Many
people from all over India had come to Pune to attend the funeral of Mr. Vikas
Shinde. Vikas was a much loved professor of a reputed Engineering College in
Pune. He had taught the subject of Integrated Circuits (IC) in the E&TC
Department for almost 30 years.
His
students were not only spread all over India, but in fact, they were all over
the world. After he passed away, one of his students posted it on Facebook and
the news spread like wildfire.
And
today all of them were here.
To say
one final goodbye.
After
the funeral, all of them had gathered together on the college ground for a
little ceremony. Later everyone sat down and started telling their best
experiences with their dear professor. Soon it turned into a competition. One
story after another.
Ashutosh
Kumar had been sitting quietly listening to all the stories. After listening to
many interesting ones, he raised his hand, got up and announced, “I have the
best Vikas Sir story. I am sure of it.”
The
crowd was silent and also interested.
“Please
tell us”, said one of them.
“This
story took place when I was in my final year. Final exams were going on. It was
the night before my IC paper.”
***
After
having a nice dinner, I returned to my room to start studying for the IC paper
which was scheduled the next day. It was 9 pm and the paper was at 8 am the
next day so I had around 11 hours and I was sure I would be able to study
enough to pass.
I opened
the text book for the first time that semester. I had attended hardly 3 or 4 of
his lectures in the entire semester. So basically I didn’t know anything about
IC.
Twenty
minutes later, I knew this was going to be impossible. There was no way I would
be able to do one unit, let alone all 6! My room-mate Anurag, doing mechanical
engineering, had an easy paper the next day so he was pouring himself a drink.
Rum and coke.
“Have
one and then start again”, he told me.
I sat
and drank with him and together we abused our teachers.
After
that drink, I got back to studying. 15 minutes later, I lost it.
“Do you
still have the PDF document that contains the information of all the teachers?”
I asked Anurag.
Anurag
had found it on one of the PCs in a lab and had taken it on his pen-drive in
case we ever need it someday.
Like
today.
“Yup. I
do”, he said.
“Give me
Vikas Sir’s number. Now!” I said.
All that
alcohol and frustration and tension had got to me. I dialled his number at 11
at night, woke him up from his sleep and abused him a lot. Almost every slang
word that I knew. And then I cut the phone before he could say anything. I
regret that incident till today. I was an idiot.
Anurag
meanwhile had admiration in his eyes for me. He got up and started clapping.
“Feeling
better? Now get back to your studies” he smiled. “Damn! I should have recorded
it!”
We
laughed and I got back to my book trying to understand a derivation. However
most of my mind was thinking about what I had just done.
Idiot.
Idiot. Idiot.
Suddenly
there was a knock on the door. I figured it must be one of the guys from the
neighbouring flat to borrow my roomie’s notes or a smoke or something.
I opened
the door. Vikas Sir!
I almost
had a heart attack.
He came
in and took off his jacket.
“Are you
really that dumb? I have the entire database of all the students. And yes, that
does include your mobile number and local address”, said Vikas Sir.
“I am
so…so sorry Sir”, I just about managed to say.
“Forget
that. Tell me what’s the problem and what are you drinking.” He smiled.
“Sir, I
am unable to understand even one bit of IC!”
“I am
not surprised because I saw you for only one bit of the semester”, he said.
Even Anurag started laughing at this comment.
“Sir, I
am really sorry for everything! Not attending, phone call and everything! If I
fail tomorrow, it will be because I deserve it!”
“Save
all this drama for the scenario where you do actually fail. I am here to guide
you to different scenario. I am here to help you study.”
“What?!”
“Yes. I
am going to sit with you and we’ll do IC for the next 4-5 hours. Worst case
scenario, if you still don’t understand the concepts, I’ll mail you the
question paper because I have only set it. Just pass and get out of here!”
“Thank
you so much Sir!”
“Don’t
thank me yet!”
Vikas
Sir took the IC book in his hand.
“Okay,
here’s what we will do. I will mail you the paper right now itself, because I
might forget later, while you pour me a drink.”
“What
Sir?!”
“Yes and
pour one for yourself too!”
I poured
one for each of us while Vikas Sir sent the email via his phone. Anurag had
completely stopped studying by this point. He was just watching us.
“Done.
Mailed it. Now I will teach you most of the concepts and numericals that have
been asked again and again. If you understand those, you should not only pass,
but get around 70-75 marks.”
“Okay
Sir.”
“Now to
motivate you to study and make this interesting. Once I am done teaching one
concept, I will ask you to repeat the whole thing. If you do it properly, we
will move on to the next concept. Every time you don’t understand it, I will
finish my entire drink and you pour me another one.”
“Okay,
but shouldn’t I get to drink every time I am correct?” I asked. I was surprised
I asked this. But Vikas Sir was like that. You would always end up thinking of
him like he is your friend.
“No.
Because you will keep getting more and more drunk and it will be harder for me
to teach you. You will just be having that one drink through the night. Maybe
not even that. And you have to concentrate and ensure I don’t drink too much!”
“Good
point Sir”. I laughed.
“Okay
let’s start with the first concept.”
Vikas
Sir raced through it in around 8 minutes. When I tried to explain it to him, I
just went blank. Frankly I hadn’t understood anything. I just kept nodding the
entire time he spoke.
Vikas
Sir gulped down the drink.
I am
guessing at this point, he realised my basics were really weak and this was
going to be much harder than he thought.
He
started the first concept again. This time explaining all the basic terms along
the way. 15 minutes later, he asked me to explain. I did it perfectly. Anurag
clapped his hands and smiled.
Vikas
Sir raised his hand and said, “This is just the opening scene. Picture abhi
baaki hai, mere dost!”
Soon we
were doing concepts after concepts. I was starting to enjoy it.
At one
point when I made a mistake, Anurag shouted, “You idiot! It’s because the
source and drain of a MOSFET are equally doped!” Both Vikas Sir and I looked at
Anurag and all three of us started laughing.
In the
next few hours till around 5 am, we were done with most of the frequently asked
University questions and I don’t think Vikas Sir had more than three glasses.
“I think
I will leave now. We have covered up almost everything. I have to freshen up
too before coming to college. Just revise everything once or twice”, said Vikas
Sir.
“Yes
Sir.”
“Best of
luck Ashutosh. I am sure you are going to do great”
“Thank
you Sir.” I smiled.
I don’t
know what happened in my head but I went and hugged Vikas Sir. I guess I felt
really thankful at that point and bad for the phone call and I started crying
and apologising again.
“It’s
okay Ashutosh. You are a good kid. You were just not thinking straight. Forget
it now and study. Okay?” said Vikas Sir.
“Yes
Sir.”
“Bye
Anurag. All the best! And thanks for the rum!” said Sir.
Anurag
smiled and waved.
“Bye”,
he said one last time. The wave turned into a thumbs-up and he was gone.
***
“I went
and wrote one of the best papers of my life that day. When the results came out
and I had scored the highest marks in IC, I wasn’t surprised”, Ashutosh said.
“Obviously.
You still had three hours and the question paper. You were definitely going to
top”, said a teacher from the current batch.
“That’s
the best part. There was no attachment in the email. It just said ‘I hope these
next 4-5 hours do help you pass the paper. You didn’t really think I’ll give
you the paper, did you? All the best!’”
Realistic....... Inspiring!
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