Rohan woke up with a gasp. His real RD Sharma lay open on the desk. The “useless” problems now looked like a secret language. He realized the book wasn’t trying to torture him. It was a gym for the mind. Each chapter was a new tool: to measure impossible heights, Calculus to understand change, Venn Diagrams to untangle life’s chaos.
In the noisy, chalk-dusted classroom of St. Mary’s High School, two kinds of students existed: those who saw the as a weapon of mass distraction, and those who saw it as a treasure map.
“Dad,” Rohan said, eyes shining. “I’m learning to fix broken compasses.”
The next morning, his father saw Rohan at the breakfast table, not eating, but scribbling furiously in a notebook. “What are you doing?” Rd Sharma Maths Book
“x = 60. y = 30.”
He smiled, picked up his pen, and began to solve.
He solved the first equation: x + y = 90. He solved the second: x - y = 30. His mind, trained by hours of drudgery, clicked. Rohan woke up with a gasp
“This is pointless,” he sighed. But then he looked at the compass. One axis was tilted. The other was misaligned. Suddenly, the page made sense. The compass was a graph. The broken needle was an inconsistent pair of lines—no solution. To fix it, he needed to find the point where they intersect .
That night, he dreamed. He was standing inside a giant, empty void. Floating before him was a single, broken compass. The needle spun wildly, unable to point North.
And on the final exam, when he faced the hardest problem in the book, he didn't see a monster. He saw a compass, waiting for someone brave enough to find its North. He realized the book wasn’t trying to torture him
A voice echoed. “Fix the compass. Use the book.”
Grumbling, Rohan opened the dream-RD Sharma. It flipped to a random page—.
That year, Rohan didn’t just pass maths. He began to see patterns everywhere. The school bell schedule? Arithmetic Progression. The population of frogs in the pond? Exponential Growth. RD Sharma hadn’t given him answers—it had given him questions to ask the world.
Rohan belonged to the first group. To him, the thick, blue-covered book with the daunting author’s name was a paper brick. Its pages were packed with problems so dense they seemed to suck the light out of the room. While his friends played cricket, Rohan’s father would place the RD Sharma on his desk and say, “One chapter. Then you can go.”