I graduated in engineering way back in 2008. This is just a
look back on those 4 years of, how do I put it delicately “suffering”. Well, I
started attending an engineering college in 2004 (nearly 10 years ago, time
does fly by!!) and for the next 4 years I went through all the ups and downs an
engineer is supposed to go through especially if that engineer is doing his
engineering from Mumbai University.
The fight is to get to the magical figure of 40. Everyone
apart from the really bright, genious ones looked at 40 as a milestone. An
engineer knows the true power of the number 40. It can make or break your
semester depending which side of 40 you fall on. 40 for me was the begin all
and end all of exams. During each and every paper of my engineering life, I
counted my marks till I was sure I would somehow get to the magical number.
After that, whatever I got was just a bonus for me! I was a reluctant engineer,
just doing engineering because I couldn’t think of doing anything else and
also, all my school friends were on their way to becoming one. So for me,
getting 40 was all that mattered.
Another interesting aspect of doiing engineering from Mumbai
University was the “Vivas”. That was always fun. Sample this: 3 guys sitting
facing an unknown face in most cases.
Unknown face: What do
you mean by blah blah?
Guy 1: (with an really intense look on his face) Sir, I have not read that chapter.
Guy 2: (with a look that says he is trying to remember) Blah blah I think sir is ahhh..uhhhh..mmmm..
The Unknown face looks at the 3rd guy
Guy 3: I don’t know
sir!
Unknown face: You guys
have not prepared anything at all. Anyways what is the equation for a circle?
Guy 1: (draws a circle
and trying to deduce the equation)
Guy 2: It’s x2/a2 +
y2/b2 = r2
The unknown face looks impressed and turns to guy 3.
Guy 3: Sir, as guy 2
said!
I was nearly always guy 3 in the vivas. And it was always
fun. The crowding of people who just came out after giving their vivas, asking
them questions as the paparazzi would have asked them. “what questions did he
ask you?” “which chapter is this shit from?” “is the external strict?” “what
the fuck?!” etc etc. And God forbid, if the profs go for their lunch break
before taking your viva. The choicest of words were then used to describe the
situation! It was always fun these vivas!! The amounting tension. The what if
question about what if the external tells us to go, study and come back to give
the vivas. That was always dreaded.
Moving on to the practicals! Ahhhh…praticals! 2 hours wasted
standing in some lab or other with faulty machinary to give you company. The
most productive work of the viva happened in the last 10 mins where readings
were smartly copied from the one group of geniouses who actually managed to get
the reading somehow. Praticals were the time when people caught up with each
other. Tales were exchanged. Gossip was circulated etc etc.
Then there were the assignents! I mean I still don’t
understand the use of assignments in egineering. Same questions were given to
the whole class on the pretext that the students will not copy from each other.
Everyone used to wait till someone finished the assignment and then it was a
mad scramble to get the photocopy (xerox in popular lingo) of that elusive
solution set. People spent days trying to copy and decipher what the other
person has written. That mad rush was really special!
I admit I could never bring myself to love engineering but
there were these moments which made it nearly worth it. I got my first job just
because I was an engineer and I could talk properly. I am ever grateful to my
college for getting me a job at the height of the 2008 recession. The friends I made, the hostel life, becoming
an independent person, falling in and out of love, and many other things! It’s
true I am not very proud of being an engineer but as I look back now, it was
the best thing that could have happened to me at that point of time to me. It
played a big role in making me what I am today! So thank you Engineering for
teaching me so many valuable lessons.
P.S: The most important thing which engineering taught me
was to procastinate till the very last moment and still get the work done at
the very last moment!
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