Is NEET Really as Hard as Everyone Says — Or Are We Just Scaring Each Other?
I
remember talking to a cousin who'd just finished her Class 10 boards. Bright
girl. Topped her school in Science. And the moment she said she wanted to
become a doctor, the entire family started offering condolences instead of
congratulations.
"NEET
toh bahut tough hai." "Pata nahi hoga ya nahi." "Dekh lena,
ek saal toh jayega hi."
Nobody
had actually sat for the exam. But everyone was an expert.
Here's
what I think is genuinely happening: we've turned NEET into folklore. Every
year, the horror stories circulate — someone scored 650+ and still didn't get a
government seat, someone studied for three years and couldn't clear it. These
stories are real. But they're also incomplete. Because for every story like
that, there's a kid from a small town, no fancy institute, who cleared it in
the first attempt. That story doesn't travel as fast. Fear always does.
NEET
is hard. I'm not going to sit here and tell you it isn't. 180 questions, 200
marks on the line for Biology alone, Physics that will make you question your
life choices at 11pm — yes, it's genuinely difficult. But "difficult"
is not the same as "designed to break you." The syllabus is fixed.
The pattern is predictable. NCERT is still the backbone. These are facts that
somehow get buried under the panic.
The
students who struggle most with NEET aren't usually the ones who lack ability.
They're the ones who never figured out how to study for it. There's a
difference between reading a chapter and actually understanding what NEET will
ask from that chapter. That gap — between knowing content and knowing the exam
— is where most people fall.
This
is honestly why the conversation around NEET coaching in Bhopal
has shifted so much in recent years. Parents used to send kids to Kota by
default, like it was the only option on earth. Now? A lot of families are
realising that proximity matters. Comfort matters. A student studying in their
own city, sleeping in their own bed, eating home-cooked food — that student is
not at a disadvantage. In many cases, they're actually less burnt out by
February than the ones who relocated at 16.
What
does good coaching actually look like, though? Because that's the real
question.
It's
not the institute with the biggest banner on DB Mall road. It's not the one
running the most aggressive ad campaign either. The best coaching for NEET in Bhopal
— and this applies anywhere, honestly — is the one where a student is known by
name, not by roll number. Where doubt sessions are actually doubt sessions and
not just extra lectures. Where mock tests come with analysis, not just scores.
A
lot of students pick a NEET institute in Bhopal based on a friend's recommendation or a YouTube ad and then
wonder six months later why they feel lost. The institute matters less than the
fit — does the teaching pace work for you, do you get personal attention,
is there accountability?
Coming
back to the original question: is NEET as scary as everyone says?
Honestly,
partly yes and mostly no.
The
exam itself — manageable with the right prep. The ecosystem around it — that's
where the real damage happens. The comparison culture, the "log kya
kahenge if you drop a year," the pressure to perform for people who won't
even remember in five years. That stuff is legitimately hard to navigate.
But
the exam? One subject at a time. One chapter at a time. NCERTs first, then
deepen. Test yourself constantly. Fix your weak spots before they become your
identity.
NEET
doesn't care about your family's fears or your neighbour's opinion. It only
cares about what you know on that one day.
So
maybe the better question isn't "is NEET hard?" Maybe it's — are
you preparing, or are you just worrying?
There's
a difference. A big one.

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