In a world where balancing work and motherhood is a daily challenge, Jaipur’s Rashi Kumawat turned her multitasking life into a story of extraordinary triumph. While handling a full-time government job and raising her one-year-old daughter, Rashi cracked one of Rajasthan’s toughest exams — the RAS 2023, securing Rank 6 with sheer dedication, patience, and discipline.
The Making of a Dreamer
Born and brought up in Tonk Phatak, Jaipur, Rashi’s academic brilliance showed early — 96.4% in Class 10 and 92.8% in Class 12. A topper throughout, she pursued Electronics Engineering at MNIT Jaipur, where she graduated as a Gold Medalist.
In 2019, she joined the Rajasthan government as an Information Assistant in the Department of Labour, a role that gave her professional stability — but her eyes were always set on the prestigious RAS badge.
Balancing Baby, Work, and Books
For Rashi, time wasn’t abundant — but determination was. With a toddler at home and office duties to fulfill, she carved out study time in fragments: early mornings before sunrise and quiet nights after her daughter slept.
Her first RAS attempt in 2021 didn’t yield results, but she didn’t give up. With self-study as her weapon, Rashi skipped coaching classes and built her strategy around revision, mock tests, and note-based learning.
“My daughter became my biggest motivation,” she says. “I studied to make her proud. Discipline and belief were my true mentors.”

Defying Odds, Defining Success
Rashi’s journey redefines what modern women can achieve. In a pool of lakhs of aspirants, her Rank 6 is more than just a number — it’s a statement that motherhood, work, and ambition can coexist when fueled by determination.
Her success story inspires working professionals and mothers across India, proving that circumstances don’t define dreams — mindset does.
Lessons from Rashi’s Journey
◆Discipline trumps duration: 2–3 hours of focused study daily can change everything.
◆Failure is fuel: Use setbacks as stepping stones, not roadblocks.
◆Family support matters: Behind every achiever is a team that believes.
◆Self-study can succeed: With clarity and consistency, coaching isn’t mandatory.
As Rashi celebrates her achievement, she symbolizes the new face of India’s empowered women — resilient, goal-oriented, and unstoppable.
