It has been
a year I passed my 12th grade and began a new journey of my life, but the
memories of Oxford Public School have not yet faded. It has been a long journey
with some ups and downs, a lot many things a child experiences in his school
days - bunking a class, roaming around the corridors, standing outside
Principal’s office, parents being called for annual report and what not. I am
pretty sure most you might have experienced all of this, but to everyone’s surprise
all of this never happened with me because my mother teaches in OPS.
I find this
blog the right platform where I can explain how it is to be a teacher’s ward.
It is definitely fun. You are neither ghar ka na ghat ka :D . Classmates see
you as a potential tale-teller and teachers expect you to be a perfect
student!
I always
studied in the school where my mother taught and for a year she was my class
teacher too. So in my 15 years of schooling, I never missed her. We literally
spent 24 hours together under the same roof. There are perks as well as short
comings in such a situation.
I sometimes
felt that it’s pretty cool to be taught by your mom in school. Here’s why:
a.
Because there is a funny belief among your friends that if they piss you off,
they are pissing off their teacher to. While the real situation is actually
quite different. My mother was very impartial when it came to matters related
to school and I am really proud of it.
b. I
used to get to know all the cool stuff before everyone else. What cool stuff?
Let me give examples:
Is tomorrow
a holiday because there is a bandh scheduled?
There would
be no zero-period tomorrow.
Are they
closing school from tomorrow because it’s quite hot?
People
often don’t know the other side of this, it sometimes feels even worse when
your mom is in same school where you study. Why? It is because:
a.
I was never allowed to top in any test, no matter how good my
paper was. My paper was corrected with extra strictness. I remember
complaining about this to my dad after every test :D. After a few tests, I had
this ambition of topping in the subject when mum was my teacher and my
happiness knew no bounds when I did it.
b. I
had parent-teacher meeting almost every alternate day. So, I couldn't dare to
miss my homework or copy during class tests. That’s one regret I still have :)
c.
Not a chance that I could bunk.
d.
Oh, and most guys were 'afraid' to talk to me as I was their
'teacher's son'. That felt a little awkward and sad.
e.
My friends took liberty in complaining about me to my mom. And
that was just to gain an edge. I knew it! Damn it you guys!!!
f.
I never could argue with other teachers because I knew they'd go
straight to my mum!
g.
Sometimes I wished she would stop being so impartial and oblivious
to the fact that I was her son and craved for her attention during classes.
But that
was just me, that kid who was the star in all other classes except her mom's :D
:D
This is all
I went through my 15 years of schooling, I tried to show you my personal side
of it. But on a serious note, I got to see how my mother has managed to be
strong out of love for her profession and vulnerable out of love for her son.
Sarthak
Dhamija
Alumni,
Oxford Public School
Strongly agree with you Sarthak.
ReplyDeleteYes I completely agree with you bhaiya
ReplyDeleteHaha on the point. Very well written Sarthak 🖤
ReplyDeleteVery well written Sarthak! It was pleasure reading your post :D
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ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed your post.
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