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Roller Coaster Journey: from AIR 35000 to AIR 310 & How Cerebellum Mission 3.0 Changed Everything for Dr Muskan

Dr Muskan

Dr. Muskan Agarwal’s NEET PG 2025 rank 310 is more than a number; it’s the story of continuous effort, setbacks, and the right guidance.

Roller Coaster Journey From 35,000 to 310

Muskan’s journey began during an internship in 2022, when she appeared for NEET PG 2022 without serious study and secured a 35,000 rank. In 2023, she worked harder and jumped to 9,000, but the next year slipped to 14,000.

During this time, she even gave up a DNB seat. “It was very difficult to leave the seat and return to books when I had been away from studies for months,” she says. With only three to four months left before the exam, she started again, determined to give her best.

Working and Preparing

By 2024, Muskan was a Medical Officer with an 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. job. Limited time forced her to plan every hour. A friend suggested Mission 3.0 Classes, and they became her daily routine.

Every evening around 5 p.m., she attended the live lectures. If work made her miss a class, she watched the recordings early the next morning. Her commute was used for solving late-night PYQ marathons and mid-day modules, reviewing mistakes on the way back.

Mission 3.0 + BTR

Muskan had already studied with BTR notes, but combined them with Mission 3.0 Classes for the final year of preparation. Whenever teachers taught something not in BTR, she added it immediately. For volatile points, she used sticky notes on her wall, so revision was always in front of her eyes.

Structured Revisions

The three-lap system of Mission Classes—Lap 1, Lap 2, Lap 3—gave her four full revisions, including the INI CET and NEET PG marathons. Everything is planned by the teacher for us. We just had to follow,”.

The Exam & Discussions (E&Ds), with 50–100 high-quality questions, helped her practice and clear doubts in real time.

PYQs Still Matter

Muskan is clear that Previous year’s Questions remain essential. “Even if the exact question isn’t repeated, examiners frame new ones from old patterns,” she explains. Late-night PYQ sessions became a key part of her routine.

Smart Test Strategy

Unlike many who take dozens of grand tests, Muskan gave only five to six GTs, including Cerebellum mocks that felt very close to the actual exam.

Winning the Mental Game

The hardest part was fighting self-doubt. “Even rank 1 never thinks they are made for this,” she says. A friend asked her to speak only positive things to herself. She followed this strictly, using simple cognitive-behavioural tricks: I will remember. I will crack it.

Her Message to NEET PG Aspirants

To students disappointed with their results, Muskan’s advice is direct:

“If you feel even a small urge to try again, go for it. Regret is heavier than failure. Every attempt shows you what you missed before. Keep a positive mindset and trust your hard work.”

From a first attempt rank of 35,000 to an All India Rank of 310, Dr. Muskan proves that disciplined study, the right resources, and a positive mind can completely change the outcome. Mission Classes were central to her success—and her story is proof that persistence works.

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