DELHI: It began, as most great disasters do, with a single careless click. Himanshi, a journalism and media professional on the job hunt, attached a document to a job application and hit send. The recruiter’s reply arrived promptly: “Hi Himanshi, thanks for your application. But you have attached your Blinkit invoice.”
Not her CV. Not her writing samples. Her grocery delivery bill.
Rather than quietly dissolve into the floor, Himanshi did something far more interesting. She screenshot the entire exchange, posted it on X with the caption “i am my own worst enemy,” and handed the internet exactly the kind of raw, unfiltered humiliation it lives for. The post racked up more than 471,000 views and 29,000 likes. The replies came thick and fast, ranging from sympathetic to gleeful, often both simultaneously.
When one user asked what she had actually ordered from Blinkit, Himanshi did not disappoint. “10 bottles of coconut water,” she replied. The internet, predictably, lost its mind.
In a follow-up that only sharpened the joke, she added: “Blinkit job toh nahi mil payegi, free condolence ice cream dedo.” The recruiter, to their considerable credit, responded with warmth rather than bewilderment, a fact Himanshi did not let pass without acknowledgment.
The reactions poured in with gleeful solidarity. “This is exactly the kind of mistake I would make under pressure,” wrote one user. Another offered: “At least you gave them a glimpse into your daily essentials.” A third quipped, “Recruiter probably got confused whether to review your skills or your snack choices.” Others went further still. “Blinkit invoice is the new resume format,” declared one comment. “Honestly, this is more real than any polished CV,” said another.
But it was Himanshi’s own response to the chaos, posted after the story had been picked up by multiple news organisations and she had briefly become the face of every job seeker’s worst nightmare, that gave the episode its proper ending. Writing on LinkedIn with characteristic self-possession, she reflected that “sometimes a mistake isn’t the end of the story, it is the story.” She also took a moment to salute the recruiter whose measured, kind reply had quietly stolen a corner of the spotlight. “In a world that thrives on screenshots and snap judgments,” she wrote, “that grace did not go unnoticed.”
Then, with timing that suggested she may have missed her calling in comedy, she got to the point. She is open to work. She is looking for opportunities in journalism and media. And she is, she would like everyone to know, perfectly capable of sending the correct attachment.
No coconut water. Just the CV.