Teenage
is probably the most underrated phase of a person’s life. All the physical and
mental variations and a ruckus of hormones, ultimately makes up a weirdo or in other words, a teenager. This was
also the time when ‘Look at Leela aunty’s son. He is a topper in whatever he
does’ rang in my ears even when my Mom was actually telling me to eat. Leela
aunty and her son were marked in red, bold and underlined, and highlighted in yellow on my hit list ever since I can remember. And
this is one woman I avoided like plague because she was bothered about my very existence. Apparently her son scored just 96% and topped the district or even the country but Leela aunty was wiping her nose in distress, because her #ConditionSeriousHai.
And
I remember that day when I came out of the exam hall after the twelfth grade
Chemistry exam. The question paper was very simply set with direct questions. Basically, I
was not born to study Chemistry. As simple as that. Now if you want to inject
organic and physical chemistry into my head that is not designed to accept this
type of data, it is your call. This was my attitude all through the chemistry
classes, chemistry tuition classes and chemistry entrance tuition classes.
After that load of chemistry equations and theories were dumped
aimlessly into my head, I still could not balance an equation correctly, whereas my classmates did it in a matter of
microseconds. Apparently Leela aunty’s son balanced
equations with his left hand when he had to used his right hand at dinner.
So
as I walked out of the exam hall I heard peals of laughter and my classmates
discussing the question paper with beaming faces. I could almost see a 99/100
written across their foreheads. However diplomacy is the key to coexist with
competitive parents. So when Papa asked how the exam went, I replied it was ‘okay’. By saying that, neither did I confirm that I
would pass with flying colors, nor did I say that it was
difficult and invite hell’s wrath. It was a situation of mental equilibrium. When I reached home everyone was not
actually looking forward to see me because Leela aunty had howled from the top
of her roof that her nerd of a son was throwing things around saying it was a ‘sub-standard’
question paper and he wasted his year for nothing. So basically this moron’s #ConditionSeriousHai.
The
reply ‘It was okay’ to any question that was aimed at me related to exams kept
the parents waiting for the results so that they could pounce on me. This means, that two
months till the results came I could live peacefully in my house without it being converted into a T-Rex's nest. However, I tactfully avoided appearing at any get-together or Sunday school, as a measure of precautionary self-defense against suspected nosy aunties. Those two months till the results came was a period I needed to be extra careful. After the results are published the war takes a different turn altogether which may involve major bombing from all possible directions but that is a totally different story. Meanwhile, Leela aunty was silently having a party in
her head, as her son’s batch mate was likely to hit rock bottom. And I tell you, there
was not one but lots of Leela aunties around all whose #ConditionSeriousHai.
If
I tried hard and managed to get a mark more than her son, I am sure Leela aunty
would have attempted suicide. So, my decision to stay within the average pool
and never leaping out of it was in a way saving the life of Leela aunty and her
son whom I doubt wore diapers at night.
Ten
years down the line, I am doing just fine without learning Chemistry, just like
Leela aunty’s son is after mastering it. The bottom line is that we will all be
just fine regardless of our take at the Chemistry paper.
So
Leela aunty, chill, have a Cadbury 5 star.
This article was written for Indiblogger Cadbury Five Star contest - Condition Serious Hai.