I genuinely need some objective advice because I feel too emotionally invested to think clearly.
I've been working in a service-based company as a Data Engineer for a little over 3 years at less than 10 LPA CTC
For the past 10 months, I've been continuously staffed on back-to-back high-intensity projects with virtually no transition period. Most workdays have been 12-14 hours, and every new project requires quickly ramping up in a new domain while meeting aggressive timelines.
Initially, I kept telling myself it was just one difficult project, but it has now become the norm.
I even took around 10-12 days of leave during these 10 months hoping I'd recover, but I came back feeling just as exhausted. Lately, I've been constantly tired, struggling to focus, and it honestly feels like I haven't had proper rest in months. I'm even getting blood work done to rule out any underlying medical issues.
The biggest issue is that I haven't been able to prepare for interviews despite wanting to switch for quite some time. My weekdays are consumed by work, and my weekends mostly go into mentally recovering rather than studying.
I recently got assigned to yet another high-pressure project, and that was the point where I finally decided to speak to my management. They've asked me to formally document my concerns, and they're looking into whether a more sustainable assignment is possible.
Financially, I have enough savings to comfortably manage for several months, and if I resign, I'll also have a two-month notice period during which I'll continue receiving my salary.
**My dilemma is this:**
**If the company is unable to provide a more sustainable workload, would you resign and use the notice period to prepare and interview full-time? Or would you continue staying until you have another offer, even if it means continuing in the same cycle?**
Looking for a genuine advice , If you think resigning would be a mistake, please tell me why. Likewise, if you've been in a similar situation and resigned without an offer, I'd really like to hear how it worked out for you
Hi everyone,
I genuinely need some objective advice because I feel too emotionally invested to think clearly.
I've been working in a service-based company as a Data Engineer for a little over 3 years at less than 10 LPA CTC
For the past 10 months, I've been continuously staffed on back-to-back high-intensity projects with virtually no transition period. Most workdays have been 12-14 hours, and every new project requires quickly ramping up in a new domain while meeting aggressive timelines.
Initially, I kept telling myself it was just one difficult project, but it has now become the norm.
I even took around 10-12 days of leave during these 10 months hoping I'd recover, but I came back feeling just as exhausted. Lately, I've been constantly tired, struggling to focus, and it honestly feels like I haven't had proper rest in months. I'm even getting blood work done to rule out any underlying medical issues.
The biggest issue is that I haven't been able to prepare for interviews despite wanting to switch for quite some time. My weekdays are consumed by work, and my weekends mostly go into mentally recovering rather than studying.
I recently got assigned to yet another high-pressure project, and that was the point where I finally decided to speak to my management. They've asked me to formally document my concerns, and they're looking into whether a more sustainable assignment is possible.
Financially, I have enough savings to comfortably manage for several months, and if I resign, I'll also have a two-month notice period during which I'll continue receiving my salary.
My dilemma is this:
If the company is unable to provide a more sustainable workload, would you resign and use the notice period to prepare and interview full-time? Or would you continue staying until you have another offer, even if it means continuing in the same cycle?
I genuinely need advice. If you think resigning would be a mistake, please tell me why. Likewise, if you've been in a similar situation and resigned without an offer, I'd really like to hear how it worked out for you
Hi everyone,
I genuinely need some objective advice because I feel too emotionally invested to think clearly.
I've been working in a service-based company as a Data Engineer for a little over 3 years at less than 10 LPA CTC
For the past 10 months, I've been continuously staffed on back-to-back high-intensity projects with virtually no transition period. Most workdays have been 12-14 hours, and every new project requires quickly ramping up in a new domain while meeting aggressive timelines.
Initially, I kept telling myself it was just one difficult project, but it has now become the norm.
I even took around 10-12 days of leave during these 10 months hoping I'd recover, but I came back feeling just as exhausted. Lately, I've been constantly tired, struggling to focus, and it honestly feels like I haven't had proper rest in months. I'm even getting blood work done to rule out any underlying medical issues.
The biggest issue is that I haven't been able to prepare for interviews despite wanting to switch for quite some time. My weekdays are consumed by work, and my weekends mostly go into mentally recovering rather than studying.
I recently got assigned to yet another high-pressure project, and that was the point where I finally decided to speak to my management. They've asked me to formally document my concerns, and they're looking into whether a more sustainable assignment is possible.
Financially, I have enough savings to comfortably manage for several months, and if I resign, I'll also have a two-month notice period during which I'll continue receiving my salary.
My dilemma is this:
If the company is unable to provide a more sustainable workload, would you resign and use the notice period to prepare and interview full-time? Or would you continue staying until you have another offer, even if it means continuing in the same cycle?
I'm not looking for validation. If you think resigning would be a mistake, please tell me why. Likewise, if you've been in a similar situation and resigned without an offer, I'd really like to hear how it worked out for you
Are we expecting notifications for sebi 2026-2027 this year ?
Also what all regulatory exams will have their notifications published in late 2026 for 2026 - 2027
What all regulatory exam's notifications are expected this year for 2026 - 2027
Are we expecting notifications for sebi 2026-2027 this year ?
Also what all regulatory exams will have their notifications published in late 2026 for 2026 - 2027