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This Is How I Started - What is Your Credit Card Story?

Hey TFCians,

Here we are—a community of more than 50,000 like-minded individuals, discussing credit cards and banking every single day. But today, let’s get a bit personal. Let’s talk about how you started your credit card journey.

This isn't just about which card you got first or what your initial experience was. Let’s go deeper—where did you first hear about credit cards? What were your expectations? What was your background at that point in life?

I’ll start this fun by sharing my own story…

I’m Sumanta Mandal, as many of you know. Born in 1993 (7 years before 2000... Thala for a reason, lol) in a lower-middle-class family.
I started freelancing at the age of 16, back in 2009. I used to work on oDesk (which is now Upwork), as well as platforms like Microworkers and Amazon Mechanical Turk. One of the biggest challenges back then was getting paid. There was PayPal, which allowed withdrawals in India, and AlertPay, which didn't.

At that time, I used my father's SBI bank account for withdrawals. But PayPal would often ask for verification, and back then, it only supported debit cards from HDFC, ICICI, and Axis Bank. So, I convinced my father to open an HDFC Bank account in his name—just to get the right debit card. And that was the spark. That was when my interest in the banking system truly began.

On my 18th birthday in 2011, the first thing I did was apply for a PAN card. The same day, I applied for a Voter ID card (even though it wasn't needed to open a bank account). After getting my PAN, I opened an Axis Bank student account with a ₹2,500 minimum balance. That was my very first bank account. Then came an SBI savings account. And soon after that, I started opening accounts in almost every PSU bank—Allahabad Bank, Bank of India, United Bank—you name it. By 2012, I had most of them.

By that time, I had become one of the top-earning member of Microworkers in India—among the top 3, actually. I was also rated as a “Rising Talent” on oDesk and had clocked over 1,500 hours of work. I mostly did website management and research-related work.

In 2013, I started hiring people to help with one of my client’s projects. I needed a credit card to pay them. Sure, I could use my debit card—but a credit card made more sense. That’s when I started learning more about credit cards. But coming from a lower-middle-class family, none of my family members had ever even thought of having one.
I approached Axis Bank, ICICI Bank, and a few others. All rejected me—because I didn’t have a stable income. Freelance income had no value in the eyes of banks back then. I was making around ₹40,000/month, but it didn’t matter.

That same year, I got an offer from an Australian company through oDesk. They hired me to manage their Amazon store, handle shipments, communicate with factories in China, and conduct research. They were paying me around ₹85,000/month—but still, no bank wanted to issue me a credit card.

The company owner, though, was incredibly supportive. She constantly encouraged me to start my own business and begin selling on Amazon.

In 2015, I made the decision to start my own Amazon store. But for that, I desperately needed a credit card. I didn’t care about rewards—I was even ready to pay a 3.5% markup fee. I just needed a card to get started.

As expected, all the banks rejected me again. Income tax returns didn’t help either. Finally, the local ICICI Bank manager offered me a deal: If I bought a ULIP plan with a ₹3 lakh annual premium, they’d issue me a Coral credit card. I immediately agreed. And 15 days later, my first credit card arrived.

In 2016, I launched my Amazon US store.

Fast forward to 2019—I wanted to share something useful about credit cards with others. So I started the TechnoFino YouTube channel.
In late 2020, I attempted to build a community website. It didn’t work—too much spam, no engagement. In 2021, I tried again. Failed. Tried again in the last quarter of the same year. Failed again.
Finally, in 2022, I launched the current version of the TechnoFino Community website—and today, it’s used by over 50,000 members and many guest readers.

And the rest? Well, you guys already know that part.

Right now, I have 63 credit cards—all primary cards, no add-ons counted.

That’s my story. Now, I’d absolutely love to hear yours. Drop your story in the comments—it’ll be fun to see how all of us started and how far we’ve come.
 
Hey TFCians,

Here we are—a community of more than 50,000 like-minded individuals, discussing credit cards and banking every single day. But today, let’s get a bit personal. Let’s talk about how you started your credit card journey.

This isn't just about which card you got first or what your initial experience was. Let’s go deeper—where did you first hear about credit cards? What were your expectations? What was your background at that point in life?

I’ll start this fun by sharing my own story…

I’m Sumanta Mandal, as many of you know. Born in 1993 (7 years before 2000... Thala for a reason, lol) in a lower-middle-class family.
I started freelancing at the age of 16, back in 2009. I used to work on oDesk (which is now Upwork), as well as platforms like Microworkers and Amazon Mechanical Turk. One of the biggest challenges back then was getting paid. There was PayPal, which allowed withdrawals in India, and AlertPay, which didn't.

At that time, I used my father's SBI bank account for withdrawals. But PayPal would often ask for verification, and back then, it only supported debit cards from HDFC, ICICI, and Axis Bank. So, I convinced my father to open an HDFC Bank account in his name—just to get the right debit card. And that was the spark. That was when my interest in the banking system truly began.

On my 18th birthday in 2011, the first thing I did was apply for a PAN card. The same day, I applied for a Voter ID card (even though it wasn't needed to open a bank account). After getting my PAN, I opened an Axis Bank student account with a ₹2,500 minimum balance. That was my very first bank account. Then came an SBI savings account. And soon after that, I started opening accounts in almost every PSU bank—Allahabad Bank, Bank of India, United Bank—you name it. By 2012, I had most of them.

By that time, I had become one of the top-earning member of Microworkers in India—among the top 3, actually. I was also rated as a “Rising Talent” on oDesk and had clocked over 1,500 hours of work. I mostly did website management and research-related work.

In 2013, I started hiring people to help with one of my client’s projects. I needed a credit card to pay them. Sure, I could use my debit card—but a credit card made more sense. That’s when I started learning more about credit cards. But coming from a lower-middle-class family, none of my family members had ever even thought of having one.
I approached Axis Bank, ICICI Bank, and a few others. All rejected me—because I didn’t have a stable income. Freelance income had no value in the eyes of banks back then. I was making around ₹40,000/month, but it didn’t matter.

That same year, I got an offer from an Australian company through oDesk. They hired me to manage their Amazon store, handle shipments, communicate with factories in China, and conduct research. They were paying me around ₹85,000/month—but still, no bank wanted to issue me a credit card.

The company owner, though, was incredibly supportive. She constantly encouraged me to start my own business and begin selling on Amazon.

In 2015, I made the decision to start my own Amazon store. But for that, I desperately needed a credit card. I didn’t care about rewards—I was even ready to pay a 3.5% markup fee. I just needed a card to get started.

As expected, all the banks rejected me again. Income tax returns didn’t help either. Finally, the local ICICI Bank manager offered me a deal: If I bought a ULIP plan with a ₹3 lakh annual premium, they’d issue me a Coral credit card. I immediately agreed. And 15 days later, my first credit card arrived.

In 2016, I launched my Amazon US store.

Fast forward to 2019—I wanted to share something useful about credit cards with others. So I started the TechnoFino YouTube channel.
In late 2020, I attempted to build a community website. It didn’t work—too much spam, no engagement. In 2021, I tried again. Failed. Tried again in the last quarter of the same year. Failed again.
Finally, in 2022, I launched the current version of the TechnoFino Community website—and today, it’s used by over 50,000 members and many guest readers.

And the rest? Well, you guys already know that part.

Right now, I have 63 credit cards—all primary cards, no add-ons counted.

That’s my story. Now, I’d absolutely love to hear yours. Drop your story in the comments—it’ll be fun to see how all of us started and how far we’ve come.
What a never give up personality you have. Thanks for not giving up on this community. I hope to inculcate some of that attitude in me too.
 
what do you sell on your amazon store?...also pls tell us how did you manage logistical issues when opening accounts etc. in amazon US...
 
Hey TFCians,

Here we are—a community of more than 50,000 like-minded individuals, discussing credit cards and banking every single day. But today, let’s get a bit personal. Let’s talk about how you started your credit card journey.

This isn't just about which card you got first or what your initial experience was. Let’s go deeper—where did you first hear about credit cards? What were your expectations? What was your background at that point in life?

I’ll start this fun by sharing my own story…

I’m Sumanta Mandal, as many of you know. Born in 1993 (on the 7th of a month... 7 years before 2000... Thala for a reason, lol) in a lower-middle-class family.
I started freelancing at the age of 16, back in 2009. I used to work on oDesk (which is now Upwork), as well as platforms like Microworkers and Amazon Mechanical Turk. One of the biggest challenges back then was getting paid. There was PayPal, which allowed withdrawals in India, and AlertPay, which didn't.

At that time, I used my father's SBI bank account for withdrawals. But PayPal would often ask for verification, and back then, it only supported debit cards from HDFC, ICICI, and Axis Bank. So, I convinced my father to open an HDFC Bank account in his name—just to get the right debit card. And that was the spark. That was when my interest in the banking system truly began.

On my 18th birthday in 2011, the first thing I did was apply for a PAN card. The same day, I applied for a Voter ID card (even though it wasn't needed to open a bank account). After getting my PAN, I opened an Axis Bank student account with a ₹2,500 minimum balance. That was my very first bank account. Then came an SBI savings account. And soon after that, I started opening accounts in almost every PSU bank—Allahabad Bank, Bank of India, United Bank—you name it. By 2012, I had most of them.

By that time, I had become one of the top-earning member of Microworkers in India—among the top 3, actually. I was also rated as a “Rising Talent” on oDesk and had clocked over 1,500 hours of work. I mostly did website management and research-related work.

In 2013, I started hiring people to help with one of my client’s projects. I needed a credit card to pay them. Sure, I could use my debit card—but a credit card made more sense. That’s when I started learning more about credit cards. But coming from a lower-middle-class family, none of my family members had ever even thought of having one.
I approached Axis Bank, ICICI Bank, and a few others. All rejected me—because I didn’t have a stable income. Freelance income had no value in the eyes of banks back then. I was making around ₹40,000/month, but it didn’t matter.

That same year, I got an offer from an Australian company through oDesk. They hired me to manage their Amazon store, handle shipments, communicate with factories in China, and conduct research. They were paying me around ₹85,000/month—but still, no bank wanted to issue me a credit card.

The company owner, though, was incredibly supportive. She constantly encouraged me to start my own business and begin selling on Amazon.

In 2015, I made the decision to start my own Amazon store. But for that, I desperately needed a credit card. I didn’t care about rewards—I was even ready to pay a 3.5% markup fee. I just needed a card to get started.

As expected, all the banks rejected me again. Income tax returns didn’t help either. Finally, the local ICICI Bank manager offered me a deal: If I bought a ULIP plan with a ₹3 lakh annual premium, they’d issue me a Coral credit card. I immediately agreed. And 15 days later, my first credit card arrived.

In 2016, I launched my Amazon US store.

Fast forward to 2019—I wanted to share something useful about credit cards with others. So I started the TechnoFino YouTube channel.
In late 2020, I attempted to build a community website. It didn’t work—too much spam, no engagement. In 2021, I tried again. Failed. Tried again in the last quarter of the same year. Failed again.
Finally, in 2022, I launched the current version of the TechnoFino Community website—and today, it’s used by over 50,000 members and many guest readers.

And the rest? Well, you guys already know that part.

Right now, I have 63 credit cards—all primary cards, no add-ons counted.

That’s my story. Now, I’d absolutely love to hear yours. Drop your story in the comments—it’ll be fun to see how all of us started and how far we’ve come.
Very nice interesting story 👍🎉🎉
Now a boring one-

1:Bank of India : My dad opened minor account and introduced me with the banking. Main account. (20 years old)

2:Newest Ujjivan SFB- (2018).

Resting in Peace- Accounts

1-UTI bank(Axis now) Salary
2-HDFC Salary
3-Citibank- Salary
4-ICICI - Student
5- Airtel Payment Bank, Closed 8-10 years back due to RBI'S restrictions.

CC- 1 HDFC - 10+ Years
Pause ⏸️

Again took admission in Nursery Joined TF Jan 25.
Hender Jigyasu (Curious, Learner)
 
Starting with a little off-topic comment. Most people think that you need to be 18 year old to get a PAN, that is incorrect, even a 2 day old child can have a PAN, just that instead of photo on it, it will say minor.

My first credit card came when I joined Mr first job in a big US IT MNC in 2001, but I had no idea about rewards etc. Though credit cards were a fancy thing those days, well so were mobile phones.

It wasn't until 2006 when I started traveling a lot for work that I realized the reward potential. That's when I got SCB Titanium (not sure) with 5% cash back.

Collected tons of points on the card in next 2-3 years, most were used to get gift cards.

My next milestone came when I moved to the US on 2009 and started realizing that I could earn ridiculous amounts of Hotel/Airline points by just getting new cards, charge 2 months rent on them and close before they got the Anniversary. Hilton, American Airlines, British, United, Southwest, Radisson, Chase sapphire and many more. Paid a 2 week europe vacation and quite a few US domestic ones using card points and certs.

Fast forward to 2015, returned to India and took a DCB when it was in its infancy. Tons of categories with 10x unlimited rewards. Most important were Reliance Digital and Snapdeal. We needed a lot of stuff like electronics, furniture etc and unlimited 10x was godsend.

Now we use Infinia for GCs, flights etc and Axis Olympus as everyday card. Still have Marriott cards in US for ENC & FNA
 
Hey TFCians,

Here we are—a community of more than 50,000 like-minded individuals, discussing credit cards and banking every single day. But today, let’s get a bit personal. Let’s talk about how you started your credit card journey.

This isn't just about which card you got first or what your initial experience was. Let’s go deeper—where did you first hear about credit cards? What were your expectations? What was your background at that point in life?

I’ll start this fun by sharing my own story…

I’m Sumanta Mandal, as many of you know. Born in 1993 (7 years before 2000... Thala for a reason, lol) in a lower-middle-class family.
I started freelancing at the age of 16, back in 2009. I used to work on oDesk (which is now Upwork), as well as platforms like Microworkers and Amazon Mechanical Turk. One of the biggest challenges back then was getting paid. There was PayPal, which allowed withdrawals in India, and AlertPay, which didn't.

At that time, I used my father's SBI bank account for withdrawals. But PayPal would often ask for verification, and back then, it only supported debit cards from HDFC, ICICI, and Axis Bank. So, I convinced my father to open an HDFC Bank account in his name—just to get the right debit card. And that was the spark. That was when my interest in the banking system truly began.

On my 18th birthday in 2011, the first thing I did was apply for a PAN card. The same day, I applied for a Voter ID card (even though it wasn't needed to open a bank account). After getting my PAN, I opened an Axis Bank student account with a ₹2,500 minimum balance. That was my very first bank account. Then came an SBI savings account. And soon after that, I started opening accounts in almost every PSU bank—Allahabad Bank, Bank of India, United Bank—you name it. By 2012, I had most of them.

By that time, I had become one of the top-earning member of Microworkers in India—among the top 3, actually. I was also rated as a “Rising Talent” on oDesk and had clocked over 1,500 hours of work. I mostly did website management and research-related work.

In 2013, I started hiring people to help with one of my client’s projects. I needed a credit card to pay them. Sure, I could use my debit card—but a credit card made more sense. That’s when I started learning more about credit cards. But coming from a lower-middle-class family, none of my family members had ever even thought of having one.
I approached Axis Bank, ICICI Bank, and a few others. All rejected me—because I didn’t have a stable income. Freelance income had no value in the eyes of banks back then. I was making around ₹40,000/month, but it didn’t matter.

That same year, I got an offer from an Australian company through oDesk. They hired me to manage their Amazon store, handle shipments, communicate with factories in China, and conduct research. They were paying me around ₹85,000/month—but still, no bank wanted to issue me a credit card.

The company owner, though, was incredibly supportive. She constantly encouraged me to start my own business and begin selling on Amazon.

In 2015, I made the decision to start my own Amazon store. But for that, I desperately needed a credit card. I didn’t care about rewards—I was even ready to pay a 3.5% markup fee. I just needed a card to get started.

As expected, all the banks rejected me again. Income tax returns didn’t help either. Finally, the local ICICI Bank manager offered me a deal: If I bought a ULIP plan with a ₹3 lakh annual premium, they’d issue me a Coral credit card. I immediately agreed. And 15 days later, my first credit card arrived.

In 2016, I launched my Amazon US store.

Fast forward to 2019—I wanted to share something useful about credit cards with others. So I started the TechnoFino YouTube channel.
In late 2020, I attempted to build a community website. It didn’t work—too much spam, no engagement. In 2021, I tried again. Failed. Tried again in the last quarter of the same year. Failed again.
Finally, in 2022, I launched the current version of the TechnoFino Community website—and today, it’s used by over 50,000 members and many guest readers.

And the rest? Well, you guys already know that part.

Right now, I have 63 credit cards—all primary cards, no add-ons counted.

That’s my story. Now, I’d absolutely love to hear yours. Drop your story in the comments—it’ll be fun to see how all of us started and how far we’ve come.
Your story is truly inspiring, Sumanta bhai. This is the first time I’ve come to know your actual age and the deeper journey behind your passion. The determination you had for getting your first credit card a few years ago—I can completely relate. I went through a similar phase myself, especially during the early years of my journey.

While my experience started a bit later, and I may not yet have the depth of knowledge or accomplishments to fully share my own story, I hope that one day I too will be able to share it on a platform like this.

Thank you for opening up about your experiences and the challenges you faced in getting your first card. I truly understand the emotions behind it. Your journey will surely motivate and inspire many others.
 
Hey TFCians,

Here we are—a community of more than 50,000 like-minded individuals, discussing credit cards and banking every single day. But today, let’s get a bit personal. Let’s talk about how you started your credit card journey.

This isn't just about which card you got first or what your initial experience was. Let’s go deeper—where did you first hear about credit cards? What were your expectations? What was your background at that point in life?

I’ll start this fun by sharing my own story…

I’m Sumanta Mandal, as many of you know. Born in 1993 (7 years before 2000... Thala for a reason, lol) in a lower-middle-class family.
I started freelancing at the age of 16, back in 2009. I used to work on oDesk (which is now Upwork), as well as platforms like Microworkers and Amazon Mechanical Turk. One of the biggest challenges back then was getting paid. There was PayPal, which allowed withdrawals in India, and AlertPay, which didn't.

At that time, I used my father's SBI bank account for withdrawals. But PayPal would often ask for verification, and back then, it only supported debit cards from HDFC, ICICI, and Axis Bank. So, I convinced my father to open an HDFC Bank account in his name—just to get the right debit card. And that was the spark. That was when my interest in the banking system truly began.

On my 18th birthday in 2011, the first thing I did was apply for a PAN card. The same day, I applied for a Voter ID card (even though it wasn't needed to open a bank account). After getting my PAN, I opened an Axis Bank student account with a ₹2,500 minimum balance. That was my very first bank account. Then came an SBI savings account. And soon after that, I started opening accounts in almost every PSU bank—Allahabad Bank, Bank of India, United Bank—you name it. By 2012, I had most of them.

By that time, I had become one of the top-earning member of Microworkers in India—among the top 3, actually. I was also rated as a “Rising Talent” on oDesk and had clocked over 1,500 hours of work. I mostly did website management and research-related work.

In 2013, I started hiring people to help with one of my client’s projects. I needed a credit card to pay them. Sure, I could use my debit card—but a credit card made more sense. That’s when I started learning more about credit cards. But coming from a lower-middle-class family, none of my family members had ever even thought of having one.
I approached Axis Bank, ICICI Bank, and a few others. All rejected me—because I didn’t have a stable income. Freelance income had no value in the eyes of banks back then. I was making around ₹40,000/month, but it didn’t matter.

That same year, I got an offer from an Australian company through oDesk. They hired me to manage their Amazon store, handle shipments, communicate with factories in China, and conduct research. They were paying me around ₹85,000/month—but still, no bank wanted to issue me a credit card.

The company owner, though, was incredibly supportive. She constantly encouraged me to start my own business and begin selling on Amazon.

In 2015, I made the decision to start my own Amazon store. But for that, I desperately needed a credit card. I didn’t care about rewards—I was even ready to pay a 3.5% markup fee. I just needed a card to get started.

As expected, all the banks rejected me again. Income tax returns didn’t help either. Finally, the local ICICI Bank manager offered me a deal: If I bought a ULIP plan with a ₹3 lakh annual premium, they’d issue me a Coral credit card. I immediately agreed. And 15 days later, my first credit card arrived.

In 2016, I launched my Amazon US store.

Fast forward to 2019—I wanted to share something useful about credit cards with others. So I started the TechnoFino YouTube channel.
In late 2020, I attempted to build a community website. It didn’t work—too much spam, no engagement. In 2021, I tried again. Failed. Tried again in the last quarter of the same year. Failed again.
Finally, in 2022, I launched the current version of the TechnoFino Community website—and today, it’s used by over 50,000 members and many guest readers.

And the rest? Well, you guys already know that part.

Right now, I have 63 credit cards—all primary cards, no add-ons counted.

That’s my story. Now, I’d absolutely love to hear yours. Drop your story in the comments—it’ll be fun to see how all of us started and how far we’ve come.
Now we are harnessing the experience you gathered all those years whoaa
 
Hey TFCians,

Here we are—a community of more than 50,000 like-minded individuals, discussing credit cards and banking every single day. But today, let’s get a bit personal. Let’s talk about how you started your credit card journey.

This isn't just about which card you got first or what your initial experience was. Let’s go deeper—where did you first hear about credit cards? What were your expectations? What was your background at that point in life?

I’ll start this fun by sharing my own story…

I’m Sumanta Mandal, as many of you know. Born in 1993 (7 years before 2000... Thala for a reason, lol) in a lower-middle-class family.
I started freelancing at the age of 16, back in 2009. I used to work on oDesk (which is now Upwork), as well as platforms like Microworkers and Amazon Mechanical Turk. One of the biggest challenges back then was getting paid. There was PayPal, which allowed withdrawals in India, and AlertPay, which didn't.

At that time, I used my father's SBI bank account for withdrawals. But PayPal would often ask for verification, and back then, it only supported debit cards from HDFC, ICICI, and Axis Bank. So, I convinced my father to open an HDFC Bank account in his name—just to get the right debit card. And that was the spark. That was when my interest in the banking system truly began.

On my 18th birthday in 2011, the first thing I did was apply for a PAN card. The same day, I applied for a Voter ID card (even though it wasn't needed to open a bank account). After getting my PAN, I opened an Axis Bank student account with a ₹2,500 minimum balance. That was my very first bank account. Then came an SBI savings account. And soon after that, I started opening accounts in almost every PSU bank—Allahabad Bank, Bank of India, United Bank—you name it. By 2012, I had most of them.

By that time, I had become one of the top-earning member of Microworkers in India—among the top 3, actually. I was also rated as a “Rising Talent” on oDesk and had clocked over 1,500 hours of work. I mostly did website management and research-related work.

In 2013, I started hiring people to help with one of my client’s projects. I needed a credit card to pay them. Sure, I could use my debit card—but a credit card made more sense. That’s when I started learning more about credit cards. But coming from a lower-middle-class family, none of my family members had ever even thought of having one.
I approached Axis Bank, ICICI Bank, and a few others. All rejected me—because I didn’t have a stable income. Freelance income had no value in the eyes of banks back then. I was making around ₹40,000/month, but it didn’t matter.

That same year, I got an offer from an Australian company through oDesk. They hired me to manage their Amazon store, handle shipments, communicate with factories in China, and conduct research. They were paying me around ₹85,000/month—but still, no bank wanted to issue me a credit card.

The company owner, though, was incredibly supportive. She constantly encouraged me to start my own business and begin selling on Amazon.

In 2015, I made the decision to start my own Amazon store. But for that, I desperately needed a credit card. I didn’t care about rewards—I was even ready to pay a 3.5% markup fee. I just needed a card to get started.

As expected, all the banks rejected me again. Income tax returns didn’t help either. Finally, the local ICICI Bank manager offered me a deal: If I bought a ULIP plan with a ₹3 lakh annual premium, they’d issue me a Coral credit card. I immediately agreed. And 15 days later, my first credit card arrived.

In 2016, I launched my Amazon US store.

Fast forward to 2019—I wanted to share something useful about credit cards with others. So I started the TechnoFino YouTube channel.
In late 2020, I attempted to build a community website. It didn’t work—too much spam, no engagement. In 2021, I tried again. Failed. Tried again in the last quarter of the same year. Failed again.
Finally, in 2022, I launched the current version of the TechnoFino Community website—and today, it’s used by over 50,000 members and many guest readers.

And the rest? Well, you guys already know that part.

Right now, I have 63 credit cards—all primary cards, no add-ons counted.

That’s my story. Now, I’d absolutely love to hear yours. Drop your story in the comments—it’ll be fun to see how all of us started and how far we’ve come.
Saw this thread and thought I should share my story too. It’s a mix-up of my life and dreams, both of which are interlinked, so I am trying to share as short as possible. Although I will try to keep it short, sorry in advance if it’s lengthy.

Early years of my life and my fate:
It was the year 1991 when I was born, a Kumar Sanu fan 🙂. Schooling - Kendriya Vidyalaya 2008. Medical aspirant - selected in MBBS 2009 (AIPMT, now NEET), but KRISHNA had something else decided for me.

I got a chronic disease in July 2009, and was on bed rest till 2014. For six years, my life was almost on bed. Although in 2011 I did try to at least get enrolled in general graduation in a local college, soon illness struck again, and I wasn’t able to clear one semester.

Anyway, I was off the track for a moment. Sorry about that. So, my banking fascination began in the year 2003, 2004 when I first saw an ATM and ATM card (of course, my father’s, SBI). Fast forward, soon I became 18 years old. I asked my father to make a PAN card. Since I was on bed rest, it was not possible for me to visit the PAN card office, but my papa arranged a personal visit on special request to my home to take the necessary documents. Now the race began.

At that time, you needed an introducer to open an account in PSU banks. But unfortunately, since I was on bed rest, it became difficult for me to open accounts. Then came a boy (he was my best friends colleague). He had an account in BOM (BANK OF MAHARASHTRA), so he took the form and filled in the necessary details and introduced me. The account opening amount was 100 rupees, and the ATM took 3 months to deliver, that too you had to receive from the branch. And since there was not a single ATM of BOM in my city, there was no provision for even ATM PIN change. In 2010, I forced my father to open my account in SBI, so he did (he is a retired class A officer, so again because of his influence special request, a bank employee visited home and opened my account). Instantly, the kit handled to me and name on the ATM card were BRANCH MANAGER 😄 (Maestro card). After that, with the help of my dear friend (late Sumit Tripathi, died in 2010, MBBS 1st year), I opened my account in PNB and CANARA. In 2011, I opened my first private bank account in AXIS (then it was UTI BANK, MAB 5K).

In 2012, I first saw a credit card in my JEEJA JI hand (SBI GOLD AND MORE card). Instantly, I decided I wanted one, but who will give a credit card to a person who is not able to leave the bed without help, let alone have any ITR or JOB? But I was desperate, and now I don’t have any one to help me (since my friend died). My elder brother was in Singapore (JOB), my sister married, my father was posted in another city, and all my other friends and cousins are now in jobs. Then came my MOTHER INDIA. She visited the bank and got me a personal to visit home. He opened a FD-backed (3L FD, limit 2.6 lakh) card (GOLD AND MORE card, now discontinued).

In 2014, finally KRISHNA laid his AASHIRVAAD on me, and I was up, joined the nearest college (MBBS age over, BRAHMAN, so no reservation), but still, I had to fight mental depression because of a long-time illness, so I had to visit a neuropsychiatrist weekly, restricted me to stay in my hometown. Anyway, I enrolled for graduation in 2014, passed out in late 2017 because of a college delayed session. I wasn’t able to change the college, even though I got rank 3 in the Central University Combined Entrance Exam. In 2022, I got my master’s (although the session was 2017-2019, but again delayed session and COVID too). Meanwhile in 2015 opened my account in HDFC BANK, after few years in 2017 got a call from HDFC BANK that I am eligible for a credit card I told him that I am not employed, he said it is pre-approved and lifetime free, at that time I didn’t even know the exact meaning of pre-approved but I got the card limit 3L, BUSINESS REGALIA. In 2020 opened my account in ICICI bank, then kotak. Currently have 9 functional/active account.

Turning point year 2022:
In 2022, I got qualified in NTA UGC NET (ASSISTANT PROFESSOR), currently pursuing my research doctoral work and teaching on AD-HOC/need based in a government college (till permanent appointment). Salary is 55K/month, which is not enough to get the most of the premium card.

In the year 2022, I published a book (AMAZON BESTSELLER for two weeks straight), currently selling on all online and offline stores.

Back in 2020 my mother gave me 7L to book a FD on my name, I said give to me instead I want to start my own business, since all my friends are now in job (BTECH COMPUTER), they were earning more than 1 lakh/month. And here I was just completed my degrees, not even applicable for any entrance exam and most of the job because of age. Anyway I started my own business from that money mostly freelancing work and started to earn more than 1L/month, more than my first/actual salary.

Influence of Apple Card and my first metal card:
In 2020, Apple introduced Apple Card in titanium. Instantly, my whole body was in utter ecstasy to get this, but unfortunately, that’s not available in India. Then I started to find out about other cards and discovered that there are other cards of metal, but in India, only ONE CARD is available. So, it was my first metal card and third credit card in my list.

Journey to next 25 cards:
In 2023, I came across a video on YouTube where a guy was talking about credit cards and how getting credit cards is his hobby. (I was searching for AXIS MAGNUS on Google and it directed me to YouTube, and I didn’t even know that you have these kinds of videos too.) Suddenly, I was relieved that I am not alone in the world of credit card hobbyists. And that YouTube personality was any guess? Of course; TECHNOFINO, Sumanta.

Influence of TECHNOFINO:
Although I was in the credit card game, with little knowledge, I wasn’t fully aware of its perks and benefits. But with the help of Technofino, I realised that there is more than aesthetic/hobby value in credit cards. In the last two years, I have saved more than 3L rupees.

Journey to premium card:
Soon I upgraded my cards BUSINESS REGALIA into DCB METAL, got BIZ BLACK, AND TIMES BLACK, IDFC ASHVA, etc. Currently in pursuit of EPM and INFINIA.

MY DREAMS
Two things which I love most are first wildlife (pursuing my doctoral work on this) and CREDIT CARDS, and there is a third too, visit ICELAND and see AURORA BOREALIS (NORTHERN LIGHTS), for which I am saving money. Since I am yet single, who is going to marry a person who was ill for six years 😆, most of them run like fire-lightened tail horses once they hear my illness history, anyway there loss 🤣, so solo travelling cost I calculated almost 4L, so I am not far from fulfilling my third dream.

I don't know when my illness strikes again or how much time I do have, so just wanna fullfill all my dreams before that day comes. lets see how much further I can go.

NOTE - My family is upper middle class. they tried to sponsor my trip to Iceland, but I always denied them because I want to go on my terms with my own earned money. I want to feel that feeling of satisfaction when you achieve something on your own. After all, I am not a charity case.

THESE ALL ARE POSSIBLE BECAUSE OF THIS COMMUNITY, SO MANY MANY THANKS TO EVERYONE.
🙏🏻
 
Saw this thread and thought I should share my story too. It’s a mix-up of my life and dreams, both of which are interlinked, so I am trying to share as short as possible. Although I will try to keep it short, sorry in advance if it’s lengthy.

Early years of my life and my fate:
It was the year 1991 when I was born, a Kumar Sanu fan 🙂. Schooling - Kendriya Vidyalaya 2008. Medical aspirant - selected in MBBS 2009 (AIPMT, now NEET), but KRISHNA had something else decided for me.

I got a chronic disease in July 2009, and was on bed rest till 2014. For six years, my life was almost on bed. Although in 2011 I did try to at least get enrolled in general graduation in a local college, soon illness struck again, and I wasn’t able to clear one semester.

Anyway, I was off the track for a moment. Sorry about that. So, my banking fascination began in the year 2003, 2004 when I first saw an ATM and ATM card (of course, my father’s, SBI). Fast forward, soon I became 18 years old. I asked my father to make a PAN card. Since I was on bed rest, it was not possible for me to visit the PAN card office, but my papa arranged a personal visit on special request to my home to take the necessary documents. Now the race began.

At that time, you needed an introducer to open an account in PSU banks. But unfortunately, since I was on bed rest, it became difficult for me to open accounts. Then came a boy (he was my best friends colleague). He had an account in BOM (BANK OF MAHARASHTRA), so he took the form and filled in the necessary details and introduced me. The account opening amount was 100 rupees, and the ATM took 3 months to deliver, that too you had to receive from the branch. And since there was not a single ATM of BOM in my city, there was no provision for even ATM PIN change. In 2010, I forced my father to open my account in SBI, so he did (he is a retired class A officer, so again because of his influence special request, a bank employee visited home and opened my account). Instantly, the kit handled to me and name on the ATM card were BRANCH MANAGER 😄 (Maestro card). After that, with the help of my dear friend (late Sumit Tripathi, died in 2010, MBBS 1st year), I opened my account in PNB and CANARA. In 2011, I opened my first private bank account in AXIS (then it was UTI BANK, MAB 5K).

In 2012, I first saw a credit card in my JEEJA JI hand (SBI GOLD AND MORE card). Instantly, I decided I wanted one, but who will give a credit card to a person who is not able to leave the bed without help, let alone have any ITR or JOB? But I was desperate, and now I don’t have any one to help me (since my friend died). My elder brother was in Singapore (JOB), my sister married, my father was posted in another city, and all my other friends and cousins are now in jobs. Then came my MOTHER INDIA. She visited the bank and got me a personal to visit home. He opened a FD-backed (3L FD, limit 2.6 lakh) card (GOLD AND MORE card, now discontinued).

In 2014, finally KRISHNA laid his AASHIRVAAD on me, and I was up, joined the nearest college (MBBS age over, BRAHMAN, so no reservation), but still, I had to fight mental depression because of a long-time illness, so I had to visit a neuropsychiatrist weekly, restricted me to stay in my hometown. Anyway, I enrolled for graduation in 2014, passed out in late 2017 because of a college delayed session. I wasn’t able to change the college, even though I got rank 3 in the Central University Combined Entrance Exam. In 2022, I got my master’s (although the session was 2017-2019, but again delayed session and COVID too). Meanwhile in 2015 opened my account in HDFC BANK, after few years in 2017 got a call from HDFC BANK that I am eligible for a credit card I told him that I am not employed, he said it is pre-approved and lifetime free, at that time I didn’t even know the exact meaning of pre-approved but I got the card limit 3L, BUSINESS REGALIA. In 2020 opened my account in ICICI bank, then kotak. Currently have 9 functional/active account.

Turning point year 2022:
In 2022, I got qualified in NTA UGC NET (ASSISTANT PROFESSOR), currently pursuing my research doctoral work and teaching on AD-HOC/need based in a government college (till permanent appointment). Salary is 55K/month, which is not enough to get the most of the premium card.

In the year 2022, I published a book (AMAZON BESTSELLER for two weeks straight), currently selling on all online and offline stores.

Back in 2020 my mother gave me 7L to book a FD on my name, I said give to me instead I want to start my own business, since all my friends are now in job (BTECH COMPUTER), they were earning more than 1 lakh/month. And here I was just completed my degrees, not even applicable for any entrance exam and most of the job because of age. Anyway I started my own business from that money mostly freelancing work and started to earn more than 1L/month, more than my first/actual salary.

Influence of Apple Card and my first metal card:
In 2020, Apple introduced Apple Card in titanium. Instantly, my whole body was in utter ecstasy to get this, but unfortunately, that’s not available in India. Then I started to find out about other cards and discovered that there are other cards of metal, but in India, only ONE CARD is available. So, it was my first metal card and third credit card in my list.

Journey to next 25 cards:
In 2023, I came across a video on YouTube where a guy was talking about credit cards and how getting credit cards is his hobby. (I was searching for AXIS MAGNUS on Google and it directed me to YouTube, and I didn’t even know that you have these kinds of videos too.) Suddenly, I was relieved that I am not alone in the world of credit card hobbyists. And that YouTube personality was any guess? Of course; TECHNOFINO, Sumanta.

Influence of TECHNOFINO:
Although I was in the credit card game, with little knowledge, I wasn’t fully aware of its perks and benefits. But with the help of Technofino, I realised that there is more than aesthetic/hobby value in credit cards. In the last two years, I have saved more than 3L rupees.

Journey to premium card:
Soon I upgraded my cards BUSINESS REGALIA into DCB METAL, got BIZ BLACK, AND TIMES BLACK, IDFC ASHVA, etc. Currently in pursuit of EPM and INFINIA.

MY DREAMS
Two things which I love most are first wildlife (pursuing my doctoral work on this) and CREDIT CARDS, and there is a third too, visit ICELAND and see AURORA BOREALIS (NORTHERN LIGHTS), for which I am saving money. Since I am yet single, who is going to marry a person who was ill for six years 😆, most of them run like fire-lightened tail horses once they hear my illness history, anyway there loss 🤣, so solo travelling cost I calculated almost 4L, so I am not far from fulfilling my third dream.

I don't know when my illness strikes again or how much time I do have, so just wanna fullfill all my dreams before that day comes. lets see how much further I can go.

NOTE - My family is upper middle class. they tried to sponsor my trip to Iceland, but I always denied them because I want to go on my terms with my own earned money. I want to feel that feeling of satisfaction when you achieve something on your own. After all, I am not a charity case.

THESE ALL ARE POSSIBLE BECAUSE OF THIS COMMUNITY, SO MANY MANY THANKS TO EVERYONE.
🙏🏻
Honestly, your story left me speechless. It hit me hard—on an emotional level.

The way you’ve turned all that pain into strength, turned years of being stuck in bed into a life filled with dreams, passion, and purpose… it’s nothing short of incredible. And what really struck me is that, after everything you’ve been through, you’re still pushing forward, still dreaming big. That kind of resilience? It’s rare. It’s inspiring.
Knowing that TechnoFino played even a small role in your journey genuinely means the world to me.

Your decision to chase your dreams—on your own terms—is powerful. That image of you standing under the Northern Lights in Iceland, funded by your own hard work… gave me goosebumps. That’s not just a dream, that’s a statement.

I’m honestly so proud that our community could be a part of your story. You deserve to be heard by many more people. And someday, I really hope we cross paths in person. I’d love to shake hands with someone who's shown this much grit and heart.

Until then—just know this, I’m cheering you on, every step of the way.
 
Saw this thread and thought I should share my story too. It’s a mix-up of my life and dreams, both of which are interlinked, so I am trying to share as short as possible. Although I will try to keep it short, sorry in advance if it’s lengthy.

Early years of my life and my fate:
It was the year 1991 when I was born, a Kumar Sanu fan 🙂. Schooling - Kendriya Vidyalaya 2008. Medical aspirant - selected in MBBS 2009 (AIPMT, now NEET), but KRISHNA had something else decided for me.

I got a chronic disease in July 2009, and was on bed rest till 2014. For six years, my life was almost on bed. Although in 2011 I did try to at least get enrolled in general graduation in a local college, soon illness struck again, and I wasn’t able to clear one semester.

Anyway, I was off the track for a moment. Sorry about that. So, my banking fascination began in the year 2003, 2004 when I first saw an ATM and ATM card (of course, my father’s, SBI). Fast forward, soon I became 18 years old. I asked my father to make a PAN card. Since I was on bed rest, it was not possible for me to visit the PAN card office, but my papa arranged a personal visit on special request to my home to take the necessary documents. Now the race began.

At that time, you needed an introducer to open an account in PSU banks. But unfortunately, since I was on bed rest, it became difficult for me to open accounts. Then came a boy (he was my best friends colleague). He had an account in BOM (BANK OF MAHARASHTRA), so he took the form and filled in the necessary details and introduced me. The account opening amount was 100 rupees, and the ATM took 3 months to deliver, that too you had to receive from the branch. And since there was not a single ATM of BOM in my city, there was no provision for even ATM PIN change. In 2010, I forced my father to open my account in SBI, so he did (he is a retired class A officer, so again because of his influence special request, a bank employee visited home and opened my account). Instantly, the kit handled to me and name on the ATM card were BRANCH MANAGER 😄 (Maestro card). After that, with the help of my dear friend (late Sumit Tripathi, died in 2010, MBBS 1st year), I opened my account in PNB and CANARA. In 2011, I opened my first private bank account in AXIS (then it was UTI BANK, MAB 5K).

In 2012, I first saw a credit card in my JEEJA JI hand (SBI GOLD AND MORE card). Instantly, I decided I wanted one, but who will give a credit card to a person who is not able to leave the bed without help, let alone have any ITR or JOB? But I was desperate, and now I don’t have any one to help me (since my friend died). My elder brother was in Singapore (JOB), my sister married, my father was posted in another city, and all my other friends and cousins are now in jobs. Then came my MOTHER INDIA. She visited the bank and got me a personal to visit home. He opened a FD-backed (3L FD, limit 2.6 lakh) card (GOLD AND MORE card, now discontinued).

In 2014, finally KRISHNA laid his AASHIRVAAD on me, and I was up, joined the nearest college (MBBS age over, BRAHMAN, so no reservation), but still, I had to fight mental depression because of a long-time illness, so I had to visit a neuropsychiatrist weekly, restricted me to stay in my hometown. Anyway, I enrolled for graduation in 2014, passed out in late 2017 because of a college delayed session. I wasn’t able to change the college, even though I got rank 3 in the Central University Combined Entrance Exam. In 2022, I got my master’s (although the session was 2017-2019, but again delayed session and COVID too). Meanwhile in 2015 opened my account in HDFC BANK, after few years in 2017 got a call from HDFC BANK that I am eligible for a credit card I told him that I am not employed, he said it is pre-approved and lifetime free, at that time I didn’t even know the exact meaning of pre-approved but I got the card limit 3L, BUSINESS REGALIA. In 2020 opened my account in ICICI bank, then kotak. Currently have 9 functional/active account.

Turning point year 2022:
In 2022, I got qualified in NTA UGC NET (ASSISTANT PROFESSOR), currently pursuing my research doctoral work and teaching on AD-HOC/need based in a government college (till permanent appointment). Salary is 55K/month, which is not enough to get the most of the premium card.

In the year 2022, I published a book (AMAZON BESTSELLER for two weeks straight), currently selling on all online and offline stores.

Back in 2020 my mother gave me 7L to book a FD on my name, I said give to me instead I want to start my own business, since all my friends are now in job (BTECH COMPUTER), they were earning more than 1 lakh/month. And here I was just completed my degrees, not even applicable for any entrance exam and most of the job because of age. Anyway I started my own business from that money mostly freelancing work and started to earn more than 1L/month, more than my first/actual salary.

Influence of Apple Card and my first metal card:
In 2020, Apple introduced Apple Card in titanium. Instantly, my whole body was in utter ecstasy to get this, but unfortunately, that’s not available in India. Then I started to find out about other cards and discovered that there are other cards of metal, but in India, only ONE CARD is available. So, it was my first metal card and third credit card in my list.

Journey to next 25 cards:
In 2023, I came across a video on YouTube where a guy was talking about credit cards and how getting credit cards is his hobby. (I was searching for AXIS MAGNUS on Google and it directed me to YouTube, and I didn’t even know that you have these kinds of videos too.) Suddenly, I was relieved that I am not alone in the world of credit card hobbyists. And that YouTube personality was any guess? Of course; TECHNOFINO, Sumanta.

Influence of TECHNOFINO:
Although I was in the credit card game, with little knowledge, I wasn’t fully aware of its perks and benefits. But with the help of Technofino, I realised that there is more than aesthetic/hobby value in credit cards. In the last two years, I have saved more than 3L rupees.

Journey to premium card:
Soon I upgraded my cards BUSINESS REGALIA into DCB METAL, got BIZ BLACK, AND TIMES BLACK, IDFC ASHVA, etc. Currently in pursuit of EPM and INFINIA.

MY DREAMS
Two things which I love most are first wildlife (pursuing my doctoral work on this) and CREDIT CARDS, and there is a third too, visit ICELAND and see AURORA BOREALIS (NORTHERN LIGHTS), for which I am saving money. Since I am yet single, who is going to marry a person who was ill for six years 😆, most of them run like fire-lightened tail horses once they hear my illness history, anyway there loss 🤣, so solo travelling cost I calculated almost 4L, so I am not far from fulfilling my third dream.

I don't know when my illness strikes again or how much time I do have, so just wanna fullfill all my dreams before that day comes. lets see how much further I can go.

NOTE - My family is upper middle class. they tried to sponsor my trip to Iceland, but I always denied them because I want to go on my terms with my own earned money. I want to feel that feeling of satisfaction when you achieve something on your own. After all, I am not a charity case.

THESE ALL ARE POSSIBLE BECAUSE OF THIS COMMUNITY, SO MANY MANY THANKS TO EVERYONE.
🙏🏻
आपने तो सच में रूला दिया ।
Speechless 😶 ....
 
Saw this thread and thought I should share my story too. It’s a mix-up of my life and dreams, both of which are interlinked, so I am trying to share as short as possible. Although I will try to keep it short, sorry in advance if it’s lengthy.

Early years of my life and my fate:
It was the year 1991 when I was born, a Kumar Sanu fan 🙂. Schooling - Kendriya Vidyalaya 2008. Medical aspirant - selected in MBBS 2009 (AIPMT, now NEET), but KRISHNA had something else decided for me.

I got a chronic disease in July 2009, and was on bed rest till 2014. For six years, my life was almost on bed. Although in 2011 I did try to at least get enrolled in general graduation in a local college, soon illness struck again, and I wasn’t able to clear one semester.

Anyway, I was off the track for a moment. Sorry about that. So, my banking fascination began in the year 2003, 2004 when I first saw an ATM and ATM card (of course, my father’s, SBI). Fast forward, soon I became 18 years old. I asked my father to make a PAN card. Since I was on bed rest, it was not possible for me to visit the PAN card office, but my papa arranged a personal visit on special request to my home to take the necessary documents. Now the race began.

At that time, you needed an introducer to open an account in PSU banks. But unfortunately, since I was on bed rest, it became difficult for me to open accounts. Then came a boy (he was my best friends colleague). He had an account in BOM (BANK OF MAHARASHTRA), so he took the form and filled in the necessary details and introduced me. The account opening amount was 100 rupees, and the ATM took 3 months to deliver, that too you had to receive from the branch. And since there was not a single ATM of BOM in my city, there was no provision for even ATM PIN change. In 2010, I forced my father to open my account in SBI, so he did (he is a retired class A officer, so again because of his influence special request, a bank employee visited home and opened my account). Instantly, the kit handled to me and name on the ATM card were BRANCH MANAGER 😄 (Maestro card). After that, with the help of my dear friend (late Sumit Tripathi, died in 2010, MBBS 1st year), I opened my account in PNB and CANARA. In 2011, I opened my first private bank account in AXIS (then it was UTI BANK, MAB 5K).

In 2012, I first saw a credit card in my JEEJA JI hand (SBI GOLD AND MORE card). Instantly, I decided I wanted one, but who will give a credit card to a person who is not able to leave the bed without help, let alone have any ITR or JOB? But I was desperate, and now I don’t have any one to help me (since my friend died). My elder brother was in Singapore (JOB), my sister married, my father was posted in another city, and all my other friends and cousins are now in jobs. Then came my MOTHER INDIA. She visited the bank and got me a personal to visit home. He opened a FD-backed (3L FD, limit 2.6 lakh) card (GOLD AND MORE card, now discontinued).

In 2014, finally KRISHNA laid his AASHIRVAAD on me, and I was up, joined the nearest college (MBBS age over, BRAHMAN, so no reservation), but still, I had to fight mental depression because of a long-time illness, so I had to visit a neuropsychiatrist weekly, restricted me to stay in my hometown. Anyway, I enrolled for graduation in 2014, passed out in late 2017 because of a college delayed session. I wasn’t able to change the college, even though I got rank 3 in the Central University Combined Entrance Exam. In 2022, I got my master’s (although the session was 2017-2019, but again delayed session and COVID too). Meanwhile in 2015 opened my account in HDFC BANK, after few years in 2017 got a call from HDFC BANK that I am eligible for a credit card I told him that I am not employed, he said it is pre-approved and lifetime free, at that time I didn’t even know the exact meaning of pre-approved but I got the card limit 3L, BUSINESS REGALIA. In 2020 opened my account in ICICI bank, then kotak. Currently have 9 functional/active account.

Turning point year 2022:
In 2022, I got qualified in NTA UGC NET (ASSISTANT PROFESSOR), currently pursuing my research doctoral work and teaching on AD-HOC/need based in a government college (till permanent appointment). Salary is 55K/month, which is not enough to get the most of the premium card.

In the year 2022, I published a book (AMAZON BESTSELLER for two weeks straight), currently selling on all online and offline stores.

Back in 2020 my mother gave me 7L to book a FD on my name, I said give to me instead I want to start my own business, since all my friends are now in job (BTECH COMPUTER), they were earning more than 1 lakh/month. And here I was just completed my degrees, not even applicable for any entrance exam and most of the job because of age. Anyway I started my own business from that money mostly freelancing work and started to earn more than 1L/month, more than my first/actual salary.

Influence of Apple Card and my first metal card:
In 2020, Apple introduced Apple Card in titanium. Instantly, my whole body was in utter ecstasy to get this, but unfortunately, that’s not available in India. Then I started to find out about other cards and discovered that there are other cards of metal, but in India, only ONE CARD is available. So, it was my first metal card and third credit card in my list.

Journey to next 25 cards:
In 2023, I came across a video on YouTube where a guy was talking about credit cards and how getting credit cards is his hobby. (I was searching for AXIS MAGNUS on Google and it directed me to YouTube, and I didn’t even know that you have these kinds of videos too.) Suddenly, I was relieved that I am not alone in the world of credit card hobbyists. And that YouTube personality was any guess? Of course; TECHNOFINO, Sumanta.

Influence of TECHNOFINO:
Although I was in the credit card game, with little knowledge, I wasn’t fully aware of its perks and benefits. But with the help of Technofino, I realised that there is more than aesthetic/hobby value in credit cards. In the last two years, I have saved more than 3L rupees.

Journey to premium card:
Soon I upgraded my cards BUSINESS REGALIA into DCB METAL, got BIZ BLACK, AND TIMES BLACK, IDFC ASHVA, etc. Currently in pursuit of EPM and INFINIA.

MY DREAMS
Two things which I love most are first wildlife (pursuing my doctoral work on this) and CREDIT CARDS, and there is a third too, visit ICELAND and see AURORA BOREALIS (NORTHERN LIGHTS), for which I am saving money. Since I am yet single, who is going to marry a person who was ill for six years 😆, most of them run like fire-lightened tail horses once they hear my illness history, anyway there loss 🤣, so solo travelling cost I calculated almost 4L, so I am not far from fulfilling my third dream.

I don't know when my illness strikes again or how much time I do have, so just wanna fullfill all my dreams before that day comes. lets see how much further I can go.

NOTE - My family is upper middle class. they tried to sponsor my trip to Iceland, but I always denied them because I want to go on my terms with my own earned money. I want to feel that feeling of satisfaction when you achieve something on your own. After all, I am not a charity case.

THESE ALL ARE POSSIBLE BECAUSE OF THIS COMMUNITY, SO MANY MANY THANKS TO EVERYONE.
🙏🏻
Ultimate motivation man..just really got goosebumps after reading your such inspiring story and the way you followed throughout this journey..
This post must be featured and viral @TechnoFino dada please
 
Saw this thread and thought I should share my story too. It’s a mix-up of my life and dreams, both of which are interlinked, so I am trying to share as short as possible. Although I will try to keep it short, sorry in advance if it’s lengthy.

Early years of my life and my fate:
It was the year 1991 when I was born, a Kumar Sanu fan 🙂. Schooling - Kendriya Vidyalaya 2008. Medical aspirant - selected in MBBS 2009 (AIPMT, now NEET), but KRISHNA had something else decided for me.

I got a chronic disease in July 2009, and was on bed rest till 2014. For six years, my life was almost on bed. Although in 2011 I did try to at least get enrolled in general graduation in a local college, soon illness struck again, and I wasn’t able to clear one semester.

Anyway, I was off the track for a moment. Sorry about that. So, my banking fascination began in the year 2003, 2004 when I first saw an ATM and ATM card (of course, my father’s, SBI). Fast forward, soon I became 18 years old. I asked my father to make a PAN card. Since I was on bed rest, it was not possible for me to visit the PAN card office, but my papa arranged a personal visit on special request to my home to take the necessary documents. Now the race began.

At that time, you needed an introducer to open an account in PSU banks. But unfortunately, since I was on bed rest, it became difficult for me to open accounts. Then came a boy (he was my best friends colleague). He had an account in BOM (BANK OF MAHARASHTRA), so he took the form and filled in the necessary details and introduced me. The account opening amount was 100 rupees, and the ATM took 3 months to deliver, that too you had to receive from the branch. And since there was not a single ATM of BOM in my city, there was no provision for even ATM PIN change. In 2010, I forced my father to open my account in SBI, so he did (he is a retired class A officer, so again because of his influence special request, a bank employee visited home and opened my account). Instantly, the kit handled to me and name on the ATM card were BRANCH MANAGER 😄 (Maestro card). After that, with the help of my dear friend (late Sumit Tripathi, died in 2010, MBBS 1st year), I opened my account in PNB and CANARA. In 2011, I opened my first private bank account in AXIS (then it was UTI BANK, MAB 5K).

In 2012, I first saw a credit card in my JEEJA JI hand (SBI GOLD AND MORE card). Instantly, I decided I wanted one, but who will give a credit card to a person who is not able to leave the bed without help, let alone have any ITR or JOB? But I was desperate, and now I don’t have any one to help me (since my friend died). My elder brother was in Singapore (JOB), my sister married, my father was posted in another city, and all my other friends and cousins are now in jobs. Then came my MOTHER INDIA. She visited the bank and got me a personal to visit home. He opened a FD-backed (3L FD, limit 2.6 lakh) card (GOLD AND MORE card, now discontinued).

In 2014, finally KRISHNA laid his AASHIRVAAD on me, and I was up, joined the nearest college (MBBS age over, BRAHMAN, so no reservation), but still, I had to fight mental depression because of a long-time illness, so I had to visit a neuropsychiatrist weekly, restricted me to stay in my hometown. Anyway, I enrolled for graduation in 2014, passed out in late 2017 because of a college delayed session. I wasn’t able to change the college, even though I got rank 3 in the Central University Combined Entrance Exam. In 2022, I got my master’s (although the session was 2017-2019, but again delayed session and COVID too). Meanwhile in 2015 opened my account in HDFC BANK, after few years in 2017 got a call from HDFC BANK that I am eligible for a credit card I told him that I am not employed, he said it is pre-approved and lifetime free, at that time I didn’t even know the exact meaning of pre-approved but I got the card limit 3L, BUSINESS REGALIA. In 2020 opened my account in ICICI bank, then kotak. Currently have 9 functional/active account.

Turning point year 2022:
In 2022, I got qualified in NTA UGC NET (ASSISTANT PROFESSOR), currently pursuing my research doctoral work and teaching on AD-HOC/need based in a government college (till permanent appointment). Salary is 55K/month, which is not enough to get the most of the premium card.

In the year 2022, I published a book (AMAZON BESTSELLER for two weeks straight), currently selling on all online and offline stores.

Back in 2020 my mother gave me 7L to book a FD on my name, I said give to me instead I want to start my own business, since all my friends are now in job (BTECH COMPUTER), they were earning more than 1 lakh/month. And here I was just completed my degrees, not even applicable for any entrance exam and most of the job because of age. Anyway I started my own business from that money mostly freelancing work and started to earn more than 1L/month, more than my first/actual salary.

Influence of Apple Card and my first metal card:
In 2020, Apple introduced Apple Card in titanium. Instantly, my whole body was in utter ecstasy to get this, but unfortunately, that’s not available in India. Then I started to find out about other cards and discovered that there are other cards of metal, but in India, only ONE CARD is available. So, it was my first metal card and third credit card in my list.

Journey to next 25 cards:
In 2023, I came across a video on YouTube where a guy was talking about credit cards and how getting credit cards is his hobby. (I was searching for AXIS MAGNUS on Google and it directed me to YouTube, and I didn’t even know that you have these kinds of videos too.) Suddenly, I was relieved that I am not alone in the world of credit card hobbyists. And that YouTube personality was any guess? Of course; TECHNOFINO, Sumanta.

Influence of TECHNOFINO:
Although I was in the credit card game, with little knowledge, I wasn’t fully aware of its perks and benefits. But with the help of Technofino, I realised that there is more than aesthetic/hobby value in credit cards. In the last two years, I have saved more than 3L rupees.

Journey to premium card:
Soon I upgraded my cards BUSINESS REGALIA into DCB METAL, got BIZ BLACK, AND TIMES BLACK, IDFC ASHVA, etc. Currently in pursuit of EPM and INFINIA.

MY DREAMS
Two things which I love most are first wildlife (pursuing my doctoral work on this) and CREDIT CARDS, and there is a third too, visit ICELAND and see AURORA BOREALIS (NORTHERN LIGHTS), for which I am saving money. Since I am yet single, who is going to marry a person who was ill for six years 😆, most of them run like fire-lightened tail horses once they hear my illness history, anyway there loss 🤣, so solo travelling cost I calculated almost 4L, so I am not far from fulfilling my third dream.

I don't know when my illness strikes again or how much time I do have, so just wanna fullfill all my dreams before that day comes. lets see how much further I can go.

NOTE - My family is upper middle class. they tried to sponsor my trip to Iceland, but I always denied them because I want to go on my terms with my own earned money. I want to feel that feeling of satisfaction when you achieve something on your own. After all, I am not a charity case.

THESE ALL ARE POSSIBLE BECAUSE OF THIS COMMUNITY, SO MANY MANY THANKS TO EVERYONE.
🙏🏻
The first thing that came to my mind was hats off, but then I remembered that I don't have a hat. I salute your spirit and perseverance. Reminds me of

Impossible is nothing.
 
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