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'I had small dreams but large instinct'

March 03, 2010
By Lata Khubchandani

This small town boy from Uttarakhand has no big school tag attached. Lata Khubchandani delves deeper to unravel the making of the adguru -- Prasoon Joshi.

What was little boy Prasoon like?
An introvert. I read a lot. I topped my class very often though. A loner but still popular among classmates and friends for my music. I wasn't considered a 'fun' guy. I would either be quiet or say something very emphatically.

How early did you realise what you wanted to do?
I still don't know what I want to do. I started relying on my instinct when I was 18-19 years old. I started doing things that give me joy and found that advertising was a place where I could park myself.

Did you rebel against the unimaginative teaching/learning system?
I was not a rebellious child. So, I couldn't tell my parents what I want to do. I completed MBA and took up a regular job which I probably would not have done if it was left to me. I learnt a lot from that. I feel Indians are very nice people. They do a lot for their children.

So how did you reach where you have?
Anyone from a small town background will identify with me. I had small dreams but a large instinct. I could not bear mediocrity. I'd read books and wonder how people could rate them so high. I remember reading The Alchemist and disliking someone trying to manipulate my mind.

What shaped your sensibility?
I don't know. My reading was mostly classic literature -- Urdu, Hindi and English poetry and translations of Bengali literature. I didn't know popular literature or popular music. Both my parents have done their master's in music. So there was a very refined musical atmosphere at home.

I'm constantly learning. I never planned anything. Everything that I did, I stumbled upon. I do only what I like and I do it with full conviction. If I fall in love with what I do I can continue an affair with it forever. Nothing is obsolete.

How did movies happen?
I used to write. In films you have an audience and I have the need to communicate and see my thoughts resonating. Every artist feels the need to communicate.

And poetry?
Initially what attracted me was that I could be with myself. I saw multiple layers of thought, appreciated the writer's command over language. But it's a retro feeling now. When I read something beautiful I'd be completely overwhelmed by it.

A first crush?
I don't know. Maybe a character from a book.

What makes you tick today?
That I do my work seriously. I don't take myself seriously at all. I work for myself. I have to satisfy myself. I don't leave it to others even if they like my work. I have to filter it myself.

Lata Khubchandani

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