Sunday 3 October 2010

Life is about solving those maths problems

In fact, my vacation did not end in my home town. I decided to visit the holy city of Puri just before coming back to Bangalore. It was here that I came before I went on to do my MBA in 2007. I have come back here after 3 years to thank the God and Goddess for all that has happened in my life since then. On my one-night train journey from Calcutta to Puri, I was trying to recollect all the good and not-so-good things that took place in my life particularly in the last 3 years. The good ones that surfaced first – my days in Cranfield, our visit to Benaras, my job in Oracle, the birth of our little angel, the satisfaction of owning a house and a car, the trip to Melbourne and many others scattered here and there. Then I thought of the bad and evil days, when things did not go the way I wanted it to be – the last days of Cranfield when I had to struggle to find a job, the days in Calcutta and the sacrifice my wife made to quit her stable job in Hyderabad to join me in Calcutta, some relationships going bitter and the bitterness lingering...

It was in the last week of my stay in UK, when the MBA course was almost over, saving a couple of submissions. By that time, I had already made up my mind to return to India for good. I was not able to find good job in UK and was already in talks with some companies in India. Suddenly by turn of some events in a short span of time, I found that I “almost” landed myself in a job in Arcelor Mittal in Luxembourgh. Arcellor Mittal – the largest steel manufacturer in the world and whose CEO, Mr. LN Mittal is one of my heroes. I got an email confirmation from them about the job. I was very excited. But, then due to the global meltdown during that time, they decided to freeze the position and my offer went “on hold”.. My heart sank. No doubt, had I made it then, my life would have been totally different. I can’t say whether it would have been any better. All I can say is, today I don’t repent it at all.
It was the 7th Semester in my Engineering college days. Things were at an all-time low for me. This particular semester was notorious for the toughness of the subjects. One, I was not a good student in the engineering days. Two, to top it I had been preparing for different MBA entrance exams. I always thought I was living on the edge. My dear friend, Sandipan, now Dr. Sandipan Pramanik, a professor in the University of Alberta, Canada, a brilliant student in his own right, was beside me, providing me the required support and guidance. Sandipan was a good performer in the class, but not an outstanding one, which he should have been, if any justice had to be done to his academic credentials and past records. We both toiled a lot, especially in the 7th Semester, but was hardly rewarded (with marks). Things just didn’t seem to go right our way. We agreed that it was by far the toughest time we faced till then. We used to say “the darkest hour is just before the dawn” to boost our morale.

Its almost 10 years ago that we had this infamous 7th Semester. I forgot all that was taught then. (Well, I forgot everything that was taught in engineering). But what I learned during those apparently bad days is the never-say-die attitude. A lesson that good days never taught me. Even today when I go through some lean patch, I remind myself of the 7th Semester and how I successfully came out of it.
And this brings me to my thought that perhaps every evil day, every not-so-sunny day has some good effects in future. When things are going hunky dory, we don’t tend to go to any sort of self-analysis mode. Only during evil days we may find it necessary to analyse the situation and deep-dive into oneself, into one’s inner self to improve. It also matures a person. Evil days are not as evil as they seem apparently. Perhaps they are not evil at all. Perhaps they are the like “difficult problems” in the Mathematics books of our school days. They are tough, but they are better for the brains. They stain the good ones from the rest of the crowd. A difficult problem does not necessarily bring a pleasant smile. But once it is solved, it makes the student a shade better in that field. Life is all about solving those maths problems – arithmatics, algebra, calculus, trigonometry…
As a student we don’t initially understand and appreciate the reason for the presence of such “difficult problems”. The author knows, the parents know, the teachers know the reason for their existence. Likewise, as a student in the curriculum known as “life” the author, the Almighty, knows the reason for the “difficult problems” albeit difficult or bad days. So, the best way is to, just like we did in our school days, concentrate on solving them, rather than question and crib their presence. One day we will get the reward and be a better student in life.

My prayer to the Almighty was all about thanking HIM for the easier and difficult problems and giving me the power to tackle such problems in future with the right mix of values and virtues.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi Amitava,

sorry to know that things always did not go as best as they could. I do like your attitude of seeing ups and downs of life as math problems. One, you realize that you get better with it with practice. Plus, do you remember how math problems in the ith grade, which used to look so terrifying, would appear silly in the (i+1)st grade? This also holds for life problems. All my best wishes for a speedy resolution.

Vijay Mogha said...

good read...