Atasi Roy Malakar
|Les abonnés
Dernières vidéos
Welcome to my channel! After leaving a secure engineering career to pursue global expertise, my F-1 graduate experience in the US became a real-time lesson in crisis management.
In this video, I break down my 2025-2026 timeline. Instead of just sharing anecdotes, I mapped the data to show it is not a figment of my imagination. I tracked my operational friction—from housing hazards to institutional bottlenecks—and graphed how systemic inefficiencies directly impact a student’s financial burn rate, bandwidth, and academic output.
📌 Video Chapters & Timestamps:
00:00:00 - The Calculated Risk: Leaving the Indian construction sector and Railways to pursue an MS in Transportation Engineering. Covering my initial arrival, maintaining a 4.0 GPA, and passing the FE exam.
00:14:25 - Infrastructure & Housing Failures: Documenting severe off-campus housing issues (lead in water, CO2 anomalies, security flaws) and the mitigation strategies I engineered to stabilize my living environment.
00:57:54 - Navigating Administrative Friction: Managing heavy workloads, resolving software access equity (VISSIM), and balancing academic outputs against chaotic institutional communication.
01:34:07 - Data Security & Identity Vulnerability: A transparent look at how extreme burnout creates vulnerability, leading to a critical SSN data exposure and the subsequent legal/bureaucratic recovery process.
01:43:30 - The Data: Quantifying Chaos: The receipts. A breakdown of the charts mapping my operational bottlenecks (spikes in email logs, unresolved maintenance requests) against financial expenses and mental health metrics.
01:51:00 - The Strategic Pivot: Why I chose to withdraw, cut my losses, and return to India. Covering the complex logistics of terminating lease liabilities, tax filings, and global relocation.
02:24:40 - Objective Takeaways: The vital importance of data documentation, root-cause analysis, and objective tracking when navigating failing systems.
About Me:
Hi, I'm Atasi (pronounced Aw-toe-shi)! I am a civil engineer passionate about architecting resilient, next-generation AI-based infrastructure. Whether working with massive physical networks or navigating everyday administrative chaos, I believe in looking at the data, building solutions, and adapting to the variables. My ultimate takeaway: "Until death, all defeat is psychological."
🔔 If you appreciate data-driven storytelling or have navigated similar systemic hurdles, please Like, Comment, and Subscribe.
Disclaimer: This video is an objective recounting of my personal timelines and data. It should not be taken as official legal, financial, or immigration advice. Always consult directly with certified professionals for F-1 compliance or legal queries.
Welcome to my channel! After leaving a secure engineering career to pursue global expertise, my F-1 graduate experience in the US became a real-time lesson in crisis management.
In this video, I break down my 2025-2026 timeline. Instead of just sharing anecdotes, I mapped the data to show it is not a figment of my imagination. I tracked my operational friction—from housing hazards to institutional bottlenecks—and graphed how systemic inefficiencies directly impact a student’s financial burn rate, bandwidth, and academic output.
📌 Video Chapters & Timestamps:
00:00:00 - The Calculated Risk: Leaving the Indian construction sector and Railways to pursue an MS in Transportation Engineering. Covering my initial arrival, maintaining a 4.0 GPA, and passing the FE exam.
00:14:25 - Infrastructure & Housing Failures: Documenting severe off-campus housing issues (lead in water, CO2 anomalies, security flaws) and the mitigation strategies I engineered to stabilize my living environment.
00:57:54 - Navigating Administrative Friction: Managing heavy workloads, resolving software access equity (VISSIM), and balancing academic outputs against chaotic institutional communication.
01:34:07 - Data Security & Identity Vulnerability: A transparent look at how extreme burnout creates vulnerability, leading to a critical SSN data exposure and the subsequent legal/bureaucratic recovery process.
01:43:30 - The Data: Quantifying Chaos: The receipts. A breakdown of the charts mapping my operational bottlenecks (spikes in email logs, unresolved maintenance requests) against financial expenses and mental health metrics.
01:51:00 - The Strategic Pivot: Why I chose to withdraw, cut my losses, and return to India. Covering the complex logistics of terminating lease liabilities, tax filings, and global relocation.
02:24:40 - Objective Takeaways: The vital importance of data documentation, root-cause analysis, and objective tracking when navigating failing systems.
About Me:
Hi, I'm Atasi (pronounced Aw-toe-shi)! I am a civil engineer passionate about architecting resilient, next-generation AI-based infrastructure. Whether working with massive physical networks or navigating everyday administrative chaos, I believe in looking at the data, building solutions, and adapting to the variables. My ultimate takeaway: "Until death, all defeat is psychological."
🔔 If you appreciate data-driven storytelling or have navigated similar systemic hurdles, please Like, Comment, and Subscribe.
Disclaimer: This video is an objective recounting of my personal timelines and data. It should not be taken as official legal, financial, or immigration advice. Always consult directly with certified professionals for F-1 compliance or legal queries.
Many of you know me for the data-driven approach I took during my first year in the US, but that focus on documentation didn't start there. It was a habit forged over years of navigating environments where a clear record was my most reliable tool.
This video covers my final chapter in India. While I’m proud of the infrastructure I helped build at the Indian Railways, I reached a point where the workplace environment no longer aligned with my standards for safety or technical integrity. When my professional boundaries were tested, I faced a period of administrative friction and technical sabotage, where the accuracy of my engineering work was being actively compromised.
I have always kept records—originally as a way to navigate personal challenges—but in this role, that habit became a professional necessity. It was the only way to safeguard the technical truth of my work. Choosing to pivot from a secure career path became the bridge to my Master’s in the US, and it was the moment I realized that transparent documentation is one of my greatest assets.
There are earlier chapters to this story that I’ll share when the time is right, but this is how I learned to turn a habit of survival into a professional standard. If you value an engineer who prioritizes integrity and operational transparency even under extreme pressure, this is the context for how I work.