Outlook – July 28, 2019

(Axel Boer) #1

29 July 2019 OutlOOk 87


geois rule. One time, we were
reliably informed by our sen-
iors, chain-smoking jho-
la-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, “If the students are not
coming to class, then you
must not be engaging them.
You probably need to do
something about your teach-
ing.” (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 —the
bunking—came to be neces-
sary 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 re-
quirements, I had fallen irre-
trievably in love. he was a
year senior and studied eco-
nomics. (If you are wonder-
ing, the hoop earrings were
part of the mis en scene.) And
presaging the oddness of our

future life together as writ-
ers—which neither of us
could have had the faintest
clue about at the time—the
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 haven’t 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 I’d started
college, I found myself teach-
ing first-year undergrads at a
new liberal arts university
that had come up on the out-
skirts of Delhi. The kids were
bright-eyed and sparky and
funny, and by the second
semester, once we’d both
overcome our initial shy-
ness—despite having spent
years in JNU in pursuit of a
PhD I had spent most of my
time writing books and not
teaching—it was established
that I was a dinosaur, a lova-
ble dinosaur they clarified,
but a dinosaur nonetheless.
So they would take my
re-edu cation in contempo-
rary mores of the young in
their capable hands: how to
read memes, how not to be
on Facebook but on
Instagram, how ‘leaving you
on read’ on WhatsApp was
the worst thing ever, how you
didn’t say ‘as hell’ anymore
but said AF, how punctuation
was everything in texting be-
tween lovers—a full-stop
could even be considered a
tantrum—and how it was bet-
ter to break up than take a
rel ationship 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
you’ve 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 an-
thropologist’s curiosity about
the fact that I had decided to
spend my life with someone
I’d met in college—that is, if,
as an anthropologist you ran
into cannibals and though
you judged them you also
found them oddly fascinating.
They couldn’t imagine it, they
assured me in their worldly
wise ways, they were in col-
lege now, they had so many
things to do, so many differ-
ent versions of themselves to
follow —and yet, for all their
urbane post-normative
stands, they kept circling
back to the territory of col-
lege life.

W


hAT does it all mean?
They seemed to be
asking me, beneath all
the clever banter. This
wracked feeling? These re-
lentless highs and lows? This
uncertainty? This tiredness?
“It’s youth,” I want to tell
them. “We all waste it, don’t
worry. It’s going to be fine.
You’re going to be fine.”
Instead, though, we talk
about You’ve Got Mail—
which they haven’t seen—and
crossover memes – which I
haven’t the foggiest about.
The next year, I don’t 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 differ-
ences are more similar than
they seem. We burned and
breathed and made mistakes
and felt immortal. It’s all
there is, it’s enough. O

y Dinosaur

Presidency in sepia with ganja, jhola, coke, beer, hoop earrings, first love, PDA...Swoon.

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