Thursday, June 4, 2026

Fragments of Greatness!

Fragments of Greatness!

I may not command the throne of power,

Yet inner strength outshines the external!

 

I may not hold the treasures of wealth,

Yet I have savoured its fleeting luxuries!

 

I may not wear the mask of handsome form,

Yet the radiance within illumines my way!


I may not have scaled the peaks of fame,

Yet I have walked a few steps toward greatness!


I may not have millions of followers online,
Yet those few who connect deeply inspire me!
 

I may not dwell in the fullness of light,

Yet glimpses of truth have touched my soul!

 

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune on June 4, 2026

 Author of “Value-Based Leadership

 

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

The Beauty of Opposites !

The Beauty of Opposites!

Life, in its grandeur, is a symphony of opposites. Not contradictions, but contrasts that breathe vitality into existence. Without them, the journey would be flat, monotonous, and devoid of meaning. Birth and death, day and night, black and white, heat and cold, joy and sorrow, defeat and triumph, man and woman, leftist and rightist—all are pairs that shape the very fabric of our being.

Birth announces possibility; death reminds us of finitude. Together they frame the arc of human life, giving urgency to our choices and depth to our reflections. Joy without sorrow would be shallow; triumph without defeat would be hollow. It is in the tension of opposites that life gains its beauty, its pulse, its worth.

Opposites are not enemies; they are partners. They sharpen our vision, stretch our understanding, and compel us to grow. Integrative thinking is born here—drawing upon the strengths of both poles, weaving harmony out of tension, and discovering wisdom in balance.

Lao Tzu once said: “Those who know the truth do not speak, and those who speak do not know the truth.”

Yet history reminds us:

Had the great leaders and reformers remained silent, would social transformation have ever taken root?

Would justice have risen, would freedom have flourished, would dignity have been restored?

Silence may embody wisdom, but speech has the power to awaken change.

The true art of living lies in discernment—knowing when silence nourishes depth, and when words must ignite reform. Wisdom is not rigid; it is contextual. It is the ability to apply the insights of philosophers and leaders with sensitivity to time, place, and circumstance.

Thus, let us embrace the fullness of existence. Let us honour the opposites that shape our journey. For in their tension lies beauty, in their contrast lies meaning, and in their union lies the possibility of a life lived with courage, compassion, and truth.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune on June 2, 2026

 Author of “Value-Based Leadership”

mvingale2405@gmail.com

#EngineeringHeartBeats #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls

 

Monday, June 1, 2026

Has My Dream Come True?

Has My Dream Come True?

I had a dream that one day I would be a Member of Parliament. I nurtured that dream with care and conviction. I read the biographies of great leaders, observed them closely: How they walk and How they talk. I listened to stirring speeches, including 'I have a Dream!',  and drew inspiration from their timeless words.

While serving in leadership roles across different organisations and undertaking research in leadership, I studied the workings of Parliament and interacted with veteran parliamentarians. I visited the Parliament Library, immersed myself in its treasures, and acquired books on parliamentary procedures. I imagined myself in that august chamber where laws are enacted, contributing to the well-being of the people and the nation. I wrote, I met party leaders, I sought opportunities. Yet destiny did not open that door.

At first, I thought the dream had ended. But reflection revealed something deeper: destiny had not denied me, it had redirected me. My path was not to legislate through statutes, but to inspire through words. The trilogy I have written, and the poem Every Dream Comes True within it, have given me fulfilment beyond measure.

The poem says: “Every dream comes true—not always in the form one has envisioned, but sometimes in a different way, and at times in a greater way.” Today, I see the truth of those words in my own journey.

Parliament enacts laws; writing enacts consciousness. Laws may change with governments, but ideas endure across generations. My trilogy has become my parliament of words. Each essay, each refrain, is a bill passed into the conscience of humanity.

Thus, my dream has not ended—it has transcended. It has taken a nobler form, aligned with prayer and optimism, and found its truth in literature and philosophy. I continue to serve, not through political office, but through the chamber of reflection, where every dream that touches the soul becomes part of the eternal march of civilisation.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune on June 2, 2026

 Author of “Value-Based Leadership

mvingale2405@gmail.com

#EngineeringHeartBeats #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls

 

Saturday, May 30, 2026

Integrity in Examinations - Beyond Crisis Management:

 Integrity in Examinations - Beyond Crisis Management:

Extraordinary measures are being taken to safeguard the NEET re-examination scheduled for 21 June. Question papers will be transported in Air Force planes, and the exam will be monitored directly by the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO). These steps reassure students and parents that integrity is being taken seriously. 

Yet they also raise deeper question:

Can such extraordinary involvement be sustained for every exam?

Clearly, the defence forces and PMO cannot be routinely deployed. Their role is to rescue in crisis, not to manage routine operations. The responsibility must ultimately rest with capable, responsible, and highly committed individuals, supported by a robust system.

Reliability Beyond Academic Excellence:

To head an organisation like NTA, academic qualifications and professional experience are essential, but they do not guarantee reliability. Degrees from prestigious institutions such as IITs or IIMs may open doors to lucrative careers in multinational corporations, where profit is the primary motive. But those who choose the path of public service, academia, or administration must embrace a different calling — one rooted in duty and values, not comparison with peers’ wealth or perks.

Reliability is not built in classrooms alone. It is forged through years of penance (tapascharya), sacrifice, and steadfast adherence to principles. Therefore, when selecting individuals to lead organisations like NTA or conduct examinations, the following questions must be asked:

  • Past Record: What has been the individual’s track record over the last 20–25 years?
  • Sacrifices: What personal prices has he or she paid for standing firm on duty?
  • Values: What belief system guides their decisions?
  • Consistency: If reliable today, what ensures reliability tomorrow?

Ensuring Reliability in Practice:

Reliability must be treated as a living quality — tested, reinforced, and monitored continuously. A framework could include:

  • Rigorous vetting of individuals’ long-term record, sacrifices, and values.
  • Continuous monitoring during their tenure and for a specified period afterwards.
  • Frequent training and team-building to reinforce integrity and collective responsibility.
  • Independent oversight to ensure accountability beyond personal claims of reliability.

The Core Message:

Academic excellence is essential, but it is not a guarantee of reliability. True reliability comes from character — a foundation built over decades of principled living. To protect the integrity of examinations, responsibility must be entrusted not merely to the qualified but to the tested and proven reliable.

Integrity in examinations cannot depend on extraordinary interventions. It must rest on ordinary systems led by extraordinary character.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune on May 30, 2026

 Author of “Value-Based Leadership

#NEET2026 #ExamIntegrity #ValueBasedLeadership #EducationReforms #FairExams #PublicTrust #Accountability #EthicsInEducation #SystemicChange #EngineeringHeartBeats #CommitmentBeyondRules

 

Monday, May 25, 2026

Commitment Beyond Rules…

 Commitment Beyond Rules…

(Continuation of “Seeing Beyond the Noise…”)

In 2017, a five‑judge bench of the Supreme Court delivered a landmark judgment mandating a unified medical entrance test — NEET. Initially, the responsibility of conducting NEET was entrusted to the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE). Later, in 2019, with the establishment of the National Testing Agency (NTA), this responsibility was formally transferred to the new body. The intent was clear: to create a single, transparent, and fair examination system for medical aspirants across India.

Yet, despite these structural reforms, challenges to integrity have persisted. This highlights that the real issue lies not only in the technology or structure of the test, but in the human element behind its conduct.

The Human Element:

Authorities who sincerely wish to conduct NEET and other such examinations with integrity must entrust responsibility to individuals who demonstrate unwavering dedication. Identifying such individuals with strong commitment is a great challenge. 

Great leaders succeeded not only because of their vision, but because they chose associates who were willing to sacrifice everything for the cause. 

Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj is one such example. His mavaleTanaji Malusare, Baji Prabhu Deshpande, Murar Baji, Yesaji Kank — fought and gave their lives for Swarajya. Their sacrifice inspired countless others to continue the struggle.

Examinations like NEET demand individuals of similar integrity and commitment — those who will safeguard the process as if it were their own honour. The challenging task is to search for them, identify them, and entrust them with responsibility.

Accountability is inseparable from responsibility. Those who shoulder the responsibility of conducting examinations must also be held accountable for any lapse. Hence, before shouldering the responsibility, they should reflect and introspect: 

Do I have the ability, integrity, and courage to stand firm? 

If not, they must have the courage to say “No” to the responsibility. 

Serving in such a system is not ornamental. It is a mantle of duty — heavy with expectation, requiring sacrifice, vigilance, and moral strength.

Leadership Conduct:

As I have written in my book Value-Based Leadership: “For the fulfillment of objectives, the sacrifices made by leaders, the price they pay, and the values they uphold — when these are visible to colleagues, they inspire a higher level of commitment towards the organization.

These insights are drawn from practice. Over four decades as an educator, I shouldered the responsibility of conducting examinations with integrity. At times it was challenging; at other times I paid the price for standing firm.

The conduct of leaders sets the tone for the entire system. When values are lived, not merely spoken, they inspire trust and commitment in everyone involved.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune, May 25, 2026

#NEET2026 #ExamIntegrity #ValueBasedLeadership #EducationReforms #FairExams #PublicTrust #Accountability #EthicsInEducation #SystemicChange #EngineeringHeartBeats #CommitmentBeyondRules

 

 

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Seeing Beyond the Noise…

Seeing Beyond the Noise…

Even with eyes wide open, we often see only what we wish to see.

Amid the deafening noise around us, we listen only to what we wish to hear.

The cancellation of the NEET exam on 3rd May 2026, after it was discovered that the paper had been leaked, is a painful reminder of this selective blindness. More than 22.05 lakh candidates appeared for the exam, and yet the integrity of the process was compromised.

This is not the first time. After the 2024 leak, corrective measures were introduced — including the Public Examination (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024, which is now in force to prevent misconduct in public examinations and common entrance tests across the country. The central government also set up a seven-member panel headed by former ISRO chief K. Radhakrishnan to recommend reforms.

The governing body of NEET itself is composed of eminent figures: a former UPSC chairman as chairperson, an IAS officer as member secretary, three directors of IITs, preceding and succeeding chairpersons of JEE, two directors of NITs, two directors of IIMs, the director of IISER, vice chancellors of JNU and IGNOU, the chairman of NAAC, and even a psychiatrist. These are stalwarts of Indian academia and administration, associated with the most prestigious institutions.

Yet, despite strict laws and highly capable administrators, breaches have occurred repeatedly. 

Why? Perhaps because we have neglected the foundation of a value system.

Punishing culprits is necessary, but punishment alone cannot guarantee that such incidents will never recur. 

The true responsibility lies with administrators: to build a system so robust that malpractice becomes impossible.

Building a System of Integrity:

The measures suggested by different committees are welcome and indeed a good move. The 2024 Act is strong enough. But the current leak proves that something more is required. 

Laws and committees can only go so far; what is needed is a deeper, systemic approach that combines technology, accountability, and values.

Here are some more measures that come to mind:

  • Rigorous background checks: Just as US Visa applicants must complete the DS-160 form and undergo AI-driven verification, every individual associated with NTA — from the chairman to paper setters — should undergo thorough background checks. Any mismatch between declared and actual information should result in disqualification, subject to due process. 
  • Surveillance: Individuals associated with NTA should be subject to monitoring during their tenure and for a defined period thereafter. Their associations, financial transactions, and even close relatives’ dealings should be scrutinized to prevent collusion.
  • Student accountability: While test-taking students are legally exempt from certain penal provisions, it is important to raise awareness that organised collusion in unfair means can still invite consequences under applicable laws. Awareness and deterrence are key to protecting exam integrity.
  • Random checks: Random checks on high scorers must be conducted, mapping their performance across Class 10 exam, NEET, other relevant exams, and their subsequent academic records.

The Call for Value-Based Leadership:

Technology and law can punish offenders, but only value-based leadership can prevent offenses. Administrators must embrace integrity as the cornerstone of examination systems. Without values, even the most advanced systems collapse under human weakness.

To help stakeholders reflect on this deeper dimension, I have made my book Value-Based Leadership freely available on Kindle from 19th May to 25th May. 

May we learn to see with truly open eyes and listen to the voices that matter!

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune on May 20, 2026

mvingale2405@gmail.com

#NEET2026 #ExamIntegrity #ValueBasedLeadership #EducationReforms #BackgroundChecks #FairExams #PublicTrust #Accountability #EthicsInEducation #SystemicChange #EngineeringHeartBeats

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Cinematic Adventure, Reimagined !

 

Cinematic Adventure, Reimagined !

Long ago, I had a brief encounter with Hindi cinema — a moment I fondly described in my book as a “Cinematic Adventure.” Yesterday, once again, I was back in the world of filmmaking, though in a new and unexpected way.

I created a short film on my iPhone using iMovie, titled Every Dream Comes True.” The visuals were already waiting in my gallery — cherished clicks of Madhura at Lakshadip Palace, snapshots from Pune Airport, and inspiring glimpses of nature’s beauty from Bhauche Udyan, Jalgaon and the serene Periyar Lake in Kerala.

With Copilot’s guidance, I added the uplifting voice of David, who read aloud my poem “Every Dream Comes True.” The process unfolded with a touch of magic:

  • I first arranged the photographs in iMovie, giving them motion and rhythm.
  • Simultaneously, David’s voice began narrating the poem displayed on my laptop.
  • I recorded the entire recitation, stopping once the poem was complete.
  • The movie was accepted, edited, and polished with care.

Finally, I shared it across digital platforms — YouTube, Instagram, Facebook — where it reached hearts beyond boundaries.

A beautiful fusion of technology, poetry, and imagination came alive. In that moment of creation, a new identity unfolded within me — I had become a movie producer!

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune, May 9, 2026

Author of Value‑Based Leadership

#EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

 

 

Fragments of Greatness!

Fragments of Greatness ! I may not command the throne of power, Yet inner strength outshines the external!   I may not hold the tr...