At Goa’s Bambolim beach, a few kilometres from Panjim, the same scene plays out every morning. This is a quiet, shack-free crescent, with a thin strip of wet sand that rarely attracts any tourists. You’ll spot a few people out on their morning walk, a few out for their morning smoke, and a few friendly dogs stretching. And you’ll always—always—spot a large group of open-water swimmers. From the very young to the very young at heart, this group features an eclectic collection of professionals: cops, surgeons, dentists, teachers, techies, marketers, restaurateurs, all being trained by a man who’s got two very interesting careers of his own.
Indrajeet Khadilkar is a Goa-based swimming coach who trains people of all ages and skill levels to swim long distances in the sea. When he’s not in the water, he’s helping cops and lawyers untangle complex legal and criminal matters, armed with his international forensics diploma and decades of experience as a handwriting analyst. How does one end up with such an unusual career combination? A former president probably had something to do with it.
Khadilkar, who grew up in Pune, had always been an ace swimmer. He won medals at the junior and senior nationals in the 1990s and also played water polo for India in the 2000s. The pivotal moment came when Khadilkar’s sports career was flourishing. He was the captain of the Maharashtra water polo team at the 2002 National Games held in Hyderabad and was invited to meet former President APJ Abdul Kalam. A brief interaction made a strong impression. “He asked me what I did, and I said swimming. He asked again, and I said only swimming—I don’t get time for anything else,” Khadilkar recalls. “And he told me, ‘Never say there’s no time. You’ll agree I’m busier than you, but I still make time every day for music.’”
Khadlikar, who had spent the best part of 18 years in the pool, was inspired and decided he needed to pick up a new skill.
“I tried many funny things at the time. I learned screen-printing, I learned fountain-making,” he recalls, laughing. A couple of years later, when he was travelling to Delhi by train, a bookseller came along. “One book caught my eye: Analyze Handwriting. Both my parents had beautiful handwriting and I had been into calligraphy at one time. I bought the book.” The fact that you could understand people’s psyche just by analysing their handwriting fascinated him. He started taking graphology classes.








