“Can I wear this right now, Mom?” My seven year old son asked
me at the checkout counter, fully expecting me to say no. He had a brand new
back pack in one hand and a big bag full of folders and pencils and supplies in
the other. I started to say no, out of habit, but I stopped myself. His
enthusiasm and genuine excitement rubbed off on me and we walked out of the
store with him wearing a new jacket and an empty backpack on his back.
In case you missed all the advertisements, it is Back to School
season! With just a week left to go before school starts, we braved the pouring
rain and similarly motivated families to go shopping for clothes and school
supplies. The atmosphere in the store was akin to Christmas. Bright signs and
flags marked the way to a large section of the store dedicated to Back to School
items. Some frequently bought items were packaged together into convenient
bundles for hassle free shopping. There were three or four rows of shelves for
just binders and folders. Pencils, crayons, markers and sharpeners were
spilling out of cleverly placed end caps. Overall there was a mood of gaiety
and celebration all around.
This made me think about my back to school routine. I spent
most of my childhood in a small south Indian town which had one hospital, four
churches, two temples, a small vegetable market, one bakery and one stationary/book
store. Summer vacation ended around the last week of May and we made that first
trip to the school, before the school began, to get our school uniforms. That
was the beginning of the week long ritual to get ready for the new school
year. A list of textbooks and notebooks
was provided by the school but everything else was optional and left entirely
to the financial ability of one’s parents. Pencils were mandatory till the
third grade and after that; we could only use fountain pens. That meant bottles
of nasty smelling Camel brand blue ink also made their way into the shopping
bags. Backpacks were made of durable canvas and were available in basic colors
such as black, blue, beige etc. Pencil
boxes were fashion accessories. In the higher grades, we had to buy the
geometry box with a compass, divider, ruler, Set Square, protractor, eraser and
a pencil sharpener. Mechanical pencils were a big deal, available in bright
colors and usually “imported”. Being
that the highly anticipated southwest monsoon usually made its entrance around
the same time as the school started, raincoats and umbrellas were a necessary
purchase. A stop at the local Bata store for a pair of black lace shoes and
white socks completed the shopping trip.
The second part of the ritual was a family affair. We would
lay out the books to be covered and labeled. Rolls of brown paper were taken
out along with sheets of name labels. My parents would cut out the brown paper
needed for covering each book and meticulously cover and tape that book.
Warnings on keeping the books neat and organized ensued. When they thought I was
old enough, I was trusted to cover my own books and a few of my younger brother’s.
There were single lined notebooks for Social Studies and Science, four-lined
books for English and two-lined books for the two local languages, Hindi and
Malayalam. While my parents worked hard
to make them look academically dignified, I would open up textbooks and browse
through lessons on the Human Body, Differentiation, Robert Frost and the vast
maze of newsprint that was to be my companion for the next year. The final touch
was the label. Very basic in form, this was a rectangular piece of paper with
pre-printed lines for Name, Std., Section, School and Subject. With each passing
year, new and exciting innovations occurred in the field of the labels. One
year it was sticker labels while another was all about Mickey and Minnie and Donald
Duck or bright floral prints or cute animal themes. My father would then write
our names, proudly and neatly, on these labels, with more instructions and
warnings to keep the covers and labels on the books at least till the first
Terminal examination. Then all the books and pencil boxes were put away in
the respective schoolbags, awaiting the start of yet another exciting year.
The school lists have changed, the supplies options have
upgraded significantly but the excitement and anticipation of going to a new
class with some old and some new friends, is still the same. For my children, at
this age when getting the right pencil grips, erasers and sharpeners is as
critical as finding out who will sit with you in the class and on the school
bus, which kid you will have to avoid and what the new teacher will be like, back
to school shopping is an important event, as it was for me. I am looking
forward to the new school year and I smile as we join this last minute frenzy
of back-to-school celebration.
5 comments:
Aww! Loved it.Suddenly I miss school way too much. :)
thank you chinmayi :)
you write very well, swapna! loved this article of yours!
That was GOOD!!!!!! Thanks for taking me down the memory lane to Angamaly. BTW, you missed to stressed upon the choice of the schools in having the most gaudy colors for the school, uniforms.
Continue writing !
Love
Baba
Thank you very much, Priyanka!!
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