Tag Archives: education

The Essays Dance

Who am I? Where am I? What am I doing here?

The side effects of exams are horrible. The essays I read during the exam are still dancing in my head, and possibly they will continue to do the same for few more days. Can someone please come and hit me hard in the head with a hammer or some such other tools so that I can find answers to the above questions.

Ah! Not so hard! It pains. Nevertheless, it seems to work, thank you. My senses are back to their designated places and I have got my answers.

Alright, before I say anything more, I must say I’m happy to be alive. How about you all?

In my last post I mentioned about my exams. Well, it is over. For the first time in three years I’m a little happy about my performance in the exam, some of you had wished me luck before the exam, hence the credit is all yours.

But, I could have been the happiest person on earth had the invigilator allowed me some extra time to write, considering the fact that I’m a slowpoke when it comes to writing. I never reproduce the same answers as in the books I read, I make my own answers. Physically, I’m not defective by any chance, and this is apparent to the invigilators. The invigilator, I suppose, is not at liberty to show me any special preference. But the fact, which I can never hide, is that I am the slowest writer on earth, and I don’t mind taking own sweet time. And I always forget: time waits, but not for me.

What an irony it is, I’m a Management Student yet I have not learnt time management. Never in the past three years could I ever keep pace with the limited time in the exam hall and write all the answers, I know the answers, it is not something out of the books, and even if it is out of the books nothing can stop me from attempting them. The limited time has never failed to add to my confusion and my word jumbles and I end up writing incoherently, which otherwise I could have written elegantly had it not been the exam hour.

Academically, I have always been an average guy. The closest to being called a bright student was the time when I was in the 12th standard, when my name came out in the papers, for there were not many competitors and very easily I could score the highest marks in certain subjects in our state. My teachers as well as my parents were delighted to see my name in print. And though my friends’ praises were faint to the extent of nothing at all, I was happy with their faint praises nonetheless.

Anyway, I’m pretty sure, when the results come out, I’ll get a first-class, like I did the last time. The paper setters of Mumbai University had been very kind in setting the question papers. Even a layman could answers the questions. Hope they will check the answers leniently.

Copyright © 2013 RAMU DAS

This Is Not Goodbye

Tick-tock, tick-tock moves the handle of the clock

“Wait,” you implore, “just a second, please.”

You keep pleading; of you time will make a mock

The handle moves on, no matter you are that or this.

I’m trying not to trifle away my last few days of college life. They are precious. The lecturers keep shouting and screaming all the time that the students need to read, read and read a little more. I read all the time, but everything apart from the college textbooks. And this doesn’t go well with the lecturers. My parents have no clue of what I do. They are happy with everything I do. But, it is high time that I put aside all those books unrelated to my curriculum and do something about the upcoming exam that I’m going to face.

Every time I look at my bookcase, I feel pity for the untouched textbooks prescribed by the University of Mumbai. The books are now catching my eyes, poor things. They are dying for the want of a reader. If they had life in them and mouth to speak, I’m sure they would have threatened me for being a bad owner and for not taking proper care of them. The dust accumulated in their covers can surely be used to block a river.

My friends in the college believe in consuming all the details of such books as though the books were some energy drink for them. At least for a short time, I think, I should follow their path and be a part of the rat race. I have to, as long as I’m a college student. My life in the present college is going to end shortly.

Dear fellow-bloggers, this is not good-bye, I shall be back by the first week of May. My parents always say: “Never say goodbye”. Say: “see you”. Therefore, dear friends, I will catch up with your posts once I’m back, till then, happy blogging. See you all!

Copyright © 2013 RAMU DAS

Adieu 2012!

Admit must I, now, that I’m feeling extremely elated, endorphin high, and, on my personal conduct, not a thing I regret – nay, not I. 2012 has been one of the best years by far, at least for me. And I – oh dear Sir, or Madam, as you maybe – am a man of small stature, but effective. Ah! Without doubt, I am effective. And I am, as Charlie Chaplin used to say, a tramp, a gentleman, a poet, a dreamer, a lonely fellow, always hopeful of romance and adventure.

Intimidated though I had been many a times and been called names , but then, a valorous man never backs down, but fares forward and keeps learning. Everyone who come to our lives count and play an important part, teach us something or the other, and offer many a lesson to learn directly or indirectly. It is these experiences that shape our lives. Life is but a journey. As a watcher of life I have experienced a great deal, I have experienced hatred, love, suffering, pleasure, and all other elements that of life. For everything, I’m just happy, as much as I can be. But let me not brag about my achievements, for as you might have read in my ‘about me page’, that I despise the idea of bragging about oneself.

All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players: they have their exits and their entrances; and one man in his time plays many parts… William Shakespeare

And lastly, I have a little advice for all: When you laugh make sure that it’s natural and that you mean it, and don’t merely show your teeth. Wear only one face instead of many, you see me as I am, like it or not. And, if anyone holds any kind of grudges against anyone, I say, let bygone be bygone!

What shall be my New Year resolution? Well, I don’t have any intention to write a long New Year resolution list over here, like many people do, I can only say I have got no more time to trifle away; have I but plans, a great many plans, and I’m going to work on them.

I have nothing to offer to my fellow-bloggers and other readers and visitors, you see, such a poor guy I am. My hand is always empty, but I have a big heart. As a New Year gift let me share something : 25 quotes that I like very much. I hope you will like them as much as I do. They are in a way funny and in another way inspiring. A very happy and prosperous New Year to all!

  1. “Think rich, look poor.” — Andy Warhol
  2. “Not all who wander are lost.” — J. R. R. Tolkien
  3. “Don’t Find Fault – Find a Remedy.”– Henry Ford
  4. “Rather than love, than money, than fame, give me truth.” — Henry David Thoreau
  5. “I became insane, with long intervals of horrible sanity.” — Edgar Allan Poe
  6. “A well-developed sense of humor is the pole that adds balance to your step as you walk the tightrope of life.” — William Arthur Ward
  7. “The course of true love never did run smooth.” — William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night’s Dream
  8. “Reply to everything someone says with ‘that’s what YOU think.’’— Anonymous
  9. “Formal education will make you a living; self education will make you a fortune.” – -Jim Rohn
  10. “Oh what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive.” — Sir Walter Scott
  11. “A man is already halfway in love with any woman who listens to him.” — Brendan Francis
  12. “Always do right. This will gratify some people and astonish the rest.” — Mark Twain
  13. “Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new.” — Albert Einstein
  14. “Women are always anxious to urge bachelors to matrimony; is it from charity, or revenge?” — Gustave Vapereau
  15. “Start a huge, foolish project, like Noah…it makes absolutely no difference what people think of you.” — Rumi
  16. “There are no great men, only great challenges that ordinary men are forced by circumstances to meet.” — Admiral William Halsey
  17. “Giving money and power to governments is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys.” — P.J. O’Rourke
  18. “The world is my country, all mankind are my brethren and to do good is my religion.” — Thomas Paine
  19. “The silence often of pure innocence Persuades when speaking fails.” — William Shakespeare
  20. “It is very easy to defeat someone, but it is very hard to win someone.” – Dr Abdul Kalaam
  21. “The tragedy of life is what dies inside a man while he lives.” — Albert Schweitzer
  22. “We are what we believe we are.” — C.S. Lewis
  23. “No man is a failure who is enjoying life.” — William Feather
  24. “When I do good, I feel good; when I do bad, I feel bad, and that is my religion.” — Abraham Lincoln
  25. “It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.” – AristotleCopyright © 2012 RAMU DAS

Six Days Of Eggjam And Here I am

‘Modern college’ had been the name of the center where I had to go along with other friends – or classmates – to write the eggjam. The college changed the idea of modern which I had for quite a long time. I thought a college with such a name should have clean classrooms, air-conditioned or something like that, fashionable and stylish, ahead of times.

As I started moving in the corridor of college (modern college), all I could get was the stinking wee-wee smell, the battered  classrooms were not even close to my notion of modern ; there were no ventilation in the classrooms; the windows were all at their worst condition ; everything looked as though it wasn’t renovated for a decade or so.

The invigilator sat on the chair, her legs crisscrossed. The students kept staring at the answer papers (booklets) which were distributed to them. A very strange kind of a paper it was. In the answer sheet there were too many instructions to be followed, which I, for one, could not understand, nor could the other students, they all looked bemused. We’re all hoping that the invigilator might say something about the instructions, but she didn’t.

Time was running out of hand, suddenly some students spoke unanimously, “Ma’am, won’t you tell us anything about the instructions?”

“Oh, do I need to?” asked the invigilator, total surprised. The invigilator, then, started speaking a foreign language until the moment someone interrupted pleadingly, “Ma’am, English please!”

Soon she obliged to speak in English, but then, she was murdering English, and someone had to tell her once again, “Ma’am, please switch on to a different language, if possible, Hindi.”

She herself wasn’t aware of how to fill the instructions on the booklet, “Just give me a moment,” she said and went out to the other class room, I assume to ask the other invigilator about the instructions. She came back, told us what to do and what not to do.

While filling the instructions it took us more than twenty minutes. That meant we had to write the answers at a bullet pace ( faster than Toronto express ), out of two hours, twenty minutes were gone!

I was amazed at the skills some of my fellow examinees possessed, the skills of cheating I mean. Some wrote the answers beforehand on their fingers, on their nails, legs, toes, palms, almost everywhere. And though it was strictly prohibited to carry any kind of papers, I saw some students seemingly gleefully inserted their hands into their pockets and brought out small pieces of paper in which the font size of the letters were perhaps lesser than four. One more thing is that the students were asked not to write anything on the question papers, but who cared? They wrote it anyway, and played pass-pass with the question papers, as long as the invigilator did not see.

I heard a continuous beeping sound and looked around to find where it was coming from. A guy who sat next to me was punching the keys of his cell phone. I kept staring at him for few seconds unbelievably, “What are you looking at?” he bellowed and clutched his headgear.

“You are brave,” I commented. He smiled and clutched his headgear once again, and said boldly, “I’m a Sardar!”

Now, the invigilator heard the beeping sound and found where it was coming from, she shouted: “Yanna Rascalla!” and, with that, I knew the invigilator must be a Tamilian or a huge fan of Rajnikant, moreover she smelt of coconut and coffee as she walked past me. She got the hold of the brave Sardar’s phone, and gave a warning, which, I believe, was the first as well as the last warning.

I was writing with full concentration when all of a sudden a hulk of a man came inside the classroom, spitted paan(betel leaf combined with areca nut) stained saliva from the window of the classroom to the ground, and said boastfully and mercilessly: “ Stop writing. Time’s up!”

That took me by total surprise. At that time I didn’t even write for forty-five marks, the paper consisted of sixty marks. I think I’m amongst one of the slowest writers in the world, but then, what I write makes sense. The invigilator after collecting the other students’ paper came to me and asked to submit the paper; I was reluctant to do that. The invigilator, then, started snatching the paper from me. “Wait,” I protested, “Let me write, or else I’ll fail.”

“Give!”

“Wait!”

“Give, I said!”

“Wait, I said,” I retorted then added, “Please.”

This went on for two minutes or so. I knew all answers, but the invigilator was adamant and persisted that I should submit the paper; I had no other option left, so I gave up.

Depressed. What does my future hold?

I was depressed (still am) and all other papers (except for one) after the first paper did not go as per my expectations, I’m just hoping to get the passing mark, that’s it and nothing more.

Copyright © 2012 RAMU DAS

Mr Nobody’s letter to the lady class representative of his class(college)

Hello, So how are you today?

Well, I think your faintly stout body is finally glowing like never before, and I believe you can carry your surplus flesh as sensuously as some girls of your age can. Hope everything is up to the mark and going as per your plan and you are enjoying life to maximum extent possible!

Now, you may be fit and fine and enjoying life to the fullest, but I’m not by any means feeling good at all. The reason is you! Let me tell you how, but before that, tell me something: did I cause you any harm? Or did I belittle you somewhere, sometime? Anytime? Did I say something which you found to be utterly rude or indigestible? I’m not sure if I did any of these ever because you have never given me a clue to know. However, if I did, I did it inadvertently; to hurt you in any way is never my design.

Please tell me, why you do show so much partiality: you send text messages to some students informing them about the lectures and the timing of the college which keeps changing every now and then as if our college is on a rollercoaster; you tell all the other students about the sudden cancellation of some lectures, about the functions and about all other activities that take place in our college. But why don’t you ever inform me about any of these things?  Why am I deprived of my rights of knowing something which is really important? Just like others I expect you to inform me about any changes that take place regarding our class, our college. Well, you do take care of others’ interest pretty well, you want to have a good place in their heart, but you never inform me, you never want to have good place in my heart. What do you think, others’ have a golden heart and I possess a charcoal black heart or something?

Do you know how much trouble I’ve to face because of the lack of information? Every day I have to catch an auto from the place where I live, then I get on board of a train from the railway station which is near my locality, and then, I reach the railway station nearest to our college and get down from the train and again from there I have to catch another auto to reach the college. You can well imagine how much time, money, and energy I spend every day. I feel completely exhausted. You have been chosen as the CR of the class, which means you have been given some rights, and as you may be aware that every right has a proportional duty, so please, I beg you to take care of your duty as much as you enjoy your rights!

Now, you may ask me, why don’t I raise the aforementioned questions to your counterpart (the man CR of the class) who is equally responsible as you are. Well, let me tell you, I don’t expect much from an asshole, so that’s the reason I don’t ask him.

Inform me if you will, if you think I deserve to know about the activities that takes place in our college. As much as you consider the college to be yours, so do I, and so does all the other students of our college. Don’t shy away from your duty but do send your valuable text messages, for doing that you’ll have my gratitude.

If I’ve said something wrong that you find offensive, please do forgive me. Forgiving someone is indeed a kind act, and you being so kind, don’t hesitate to forgive me, please!

Always yours,

Mr. Nobody

Copyright © 2012 RAMU DAS