Physics isn't hiding from you.
It's hiding in your day.
You don't need to already "get" physics to start. Every formula on your syllabus is describing something you've already felt — a bus jerking forward, a phone getting warm, a mirror flipping your shirt but not your height. We start there.
Why you lurch forward when the bus stops
Your body was moving with the bus. When the bus stops, your body "wants" to keep moving — because nothing has told it to stop. That's inertia, not magic. NEET loves to test this exact idea in disguised forms.
You're not "bad at physics." You were taught it backwards.
Most classrooms start with the equation and hope the meaning shows up later. For a lot of students it never does — and then physics starts to feel like a subject that's judging you. It isn't. It's just a subject that was explained before it was shown.
- 1 You freeze when you see F = ma before you've seen a force actually push something.
- 2 You've memorised formulas for months and still can't tell which one to use in a new question.
- 3 You've decided physics "isn't for you" — usually after one bad test, not because it's true.
Application first. Formula last.
See it happen
Every topic opens with something you've actually experienced — no prior physics needed to understand the scene.
Feel why it makes sense
We build the reasoning in plain words first. If you can explain it to a friend without a formula, you've understood it.
Then the equation
The formula arrives as a shortcut for something you already believe — not a rule you have to trust blindly.