The August I joined Presidency College to study English literature, hoop earrings had just made a comeback in Calcutta. The rain had left the city damp with optimism, and I found myself newly released into its streets, into the world in fact, a born-again of sorts, freed not only from the technicalities of calculus and chemistry and the burdens of growing up an ever-chaperoned only-child, but also from the proprieties of my all-girls바카라 Methodist school바카라the skirt had to be at least two inches below the knee, if one바카라s hair surpassed one바카라s ears by two inches it had to be tied into a ponytail, and earrings, if at all, should be at most a comma punctuating the earlobe, nothing dangly or fiddly or dressy was to be countenanced. Naturally, the many freedoms of my new institution dazzled me at first.
Sprawling, and a little eccÂentric, with just the right amount of dust to cast my memories in sepia바카라바카라Uff, our college had so much character,바카라 I would tell my own students years later바카라Presidency loomed over College Street, which was memorable in itsÂelf, with its book stalls and INSÂane traffic and the prospect of the iconic Coffee House two minutes away on Bankim Chatterjee Street. In the college canteen, tucked away from the comings and goings of professors, boys and girls sang and argued and read Milan Kundera and Jibananda Das and Paul RicĆur and bantered ceaselessly, guzzling coke바카라the coke machine had been fought for and the war against sugar hadn바카라t reached north Calcutta as yet바카라and chicken samosas. On occasion, a high-as-a-kite senior might be sent to take a bath in the adjoining facilities, to cool down, after which he바카라d walk around amiably in a towel borrowed from one of the Hindu Hostel boys. (Now why he couldn바카라t be sent to the hostel in the first place, to take a damn bath there, escÂaped me. But one learnt to keep a poker face.) Couples kissed in the corridors, students could smoke with their professors, the science libÂrary with its wooden partitions was known as a popular spot for lovers to work out their differences, and the college had an official ganja-supplier called Bhetki Da. The plenitude made us giddy.
It was 2002. A decade after liberalisation, even the hardened commies had somewhat relaxed their rant against the cultural ruination, and the SFI, which had just won the college union elections바카라I would soon be drafted into the Independents바카라 Consolidation, the Opposition, which would defÂeat SFI in my second year바카라were planning to throw a big freshers party, with a big Bengali band, and were looking around for corporate sponsorships. There would be dancing, we were told. The canteen fridge was going to be stocked with beer, and there might be orgies were possibly planned on the canteen-roof at night. The air was thick with rumours.
바카라What are the classes like?바카라 my mother asked, interrupting my glowing reports, minus the orgies and the beer, that is. 바카라They바카라re great,바카라 I said, truthfully of course, without the addendum that had by now been embraced by most of us: classes don바카라t really matter, education in college happens outside the classroom. (My father belonged to this school of philosophy; my mother would have had a heart attack. Sometimes I wonder how they even met in college, my parents, given that one was always in the classroom while the other was perennially mounting theatre productions or playing sports or taking on leadership roles in social work.)
In Presidency, it was quickly established that while the University of Calcutta, at large, had an attendance policy, our college바카라frankly바카라looked down upon it as yet another tiresome bourgeois rule. One time, we were reliably informed by our seniors, chain-smoking jhola-wallahs who were cynical as hell, that a professor had complained to the principal that students were routinely bunking his lectures. He wanted something to be done about it. To this, the principal is reported to have responded icily, 바카라If the students are not coming to class, then you must not be engaging them. You probably need to do something about your teaching.바카라 (This story might seem apocryphal, but it had been later confirmed to me by then principal Dr Amitava Chatterjee.) Liberated by this story, I bunked most pass classes for the next year-and-a-half. The teachers, to be fair, were pretty engaging.
In fact, this situation 바카라the bunking바카라came to be necessary rather than casual since I had far more important things to do with my time than take notes in class. In my enthusiasm to genuinely embrace the mores of our college, where politics and prem were foundational requirements, I had fallen irretrievably in love. He was a year senior and studied economics. (If you are wondering, the hoop earrings were part of the mis en scene.) And presaging the oddness of our future life together as writers바카라which neither of us could have had the faintest clue about at the time바카라the early rites of our relationship featured my publishing him, in a monthly newspaper that my friends and I had started in the second week of college. I know, I know, I haven바카라t been able to summon up the kind of energy and enterprise I displayed in the first few months of college in later life. We named the newspaper, with the unbridled arrogance of youth, UnPresiDented.
In 2017, exactly a decade-and-a-half after I바카라d started college, I found myself teaching first-year undergrads at a new liberal arts university that had come up on the outskirts of Delhi. The kids were bright-eyed and sparky and funny, and by the second semester, once we바카라d both overcome our initial shyness바카라despite having spent years in JNU in pursuit of a PhD I had spent most of my time writing books and not teaching바카라it was established that I was a dinosaur, a lovable dinosaur they clarified, but a dinosaur nonetheless. So they would take my re-eduÂcation in contemporary mores of the young in their capable hands: how to read memes, how not to be on Facebook but on Instagram, how 바카라leaving you on read바카라 on WhatsApp was the worst thing ever, how you didn바카라t say 바카라as hell바카라 anymore but said AF, how punctuation was everything in texting between lovers바카라a full-stop could even be considered a tantrum바카라and how it was better to break up than take a relÂationship long-distance.
I often laughed and rolled my eyes. They did the same. In return, though, I would have to honestly answer their questions on the dinosaurian subject of love. (Turns out, if you바카라ve spent a decade writing confessional essays and part-autobiographical fiction, your students will dig everything out, read them all, and throw forgotten facts at your face.) They had an anthropologist바카라s curiosity about the fact that I had decided to spend my life with someone I바카라d met in college바카라that is, if, as an anthropologist you ran into cannibals and though you judged them you also found them oddly fascinating. They couldn바카라t imagine it, they assured me in their worldly wise ways, they were in college now, they had so many things to do, so many different versions of themselves to follow 바카라and yet, for all their urbane post-normative stands, they kept circling back to the territory of college life.
What does it all mean? They seemed to be asking me, beneath all the clever banter. This wracked feeling? These relentless highs and lows? This uncertainty? This tiredness?
바카라It바카라s youth,바카라 I want to tell them. 바카라We all waste it, don바카라t worry. It바카라s going to be fine. You바카라re going to be fine.바카라 Instead, though, we talk about You바카라ve Got Mail바카라which they haven바카라t seen바카라and crossover memes 바카라 which I haven바카라t the foggiest about.
The next year, I don바카라t go back to teach. Instead, I spend it writing a novel about a group of people who went to college together in the late nineties and who have, for one reason or another, re-convened in Calcutta again. It is, perhaps, a long explanation to my students about my youth and theirs, and the worlds in between, which, for all their differences are more similar than they seem. We burned and breathed and made mistakes and felt immortal. It바카라s all there is, it바카라s enough.
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Devapriya Roy, A Delhi-based writer, her latest novel Friends from College has just been published