My
convent school memories are like a sepia tinted beautiful musical. All that I
look back and laugh has something to do with the disciplinary methods of the
school and how we managed to break the rules and regularly ended up in the Principal’s
office. The phrases ‘Pin drop silence’, ‘Do not eat with your hands’ and
‘Shoes should be so clean you should see your face on it’ ring in my ears whenever
my mind takes me back to my school days.
I am sure they went a tad too much with that
shoe thing. I have never seen my face on my shoes. However some teachers tried
to see their reflection on my shoes and failed miserably, in turn subjecting me to their wrath. Logically
speaking, this cannot be a judging factor for adherence of school rule number
2, Cleanliness. They also said that Cleanliness was Godliness, and my
school shoes just kept proving that I was not God.
In
my terms, a clean black school shoe is one that is NOT brown. I've had my share of brown shoe days (it was a
magical time when bad hair days were unheard of) along with many others and on
such days our Principal decided that we were unfit to be in class for the first
hour. Which means the first hour is basically for shoes and not people? What does
that make of those kids who were allowed to attend the first hour class? Theoretically
they should feel offended. However they were seen hopping away to the class with
much glee and pride. Seriously I still don’t understand certain things which
everyone else seems to get.
And then came the eating with hands part. Even when a fork
or spoon is used we are still using our hands right? So what is the point in
saying ‘Do not eat using your hands’? This can only be possible if Mummy came
and fed me during lunch hour, so that I will not be using my hands,
but hers. Being pure non vegetarians, our lunch consisted of fish on a daily
basis. How are we supposed to eat fried dish from a deep round steel lunch box
using a fork and a spoon? The chance of the fish taking off and landing somewhere else was
very high. We also had vegetarians in our class and someone complaining ‘Ma’am
she threw a fish into my lunch box ewwww’ was the last and only complaint left
to be registered in my file. Also I am not ready to part with my fish. Same was
the case with all my pure non vegetarian friends and not once in our school
days did we use forks and spoons.
And then one afternoon, I was happily sharing pending
stories from the weekend to my friends. The clocked ticked its way towards the
end of recess and the bell rang. I hadn't eaten much, my fingers still dipped
in a tub of rice, sambar and fish. There was no way I could reach the wash room
and be back before the teacher came. And I dint believe in carrying napkins my
Mom gave me along with the lunch box every day, I just kept wondering why they
even existed. I was caught in a pickle. Suddenly a brilliant idea struck me. I
took my water bottle, put my hand out of the window and washed it. The water
fell on the sun shade.
The
teacher walked in watching me do the dirtiest thing that could ever happen in a
convent school. And then she made me write ‘Henceforth I will not wash my hands
through the window' in my school diary and asked me to get it signed from my
father.
Papa was NOT a terror in our school days, but any failure in
following discipline can irk him real bad. Even if I failed an academic year he
would not be too bothered. However he does not tolerate bad behavior. That whole
day I’d been thinking how to face him and then bring up that diary which could
change my life forever. I had no excuse. I had no one to support me. Mummy was
like ‘WHAT? Unbelievable! How could you…’. Our house was a complete setting for
an intense drama. I ended up looking like a kid who did drugs in school. And
that sun shade would have dried up already. It’s not like I drank whiskey and
threw the bottle there. Whatever it is even if I say that my friend ALSO washed
her hands through the window(which is my most commonly used excuse) he’d just say he dint care about anyone else.
Well if he cared about me then he should have just signed that diary!
What happened next is history. Papa refused to sign, there
was a lot of angry gyaan, I cried some crocodile tears and then there were
talks about how my last name was also his first name and that it was shameful. The next
day Papa escorted me to school. He met
the teacher, she was mighty pleased, they spoke and occasionally looked at me, and
I stood there facing my shoes.
Papa was very satisfied with how seriously the school took
its rules, the teacher happy that someone took her seriously, and I still couldn't see my face on the shoes.