Thursday, October 5, 2017

Exams and all…

Those who know me well, or those who have read my blogs know that I have had an unusual kind of relationship with exams; some of you may term it as ‘complicated’. Now, for some time I was living in a state of bliss, believing that my trysts with exams are all over, and that’s what I thought, but now it has returned to haunt me in the form of my lads’ struggles.

As my boys struggle and break their head with their version of aliens, Miss. Manga Malayalam and Mr. Jhandu Hindi, I am dragged back into my very own fear zone. In many ways, I fear that I will end up becoming my own parents, or the parents of my close friends, whose acts I largely despised. Remember their acts of going to the terrace and turning the TV antennae in the wrong direction, so that we lost signal reception, or their act of hiding away the VCR, the audio cassette player and our Tinkles and Amar Chitra Kathas, and then telling our playtime friends in typical Malayalam accent “o nehi aa segtha … o pedh reha hai… thum jaao ….ooska exham hei”. This writing is just to tread past that fear by making it all sound comic and insignificant to myself.

Until last year, the exam pattern in CBSE schools was so very convenient. Kids had to just study the portions for a particular trimester and then forget all about it after the exams. Now the shitty guys in the Centre have gone back to that same archaic system that traumatized my generation, and it just gave me a shattering current of déjà vu down my spine, when wifey informed that the lads will have to study the whole book for their final exams! Set aside that shocker, she only added salt to the wound, when she said that, maybe Mr. Jhandu Hindi won’t go away after one finishes Secondary School, and that he will stay on to haunt the family through the kid’s Higher Secondary schooling. I am crestfallen; feel roasted, shaken, stirred, abused et al, some of which are unmentionable here.

As the only adult male in the house, I took it upon me as my moral responsibility to find a solution to this problem that has besieged it, and was also working towards making a robust counter attack plan,  but it so happens that I have been asked by the High Command ‘not to interfere’. More shaken, more stirred and more what not! But on second thoughts, I think she was right. What counter attack plan can you expect from a man who tutors his son about the ‘Desi Maals of Bhojpur’ when asked to teach ‘Decimal System of Mathematics’ or form the guy who until recently thought that the feminine gender of ‘Pea-cock’ is a ‘Pea-pussy’.

Yes, academics is not my forte, and beating the juggernaut of exams convincingly is not one at all. I can tell this with conviction recalling my many humiliating encounters with it in the past. My 1st semester exams in Engineering gave me a whopping 6 back papers, the ordeal of back papers continued through until my 7th semester, where at one point of time I was sitting proudly upon a pile of 14.

In many ways I have polished my skill in writing by scribbling fiction in my answer sheets. Sitting through exams for Science, Management and other such descriptive subjects were easier and pleasurable too, because it gave me a lot of scope and space to write. I have made some marvelous discoveries, inventions and written some profound, yet rib tickling and thrilling short stories in some of my Science and Management answer sheets, alas all of those papers are now lost. One incident that I can recall in particular is when I was doing my Masters in Ahmedabad. In my hostel, we were preparing for our Project Management Exam which was due next day, when my Brother-In-Law dropped in, and suggested me to join him at his place promising that he would drop me back the next day just in time for the exam. Now, since his newly wed wife had asked him to go and get her brother, he wouldn’t take ‘no’ for an answer, and on the other side, my friends and classmates advised me against it, and wanted me to stay back and prepare for the test. My BIL threw in his final bait, the ram-baan, or should I call it a Chapatti shaped Sudarshan Chakra. He said that my sister was making phulkas for me, and by God, let me tell you, no one makes better phulkas in this world than my sisters. I had to bite the bait, although my jealous roomies tried to hold me back, I left. Next day the exam went well. As usual I wrote all that I had learnt and filled the pages with the right Project Management theories, rationale, doctrines and what not. I was really happy with my work, and even went on to poke my jealous friends’ envy bones describing the soft fluffiness of the phulkas, and the feeling of bliss one experiences when one relishes those tender, succulent chicken pieces right from the warm rich, spicy, aromatic chicken curry that my sister had prepared and had my mom’s trademark seal all over it. My mouth still goes watery when I think about it, but let me tell you, on that day, when the answer sheets were distributed I watered not only from my eyes, but also all the unmentionable places in my body as my professor and classmates had a field day discussing my revolutionary Project Management ideas in the classroom. On that fateful day, my love affair with Miss Phulka died. Although I have remained a foodie, I haven’t looked back at that bread with fondness ever since.
  
My worst enemies were always Mathematics, Analysis or anything that had to do with complex engineering calculations. Most of the times, my Mathematics, Mechanics and Structural Analysis answer sheets returned with zeroes all over them. It is a fact that I have contributed more zeroes to Mathematics than the great Aryabhatta or Brahmagupta or Bhaskara or any other great mathematician that has walked the Indian soil, but whatever, I have never let those achievements corrupt my humility and humbleness. I think, and I believe that it is one of my greatest rewards and God’s appreciation of my great valor and fortitude that my lads are finding dealing with numbers and complex formulae a cakewalk. My wife however has the funny misconception that this is her lineage and tutorage. How silly of her!

Now, it is not that my very own tortuous affairs with exams ended with my college days, I did face some big exams after that and I must humbly inform that I did come out with flying colors out of them, although I know that my examiners must be now regretting their decision to pass me. J The first one was when I passed an unwritten test, and a silly girl finally agreed to marry me. Later, with a lot of help from my friends and colleagues, I did clear two online exams for professional accreditations. As of now, I am already due to take one more such accreditation exam, which I have already procrastinated for 4 years. Now hey, it is not that I am scared or anything, it is just that I want to give this test its due time. I am planning to take that exam by the end of this year, and when I do that, I am planning to take a week off from work and everything else, shut myself in the store room on the top floor, throw off my mobile phone, shut off the wifi in my house and ban friends and family from my life. You know drastic times require drastic measures.

But frankly, it is my opinion, that whoever you are and whatever your age or gender be, exams, its preparation and its results must not flutter or fluster you. It must not disrupt your normal life. It pains when I see these little lads and their parents going through all the stress, and it hurts when I see that they have to sacrifice their precious ipad, TV and play time, confined to a desk and a chair, behind a pile of books, with the only sight of a fuming, overzealous tutor of a parent in the front. This sight is really disheartening.


Life must go on as normal. We must play, we must engage in our routine sports, we must do our extracurricular stuff, we must party, and we must have our family gatherings, rituals and functions. These things must not stop or be discontinued or even take a break because of some routine exam. That reminds me, we are invited for two parties this weekend, and both are sure to have lots of exotic spicy Indian food, awesome company and both the invitations come with unwritten assurances that the night will be totally laced with ghee and glee. Of course, we won’t be able to make it; we will be busy confined to our desk and chair, hidden behind books, preparing for the exams.