Sunday, May 21, 2006

Ahmedabad rears its head again

I am contemplating a trip in a few days to Ahmedabad, home of my alma mater, to get my clearance from the office, and to hopefully bid a final goodbye to the place that has been home to me for all these years. Hence I caught myself reminiscing on the first couple of years I spent there, and to my surprise I had quite a fair share of fond memories to go with the ones of utter despair.

7 summers ago, I packed up bag and baggage and left for a completely foreign land. I had just got admission into a prestigious med school in Ahmedabad, Gujarat (I didnt think it was prestigious when i left, I was still depressed at not having gotten into a Delhi med school, but it was drummed into me over the subsequent 6 years-I still have trouble accepting the fact).

Nothing could have prepared me for the culture shock that lay ahead. For the first 6 months or so, I was in a perpetual daze. The place, the people, the place, the people, the people, oh, the people...everything drove me nuts (or in my rare lucid moments made me believe that everyone else was nuts)

The first month or two were spent getting myself ragged like anything, although in retrospect i seem to have enjoyed it. There were some really weird seniors in hostel with strange ideas of what constitutes fun. One guy woke me up at 3 am and interrogated me till 5 about Delhi and its surrounding areas."how many districts come under NCR?", and shit like this. When i forgot to mention the place he was from (faridabad),he went ballistic, and reportedly gave me hell. I was too sleepy to notice, but some of my friends told me the next day.

And it wasnt just the people who were already there. There were so many freaks in my batch too. I began to suspect there was a conspiracy to pick out all the weirdos and send them to that college, but the theory instantly collapsed 'cos it was based on the assumption that I was a freak as well.(A large majority of people have been known to be strongly in favor of this hypothesis, but I refuse to accept it)

One of my classmates used to love pretending that he was some sort of politician-cum-freedom fighter. He used to give us long speeches on how we should stand up for our rights and not let ourselves be ragged, and how he could arrange a "tamancha"(pistol) for the 'cause'. Another one spent roughly 80% of the time at home, and how he managed to get through with attendance like that is a mystery to all(It has been alleged that he went and told a professor that he had cancer, and wanted to spend as many of his last days as possible with his family. How a prof at a med school would fall for that is totally beyond me. It has also been alleged that he is married and has a daughter and thats the reason for his frequent and long visits to his hometown). Then there was the chap who virtually lived for porn. (He is reported to have watched 7 back to back porno movies in a single night to celebrate new years'- need i say more?)

The faculty of the college seemed to have its share of quirks too. One day the Head of Anatomy called me as I was leaving for lunch and asked me to lock him in his room, and to unlock him at the end of the break. That is the longest lunch break I ever had, and I had to keep reminding myself every minute, cos if I had forgotten to unlock him, I'd have to wait for him to retire before I could pass Anatomy.

The language and food were things it took me years to come to terms with. The food sucked quite badly. I can never forget the time I went to the mess, after playing an hour of soccer, dreaming of a lavish spread, and our cook (a lady affectionately called "mausi" by everyone else-there was no fondness from my side, our relations were at best strained) presented me with a platter of lauki ki sabji. I could feel the bile rise in my stomach. I controlled my reverse peristalsis and asked her what there was for dessert, and I was offered a bowl full of some green gunk that i thought i'd seen on the soccer pitch few minutes back-"lauki ka halwa". I pretty much ran what i believe is known as the 'gamut of emotions' at that moment. I felt disgust when i saw that thing, awe and amazement at the lengths that life went to in order to piss me off, joy when i realised i was right all along- the world WAS crazy, and dismay when i realised that there was no way on earth that i could possibly eat whatever that was, and would have to go out and hunt for food.

The first few months in any new place are trying, i'm sure, but I was tested to the hilt in Ahmedabad. The things that got me through those dark evenings when i was staring at the prospect of having tinda or lauki ke kofte were some good music, some good reading, my friends who to some extent agreed with me(those evenings were sometimes like war, when we would just sit together for 15 minutes before going to the mess and brace ourselves for the ordeal),and the promise to myself of an ice cream after the "meal".

I had my share of fun in college, although much different from the way i had pictured college before joining(someone should sue bollywood for their depictions of these temples of learning), but I am not looking forward to going back to the scene of the crime(s). Least of all in the heat of June. And I can already feel my gastric mucosa jumping around and looking for a place to hide at the very prospect.

6 comments:

Abhinav Dua said...

hehe, its funny dude as usual!
and my 2 cents on life at college - well quite similar to ur sentiments, hated it, loved it, miss it, dont wanna repeat it!

Anonymous said...

bjmc rocks...period

i loved the place totally.. and i had more untoward incidents than u.. and i too was a stranger in a sort of way.. and dude u were considered a big freak like me (with all due respect).. and u were at the 10th best college in the nation.. im sorry u cudnt be in delhi.. but ur acting like a guy complainin he got into ivy league but not at boston:) saale - 20rs ki movie dikhai, sasta daaru pilaya, khila ke saandh banaya aur phir bhi ahmedabad ko gaali deta hai.. and all those free entertainment shows of earthquake, ragging, b block fights, rioting we threw in for u:) the people were good to take u in and treat u like their own.. and i havent yet come across 1 guy who liked any college food - except that of the girls hostel;) and im more experienced in this matter than u son.. and i ate at RAVI canteen - didnt even have a mausi..

say hi to all our mates there.. i miss all of them and the library and those "comedy" porn nights in tv room, those wild midnight birthday bumps, that insane cussing, those fun rag nights, those many nights spent playin cards, those rumors of this guy makin out with that babe, those depressing moments, those harami college office folks, those wild biking days, those r world trips, those proposing to any arbit hot female i came across, those monthly rock shows.. i miss every single thing of ahmedabad and bjmc..

kiss those "hot" women goodbye for me.. someday the prodigal son in me too will return as a honorary faculty..

till then my beloved bjmc - keep rockin!!!

badguy

AnotherHuman said...

Well! :)

Anonymous said...

nice to hear you smile...

Anonymous said...

iba - me aint from delhi.. that place gave me a degree when others didnt want to see my nri face.. its the best in gujarat.. always was and always will be.. can u prove it to me that any institution in delhi can give u a better education??

every1 bitches about their alma mater.. its natural..

badguy

Khadija Ejaz said...

It is SO funny when you gobbledeegoop medical terminology with the good ol' Queen's English.