Last week, an IITian committed suicide. People who commit suicide do it
when they feel there’s no future. But wait, isn’t IIT the one place
where a bright and shining future is a foregone conclusion? It just
doesn’t add up, does it? Why would a young, hardworking, bright student
who has the world ahead of him do something like this? But the answer is
this-in our constant reverence for the great institution (and I do
believe IITs are great), we forget the dark side. And the dark side is
that the IITs are afflicted by the quintessential Indian phenomenon of
academic pressure, probably the highest in the world.
I can rant about the educational system and how it requires serious
fixing, or I can address the immediate-try my best to prevent such
suicides. For this column I have chosen the latter, and I do so with a
personal story.
News of a suicide always brings back one particular
childhood memory. I was 14 years old when I first seriously contemplated
suicide.
I had done badly in chemistry in the Class X half yearly exam. I was an
IIT aspirant, and 68% was nowhere near what an IIT candidate should be
getting.
I don’t know what had made me screw up the exam, but I did know this, I
was going to kill myself. The only debate was about method.
Ironically, chemistry offered a way. I had read about copper
sulphate, and that it was both cheap and poisonous. Copper sulphate was
available at the kirana store. I had it all worked out.
My rationale for killing myself was simple-nobody loved me,
my chemistry score was awful, I had no future and what difference would
it make to the world if I was not there. I bought the copper sulphate
for two rupees-probably the cheapest exit strategy in the world.
I didn’t do it for two reasons. One, I had a casual chat with the aunty
next door about copper sulphate, and my knowledgeable aunty knew about a
woman who had died that way. She said it was the most painful death
possible, all your veins burst and you suffer for hours. This tale made
my insides shudder. Second, on the day I was to do it, I noticed a
street dog outside my house being teased by the neighborhood kids as he
hunted for scraps of food. Nobody loved him. It would make no difference
to the world if the dog wasn’t there. And I was pretty sure that its
chemistry score would be awful. Yet, the dog wasn’t trotting off to the
kirana store. He was only interested in figuring out a strategy for his
next meal. And when he was full, he merely curled up in a corner with
one eye open, clearly content and not giving a damn about the world. If
he wasn’t planning to die anytime soon what the hell was I ranting
about? I threw the copper sulphate
in the bin. It was the best two bucks I ever wasted.
So why did I tell you this story? Because sometimes the pressure gets
too much; like it did for the IITian who couldn’t take it no more. On
the day he took that dreadful decision, his family and friends were
shattered, and India lost a wonderful, bright child. And as the silly
but true copper sulphate story tells you-it could happen to any of us or
those around us.
So please be on the lookout, if you see a distressed young soul, lend a
supportive, non-judgmental ear. When I look back, I thank that aunt and
that dog for unwittingly saving my life. If God wanted us to take our
own life, he would have provided a power off button. He didn’t, so have
faith and let his plan for you unfold. Because no matter how tough life
gets and how much it hurts, if street dogs don’t give up, there is no
reason why we, the smart species, should. Makes sense right?
November 24, 2005 ()