Dear Jaikumar:
You say, "whenever i start anything i get into problems and cannot complete it."
Do you think you are going to find providing IT services or women's products to be any different?
A long time ago some guys in India wrote a little book called the Bhagavad Gita. I have always wondered why, having such a precious jewel at hand, so few Indians ever read it. It is a pracitcal guide to wise living.
Your problems (they seem to pop up in all areas of your life) lie within you. No amount of tinkering with the external will help you find your way.
You feel yourself a failure, and therefore talk of killing yourself.
The Bhagavad Gita says this:
"Whence this lifeless dejection, Arjuna, in this hour, the hour of trial? Strong men know not despair, Arjuna, for this wins neither heaven nor earth. Fall not into degrading weakness, for this becomes not a man who is a man. Throw off this ignoble discouragemment, and arise like a fire that burns all before it." -- Here is the first thing in the Gita that you will put to work in your life. You will get up off your butt and act like a man. You will decide that no matter what you will never surrender; you will try despite repeated failure.
You say you live to please your parents. Fool. A man who lives to please others ends up pleasing no one. Be you.
Until the day of his death, my father was not pleased with me. It mattered not what I did, I could not please him. As an old man, older than I am now (71), he said to me, "All I want is to be at peace with myself." I don't believe he ever achieved that. I did. So I say to this father who I could not please: I achieved what you desired but could not. Who then is the victorious warrior? Who then chose the path of wisdom?
Get a copy of the Gita. Read a little daily. Work hard to understand it. Put it to work in your daily life. Do not accept the values of others, but find and develop your own values. And learn to accept yourself, even in the face of "failure."
Using a western style chart and techniques...
You have an exact conjunction of Saturn and Pluto squarely on the cusp of the 2nd House of money. Not exactly an augur of wealth.
Neptune is angular. Hard to keep your feet on the ground.
Venus is conjunct Rahu.
And very importantly, Sun is in the 8th House. This placement very often signifies a person who lives life as an outsider, perhaps an outcast, but also one with great potential for spiritual development.
The 7th House of marriage is ruled by Mars, and Mars is combust in the 8th House. What makes a man who can't support himself want to drag a woman in his wake?
Your chart, regarding "career", has some indications toward "personal adornment". I used to sell costume jewelry.
Take a "portfolio" (one of those small, thin cases) and line it with velvet. Set it up so that it becomes a display case for your jewelry and keeps everything in place. You now have a hand-held jewelry store. Carry it with you at all times; eat with it, sleep with it, and open it to show your wares at every opportunity.
Sell at stores and businesses where women work, as clerks or secretaries. They are there (you don't waste time looking for customers that aren't there, and these girls are earning money). Work beauty shops -- the women there are interested in looking good, have a little money, and are your prisoners while they get their hair or nails done. Walk in, say Hi, place your case of jewelry in front of them, and then open it, facing them. Riding a bus or the metro? Walk the aisle and show every woman in the car your beautiful jewelry.
Do this from 8 am to 8 pm, six days a week. You can't fail if you do as I suggest.
The Gita also has this to say:
"By sacrifice shalt thou honor the gods and the gods will then love thee. For pleased with thy sacrifice, the gods will grant to thee the joy of all thy desires." Now, by gods we understand "that which we worship." If my deepest desire is money, then we might say that I worship the god of money. If I sacrifice myself to "money," I shall have money. Sacrifice yourself to what you love most -- that is your god. So, I work diligently from sun to sun, and then some....I sacrifice myself and money comes to me. This idea is not "religious;" it is applied practical psychology, it describes how to use the natural order of things to accomplish your desires.
If you find that by doing these things you are succeeding, then set aside all the money you can. When you have accumulated enough, buy in wholesale lots at good prices...and instead of selling one piece at a time, teach others how to sell. Set up a "package" that your customers can afford to buy (a sales kit, such as the one you first made and used) so they can begin earning extra money by selling jewelry, which you sell to them.
The secret to success is that twelve-hour work day. Nose to the grindstone.
But your problem....well, friend, it is within you.