I knew I was committing to something which ran strictly
against my beliefs, when I gave a nod to Baby sir. The prospect of spending an
entire week with a group of relatively unknowns did not tempt me. Add to that the disappointment of missing out
on B.tech arts.
Honestly speaking the journey didn’t start off in the best
possible manner either. Was terribly early for the train owing to some
mis-communication. And when I realized I
was going to spend the next 24 x 7 with people whom I had seemingly no similarities with, I was completely overwhelmed
by an urge to get down at the next railway station and just leave.
But I’m glad I didn’t, cause the train ride to Chennai turned out to be very interesting
to say the least. Infact it was a teaser to what the south zone would finally
do to me – break the conventions. The journey alongside Kerala’s unique
‘Bharatapuzha’ was not spent looking for Pulitzers. Instead
we talked loud, shook the entire compartment with our ‘naadan paatu’ and gave
the fellow travelers one hell of a time.
We did not really have to reach Satyabama to get the initial
impressions. Apparently the only place in the college where a boy and girl can
be seen together is the college bus. Just on the emblem outside though. Inside
there is a strong iron rod separating the two sections. I wonder if they put curtains
in there as well!
Satyabama is a weird college to say the very least. They
don’t allow mobile phones, have separate ‘everything’ [ from food courts to
hand wash] for boys and girls, sizzling fountains[ quite ironical really, cause
they also have bathrooms without water]. Add to that some dumb management,
which spells ‘block’ as ‘black’ [ I suppose the blame goes to the pronunciation ], which requires the permission of the HOD to take a printout,
and who considers trousers to be ‘against their culture’. Unlike the
contemporary engineering colleges which have cameras installed to watch what
the students are upto, the folks at
Satyabama believes in a more ‘supreme’ power- MGR. There are portraits of the great actor everywhere. And I mean EVERYWHERE! Its almost
like “ Beware rascala: MGR is watching you.”
The real problem with Satyabama was not their strictness
though. Every college has their set of rules. Infact they were willing to do anything under the sun, provided they
were allowed to do it in their own way. Where else on Earth would you be
provided with a bed and attached bathroom for a fest of this magnitude? What
they failed to realize was the whole essence of the fest. These were some of
the brightest talents in the country competing. An assemblage of South India’s best not
outcasts. A platform to meet and share.
If only they would’ve realized this and sought advice from anyone who’s been an
integral part of these fests. Killed the infinitely many restrictions they had
employed. Brought unbiased judges and quizmasters who knew what they were doing!
Conducting classical music inside a hall that’s 16 degrees
away from freezing point was not wise.
Hosting the folk/tribal music and the quiz competition simultaneously in
venues that shares a wall wasn’t brainstorming either. Too many silly glitches that
could’ve been avoided.
But the story of 27th south zone has nothing to
do with these insignificant flaws. Or the infinite dogs and buses that haunts
the college. It’s a story of love, how strangers became a family. Of discovery. A tale about team spirit. The
joy of winning. And most importantly the spirit of losing.
The attitude some of my friends showed when they were clearly hard done by.
Priceless lessons for life. You don’t become a genius sitting under an apple
tree. The amount of practise everyone puts in is something one should witness
first hand. Add to the dedication their passion. Infact my team mate and I
would sit there in that corner of block 7, watch the mime practice in complete
awe and then feel guilty about not doing anything ourselves.
When I broke freethat murky evening at Mcleod Ganj from the rest of the gang, I thought being alone and having the world to yourself was the ultimate experience. Today, I sit in front of my laptop a changed man because now I realize that happiness is only real when shared. Those walks in search of tea and the happiness when one gets a bonus 'vada'. The backstage before the skit. That makeshift procession. Those ‘evaluation’ sessions in the night where the 'seniors' kept reminding us about the 'south zone' spirit. Crawling through Sholinganallur in search of 'Rasamalai' and the reactions after seeing the bill. All rich memories of togetherness. The week has transformed me. Moreover I got to know that ‘Hubli’ sells incredible shorts, why madras filter coffee is the world’s best, ‘Kollegala’ dance is groovier than samba and the answer to the autograph book question “ the best moments in your life so far.”
7 comments:
Good one!;)
nyc...;)
Dear Nevin, You did it in true spirit.... Nice
thanks sir :)
Hey a really nice post...your writing is honest and you have a sunny approach to life. keep it up :)
http://zephyr-flare.blogspot.com
thnks sudha
Nice..very.
1st time here. Won't be the last. :)
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