Why Can't I Do My Bachelors In Jalebi Making?

    • Team NIE
    • Publish Date: Jun 24 2016 3:50PM
    • |
    • Updated Date: Jul 29 2016 12:16PM
Why Can't I Do My Bachelors In Jalebi Making?

Asks Maanya Chaudhary, a student of Seth Anandram Jaipuria School, Ghaziabad

Sure, the headline sounds weird but that’s what comes to my mind whenever I see the huge stack of books on my table. Fundamental Physics, Elementary Biology, Foundations of Chemistry and Psychology send shivers down my spine. Well, it’s middle class tendency to push their children towards medical, engineering and company secretary, and I am a victim of that.

 

Even before the sperm meets the egg, the ‘buaji’ declares, “Mera bhatija to engineer hi banega,” and that’s where the ordeal begins. I myself opted for physics, chemistry, biology and mathematics with psychology, but being as horrible as I am in Mathematics I opted out of it sooner than I can speak ‘PCBM’. That decision was catastrophic, my mother became hysteric and my father said "Now that you've left Maths, you'll soon become psychasthenic ".
 

When I scored stupendously well in Class X, my family’s one point agenda was to make me appear for the All India Pre Medical Test (AIPMT), which has now been rechristened as NEET. Sigh! I feel bad that I am an aspiring doctor. Being a doctor will hurt me! Once, while walking through the labyrinthine corridors of my school, my bestie asked me, “What doctor will you be?” I replied, “Everything, but a super-specialist”. It’s worse being a super-specialist because super specialists are superspecialists because they super specialise in specific ailments. 
Rewinding the past makes me shudder to the core, but if not a doctor then what? My answer to this, ladies and gentlemen, is a halwai. "You do look like one already", my mother would say. My heart frets the burning smell of phenyl infused hospitals and OPDs, which is a world apart from the appetite stimulating smell of spicy samosas, hot pakoras and crispy jalebis. Skimming those lovely fried pieces of angelic goodness dipped in sugary ambrosia is what I intend to do. It may be a maleficent thought, but I would rather give people diabetes than cure it, and that’s why I want to do my bachelors in Jalebi making!

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Comments

Bhavana Jaison Atomic Energy Central School No 2

Every work should be honored and has it''s own pleasure. I think a halwai earns more than what a doctor or engineer earns .

Rajathariga S P AECS MAGNOLIA MARUTHI PUB SCH

This was both hilarious and it made a lot of sense.

Khushi Sharma BHARTI PUBLIC SCHOOL (SWASTHYA VHR)

Well, a person should be allowed to select his line of profession and no skill should be regarded as inferior with the other.

Prachi Jha SGM Shiroiya English School

Every work is nice and should be respected. Even if it''s a halwai. I think if even a doctor doesn''t likes his work than a halwai can earn more. Every work if done by heart will be the best. If their is no one in the world to do that work than the world will want it.

Ritvik Baweja Bal Bharati Public School

I agree that every interest can be converted to a career

Darshil Shah ST. XAVIERS - LOYOLLA -2 LOYOLLA 2

A person should choose the line according to his passion. In today''s world everyone is running behind money and forgetting their passion. Every one have their own interests. We should not listen to the world and we should make our own decisions.

Sarath Kumar RM Bethel Mat Hr Sec School

It''s nothing wrong in what we choose as our profession . Every job has to be appreciated. In fact people want to stop in joining the same monotonous professions like doctor or engineer.

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