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Dispatch · 2 min read

The Dropout Decision: Why I Left College to Write 100 Books

My parents believed education was the single most important thing. My entire motivation was to prove them wrong.

PersonalEducationDecision

The Motivation

My parents were clear: education is the most important thing. Study hard, get a degree, get a job, build a life.

My entire motivation — the thing that got me out of bed every day — was to prove them wrong.

Not out of spite. Out of a conviction that the world had changed, that what worked for my father's generation wasn't the only path, and that I could build something from nothing using only the one skill I trusted: writing.

The Decision

After scoring 0 in my 12th standard prelims (I intentionally didn't copy, to test myself — I knew nothing), I scraped through board exams with 65%. I enrolled in B.Com "to understand how money works." First year, I came 2nd in college. Second year, I realised a degree wouldn't help me earn money.

Then my friend Poonam said: "You write good poetry. Why not write a book?"

I dismissed it — "A poem is 1 page. A book is 300 pages."

But after running away from Thane with ₹100, desperate for income, I Googled "how to earn money" and found Amazon KDP. The idea crystallised: write books, sell them, prove everyone wrong.

What It Cost

The dropout path cost more than money:

  • My parents' trust
  • Financial stability (I ended up ₹2 crore in debt)
  • Years in the dark when Amazon blocked my account
  • My father's retirement savings, sacrificed to clear my debt

What It Proved

Before age 25, I had:

  • Written 100+ books
  • Earned ₹1 crore from Amazon
  • Travelled to Jordan, Dubai, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia
  • Founded and successfully exited a publishing company (Authorva Private Limited)

The dropout decision proved that education isn't the only path. It also proved that a path without education is brutally unforgiving of mistakes.

At 29, I returned to college — B.Com Marketing at ASM CSIT College, SPPU, Pune. Sitting with 17-18 year olds. Full circle.

The irony isn't lost on me.

— From the desk of Atharva Inamdar, March 2026

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