Tuesday,29th November 2023
A Mini Heart attack
For the first time in my life, I had received more than 50 wishes on my birthday. Thanks to Instagram, my juniors, schoolmates, and all the AOSites.
The first one was from Hritika, whose texts I saw when I woke up at 4 a.m. as usual.
"Happy Birthday (celebration emojis)
God bless you"
Hritika's message was a pleasant surprise. It was generous of her—the sweetest member of F.R.I.E.N.D.S, as I always called her.
At 8 a.m., I installed Instagram and got around two mentions, from Ramesh and a school friend. On Snapchat, I got wishes from Team Snapchat, of course, and from my juniors.
While on the bus, I received another wish, this time from Lizz:
Happy bday! (a red heart)
I didn't see that coming, but it was a kind gesture.
Opening the door of our classroom, they all got up to wish me, which made my smile grow even wider. Meanwhile, the spectacled girl had seen the photo of her favourite chocolate that I sent her:
"Happy b'day! (a single birthday-capped emoji)"
That was all I got in return for the chocolate.
"I remember your choice", I replied, tagging the photo of the chocolate.
"Good, good. But it's your birthday," She didn't seem to catch on that it's usually the birthday boy who brings chocolates for others. But I wasn't thinking traditionally—I just wanted to send her something she liked. It was silly, I guess.
"So what, Miss?" I quickly retorted.
"Why are you calling me Miss?" she asked with a laughing emoji.
"So should I call you Mrs?" I was slowly reverting to my school form.
"No, don't say anything", she always spoke like that. 'Straight to the point.'
Unbeknownst to me, Sajit sir, our faculty member, had arrived in the classroom and caught me using WhatsApp. He might have even seen who I was chatting with. I quickly switched off my phone and stowed it in my bag. I was embarrassed, but he always had a way of making everyone feel comfortable in class.
"Bhai, who uses WhatsApp these days?" he joked, pointing out that it's the era of Instagram and Snapchat, and I was still using WhatsApp to text people.
Our only math lecture ended at 12 p.m. Sajit sir asked me to set up the projector in the neighbouring class for his next lecture.
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Batch 1
The Elite Batch
As I opened the door, the classroom appeared as it always did—nothing less than a 5-star restaurant, minus the food. The way they sat in groups made it seem like one. Some of the top students sat at the front, including Sachin, Ayaan, Ananya, Anika, and many others.
Amit, the leader of the backbenchers and emperor of conversation, as I always called him, was also there. In the mid-left corner, Paresh, who had confessed his feelings to Sanjana J soon after joining the batch, only to be bluntly rejected, sat with his new friends. And in the middle of the first and second rows were those four girls —Lizz, Naira, Sanjana J, and Rushika — who always stuck together.
The chocolate-brown curtain and the yellow ceiling lights gave the room a remarkable look. Add some background music, and you'd feel like you've stepped into a high-rated restaurant.
Lost in thought, I carefully made my way toward the whiteboard, slowly walking between the first and the second column of benches where the four girls were sitting on four different benches, which seemed like the vertices of a rectangle. They were deep in gossip and discussion. As I neared their territory, Sanjana took her eyes off the girls she was looking at, turned to me, and wished,
"Happyyy Birthdayyy."
"Oh (in my mind)..." I never saw that coming. My heart skipped a beat, and I could feel it. I took a step back and thanked them.
"...Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you very much," I repeated as the other three also wished me.
"Are, ise kaise… wait, how did she…?" I questioned myself, wondering how she had not followed me back on Instagram, even after accepting my follow request.
"Bade log hai ye," my mind often chanted about her.
She might have seen it in Ramesh's Instagram story. But it was actually so sweet of her that I could barely lift my head to look at the four of them. She almost gave me a heart attack. The worst part was that I blushed so much upon hearing it that I couldn't even raise my head while thanking her.
"Kindness costs nothing"—that was the line I had once read on the cover of an A3 notebook. Why would she even care if it was my birthday? Yet, the fact that she wished me felt genuinely kind. In that moment, I silently took back everything I had ever thought about her being arrogant or distant. Maybe she wasn't like that after all.
"Bro, come here also." While leaving the class, I was called by Amit and his gang, and they too wished me after pulling my leg. "Ha Bhai, you took wishes from girls only," he taunted.
"Are yaar, I was just there to set up the projector—they were the ones who wished me!" I tried to defend myself, like always. But it was no use. Their grins said it all: in that room full of birthday wishes, I'd just become their favorite punchline.
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