Most people spend years waiting for the right time. The right time to switch careers. The right time to travel. The right time to pursue a dream that feels a little too ambitious, a little too impractical, or a little too late.Shradha Gupta knows what that feels like. She also knows what happens when you stop waiting.Today, the Dubai-based banking executive has achieved something most people can only dream about. She has stood on the summit of Mount Everest, the highest point on Earth at 8,849 metres above sea level. But what makes her story remarkable is not just the mountain she climbed. It's how recently the journey began.Just three years ago, Gupta wasn't a mountaineer at all.She was a senior corporate banker leading business across the Middle East, balancing deadlines, boardrooms, strategy meetings and the relentless pace of international finance. Mountains belonged to other people - adventurers, athletes, lifelong climbers.Then life threw her an unexpected challenge."Three years ago, I wasn't even a mountaineer. I had just survived one of the hardest periods of my life. A serious accident in 2020 became an unexpected turning point. I was forced to slow down and I started asking myself questions I'd been too busy to ask," she says.For many people, difficult moments become reasons to retreat. For Gupta, it became the beginning of a completely new chapter. "The transformation wasn't really about climbing. It was about deciding, for the first time, to stop waiting for the 'right time.'"That decision changed everything.She started with Mount Kilimanjaro. Then came Mount Elbrus. Then Aconcagua. Each climb pushed her further beyond the boundaries she had unknowingly set for herself."I started with Kilimanjaro almost on a dare to myself. Then came Elbrus. Then Aconcagua. Each summit wasn't just a peak, it was proof of a new version of me."What followed was an ascent few would have predicted.In September 2025, Gupta reached the summit of Mount Manaslu, the world's eighth-highest mountain. Less than a year later, she stood on Everest.For many climbers, reaching Everest takes a decade or more of preparation. Gupta's rapid rise inevitably attracted scepticism."There were absolutely moments of doubt, and yes, people who questioned whether I was moving too fast, whether I was 'ready,'" she says. But she never confused other people's fears with her own."I understood why people had doubts. I just never let their doubts become mine."That mindset would prove invaluable on Everest.People often imagine Everest as a battle against snow, altitude and exhaustion. Climbers who have been there know the hardest fight is often happening inside your own head.High above the clouds, where oxygen levels drop dramatically and every movement becomes difficult, the mountain strips life down to its simplest form.Gupta remembers those moments clearly."There's a moment on every high-altitude climb, and Everest had several, where your body is sending every possible signal to stop, and the only thing that keeps you moving is something that lives deeper than physical strength."For her, that strength came from purpose."I wasn't climbing to prove something to the world. I was climbing to prove something to myself, that after everything I had been through, I was still standing. Still capable. Still choosing life on my own terms."When conditions became brutal, she focused on a single question."Can I take one more step?"Not the summit. Not the finish line. Just one more step."And when the answer was yes, I took it. Then I asked again."It's advice that applies as much to life as it does to climbing Everest.While her mountaineering achievements are extraordinary, Gupta's story resonates because she hasn't left her old life behind. She continues to lead a demanding global banking career while pursuing some of the world's toughest climbs.Many professionals believe they must choose between career success and personal dreams. Gupta disagrees."We're conditioned to believe that ambition is a finite resource, that if you pour it into your career, there's nothing left for your dreams. I've found the opposite to be true."In fact, she believes the mountains have made her better at her day job."When you've held your nerve at 8,000 metres, where a wrong call is irreversible, you develop stillness, patience, the ability to read a situation and wait for the right moment rather than react to every signal."The balancing act isn't always easy. There are sacrifices, early mornings and exhausted weekends. But she has no regrets. "I've never once thought: I should have done less."Perhaps the most powerful part of Gupta's story is what it says about age.So many people quietly abandon dreams because they believe they are too old, too inexperienced or too far behind.Gupta refuses to accept those rules."Why are we so obsessed with a clock, that things have to be done by a certain time? Who decided that?"She entered mountaineering at 40. She had no traditional climbing background. She came from boardrooms, not base camps.Yet there she was, standing above 8,000 metres on Manaslu, preparing for even bigger challenges."It hit me somewhere on Manaslu... I thought: no one gave me permission to be here. I gave it to myself."That realisation changed everything."The rules we have are largely self-imposed. The moment we let these notions go, everything becomes possible."Her confidence is rooted not only in experience but also in a lifelong belief that people can be more than one thing.Gupta credits her years at Modern School Barakhamba Road in Delhi and later the National University of Singapore for helping shape that mindset."Modern School taught me that a person is meant to be more than just one thing."Today, she embodies that philosophy completely. Banker. Mountaineer. Leader. Adventurer.Not one or the other. Both.Now, after standing on the roof of the world, Gupta has returned with a lesson that extends far beyond mountaineering.Everest, she says, taught her that meaning doesn't come from comfort."Everest taught me that a meaningful life isn't necessarily a comfortable one. It's a chosen one."It is a lesson that feels particularly relevant in a world where people are often encouraged to play it safe, stay realistic and lower their expectations.Shradha Gupta's journey suggests the opposite.That dreams don't come with expiry dates.That fear isn't a sign to stop.That extraordinary achievements often begin with ordinary people taking one uncertain step.And perhaps most importantly, that nobody needs permission to pursue a bigger life.Sometimes, all it takes is deciding to begin.