Tuesday 11 March 2014

Maths; once I loved you....

“O my God! How did you do it?” My distant cousin exclaimed over the phone. Her highly pitched voice tore through my ears. And I had to bring out a gap between my left one and the receiver. I replied low.
“Well...mmm....it’s nothing, you just have to learn it fine.”
“No, wait. Did you dream of the questions the night before?”
I thought of what to reply! It was an insane question to me but, she didn’t own the blame for her phobic self. Maybe, I was some crazy nut to be floating on craziness at a height I never should have been. I convinced her at the cost of application of a word which I hated the most.
“Just practice, that’s all.”
            I was 16 then. Relatives, from all corners of the state, some I never knew, they existed, flooded our home. The reason was someone in their family had done something that no one of the blood ever did: 100 out of 100 in Matric. It was like celebration time for them. My parents were the happiest persons on earth. I was relieved but, nervous as well. Interrogations! I loathed facing them: What will you do now? How much did you practice? Can you do it again in future? I felt I was caught red handed in the relationship I had been secretly involved; my affair with maths.
It was not the case of love at first sight, for sure. I hardly do remember getting a maximum of 50, not until I realized a depth about it, somewhere between seventh and eighth, during the era of simple linear equations perhaps. I began to swim over the subtle flows to solutions. Chords, logs, i’s, ratios and sets functioned like functions in paperless thoughts. Maths had the most beautiful art, the art of approaching things. It had ways where I was the most confident. My intimacy with it anyway proved that it explained everything, even physically. Numbers were my best friends; I have been to glaciers with them!
But everything was not at all rosy; there were villains in my story. Fighting them was the toughest of all. I mean, why the hell should I care about Wordsworth’s lovely spring that never occurred to me? Revolutions, Movements and Kingdoms were like pages of fever. Literature hit me hard. One of them was different: Science, who is still faithful to me. It isolated our secrets dates.
“How much will you practice maths? You must make time for other subjects also.” My mother told me as she looked at what I was penning down while placing tea and biscuits on my table.
Practice, I hated the word. Practice is done for a reason and I had no reason for Maths, I just loved it. Filling pages with the colours of graphs, shades of rationalisation and the hearty numerical solutions didn’t imply the so called Practice. It was funny playtime with the closest thing that ever happened to me.
“This is not maths, Maa. I am doing Science.”
“Ok, sometimes it looks so similar.”
Well, it was not similar for me. For Science to succeed, it had to climb the universally true staircase called Mathematics. It is a total proof of the world of Science. In fact, it was a proof of everything for me then. Four = Five or cow = fish, all these were like weapons for challenges thrown to me. I blended all elements of destiny by figures from zero to nine. I measured eternity in my age of teen. I was at the top. I was in love.
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“Bang bang...! Wake up or you’ll be late again.” Someone thumped my door and growled aloud to break one of the softest of many mornings I used to grandly sleep out on the cosy bed of my hostel room. Friend’s you know, so obedient they are in following your orders for some classified brutal things like waking you up in the morning. More often, I peacefully denied myself to accomplish the expected task.
By grace of God or by some inherent numerical skills, I somehow figured in the list of fellows who could step into our state Engineering College for study: my father’s dream. Though I had no idea what would I do after being an engineer, I was happy. Settlement of four years, I thought was enough for me to figure out what future had in store for me. I was confident in all points of life till then. Numbers and measurements have always helped me, they were my silent strengths. But I strayed.
Overconfidence, I suppose will be the best word to describe my deviating ways to a future I had never imagined. A future destined for a struggle in every step! A future where the doom breathes past every now and then! I know some has had seen worse, but mine was not supposed to be like this. And my love, Maths, I don’t know how I lost you. I was not faithful, I know that. Actually I was always searching for you in the various tastes I developed in methods that don’t work with you. You didn’t seem to have any rational answers to them either.
The thing that happens to most of the guys who come to engineering colleges, especially those living in the college hostels is something that can leave mathematics clueless. Well, someone like me whose prime starting idea of being an engineer was to stop the blabbering mouths of kith and kin from further comparing my dazzling past with the present vices was the most suitable victim. Young boarders like us tend to develop immeasurable nocturnal habits. We did what we never did before. Ate, drank and slept like kings. Attending classes was the last thing we thought about.
Lady love, from the view of my short span experiences with a few of them is beyond trajectory and projection. Mathematically speaking, it’s an undefined function that can uproot your function from the algebraic origin of where you belong, to the infinity of emotional crap. Numbers have no clues to it. It demands those which your calculations reject. So, with all these theories of my pitiful old love, what I always did was I returned each and every time. All my relationships lasted for countable days, sometimes months but never in years. No offence to the ones called real lovers, sorry to say, but you’ve already sloped away too far.
It’s the worst phase where human emotions and all the colours of life which you never experienced before suddenly appear and that too in a stage when you need to keep them aside. Such situations lead you to make mistakes that you normally won’t do. In the case of academics during my time in Engineering, I suffered with that. Parties even during exams, being the egoistic bad hero to faculties against the low figures on my mark sheets, cultural dreams during high times of paperwork and many other momentary flash points were the description of the sick me.
It was the time when I really needed my Maths back. I missed the rational thinking and the logic it offered to me before. I missed the ultimate plan! Frustrations heaped a pile over my head yielding nothing but miscalculations of life. I was left jobless (still the same) to sit and stare bewildered beings of the past, race past me to glory. I remembered my day in school when I failed in Maths in class V. The teacher slashed me on my butt and growled, “If you don’t practice, it will happen again.”
That was the point! That was the word, Practice! This hateful word was what I once followed with love. It came in various forms. I just needed to catch the actual emotions to do it. It wouldn’t be incorrect if I say Mathematics did break my heart at that co-ordinate of maxima. But I was equally to be blamed. I didn't maintain what my only true relationship demanded and that was some time of closeness like I gave it before.
Anyways, I now think I have started trying for a revival, an attempt of pulling my curve back to its domain, for a proof that my point of extrema was an inflection in disguise, a final test for my love.
And few months back when a little one of the Matric aspirants from my place happened to chat me online, he asked, “Dada, how can I score a 100?” Though I still hated the word, but this time I meant it.

“PRACTICE.”