Monday, May 26, 2008

No title to think of...

So another week goes by at the Indian School of Business. The routine is pretty much set - wake up, blah blah, lectures, sleeping in lectures, smokes, coffee, assignments, the occassional meal, more blah blah, quizzes, case-study discussions, suttas, coffee, sleep, wake up... the chakravyuh is impossible to break out of. It's worse than running on a treadmill... you're actually slipping further back if you don't speed up!
In other news, mid-term grades have been announced (well most of them) and I am adhering-and intend to adhere heretofore - to a strict grade non-disclosure policy. You're welcome to tell me what you think I've got or what you've got, and I'll have a good laugh over both!
The one important thing of note is actually the election of Rohit Kapoor as GSB president. Here, I have to tip my hat to all the 440-odd students of ISB for having made the right choice. Major Kapoor is the PERFECT person to be the leading light of the institution, and is a sterling choice. Other elections are coming up...
...but honestly, everyone's eyes are on the end-term exams (and more stats, eco, marketing and accounts). And the journey back home after that. It's been an unbelievable six weeks since we arrived here starry-eyed on April 12th, and whether we admit to it or not, our lives have irrevocably changed, and we've become better persons, yada yada yada. But to cling on to the last vestige of sanity, everyone is going home. Everyone but me (and a few others)...cuz the Wife has finally deigned to come and meet me!

It seems like regular readers of the blog (yes, all four of you) liked the faux pas that I had posted earlier, and clamoured for more. So here are some more, all of them more or less true with a few minor embellishments - and needless to say they're all childish sexual innuendos. I'm going to call this lot the D-company - cuz they simply keep me company and provide me with enough to write about. Enjoy.

1. The aforementioned FPK, lets call her Oddity for now, yelled out in a moment of sheer anguish - "Guys, f$%k me!" As if the Accounts assignment wasn't enough. You go girl!
2. Friend of mine, aptly nicknamed "Prick", was boasting about how he put his room-mate in, well, his place. His exact words, "Kal maine BD* ko kya sahi thoka..." Yes, yes BD...say his name, bitch...WHAT'S HIS NAME?!!!! You showed him, Prick! (*Name changed to protect identity and ward off other potential suitors)
3. MG, happily married father of two, points vaguely in some direction and calls out to Bawi, "Eh bawi isko zara hila na." PG, see what your husband is up to in your absence!
I strangely can't remember the other big faux pas that seem to happen a dime a dozen. A lot of them could be attributable to me, I suppose.

**********
I think the best way to sum up the year thus far and the 11 months remaining come from a Seal song... as I was listening to it last night, it struck me between the eyes.

"You are never gonna survive this/Unless, you get a little, crazy"
Seal - Crazy (1991)

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

When the clock strikes 1...

Something happens to perfectly rational, sane and otherwise normal people in the early hours of the morning. Like me for instance, blogging at 0200 AM. But I digress. So it's late in the night, or early, depending on whether you're in ISB or not, you've got a marketing assigment due in a few hours, some Economics and Stats to brush up on and sleep to catch up with, and it's threatening to rain. What do you do? Naturally, take the bike out in the rain and soak in the cool breeze. Then stand in a circle, and play catch with a coconut, a mango and a stress-ball in the shape of a brain, naturally. If the mango goes splotch (and it will) and the coconut cracks (and it will too), take a container, pretend the lid is a frisbee and...Game On!

At 0200 on Monday night, eight grown men and women, leaving their marketing, stats and all other inhibitions behind, began throwing random objects at each other. It had rained for about half an hour, and there was absolutel It started off with a "shaadi ka narial" and soon became any throwable or catchable object. So coconuts flew, mango got pulped, and the stress-ball brain bounced off people's heads. Strange thing - for a few brief moments, people in their mid-20s forgot what it was like to be responsible adults, and actually had a good time letting their hair down. I've never felt more alive at 0230 than I did last night when I was catching a broken coconut.

Midnight chais have become almost routine. It's when chai and rain combine, something magical happens. For a brief, fleeting moment, we forget we've got grades and assignments and study groups and what-nots happening, and just live for the moment. There seem to be two lessons here - bringing out your inner kid isn't such a bad thing, and more importantly, as you become a part of ISB, you get successively more f#$&ed in the head.

GSB president election fever is on. And seemingly among the most important things to accomplish at ISB in one year's time is to have an ice-cream parlour, 24x7 coffee vending machine and do "something about the TAs" (If I didn't mention it earlier, Abhijit and all other TAs rock!). Ah, the stresses of a one-year program.

Saturday, May 17, 2008

Mid-term over...

Phew,

What a week it's been! Exams over and much heartburn has happened. The smarter amongst us have now realised how to do an MBA, the lesser ones are still putting in their 12 hours a day. My sleep cycle is showing no signs of improvement but atleast i'm not losing any hair. Stats was ok, Eco was terrible and Accounting was sweeeeeeeeeeeet!

In the meantime, here are some gems that popped up as people's brains began to fry in the heat of the midterms.

1. Hind-sight: FPK (that's short for Fiesty Punjabi Kudi) normally gives it back in heaps. But we were wondering what the hell she was talking about last night, when she turned around and said... with her back facing us. "Dammit, this hole is becoming bigger and bigger by the minute." Yes, we have been taking it where it hurts us the most all this month, but we sure weren't experiencing contraction and expansion by the minute...! Turned out she was talking about a rip in her jeans. Hmm...

2. Shake em: Post-exam, me and A-mutt (name changed) were getting some coffee for everyone. Stupid coffee vending machine doesn't add sugar and we've got four to carry. So A-mutt says, "Chini daal de, stirrer daal de, uske baad sabko bolte hai hilane ko." Dude, I like my coffee black!

3. Your place or mine?: So Bawi (again hidden name) is trying to understand revenue recognition. The funda is "evidence of financial arrangement." Bawi thinks aloud..."So if I get into an arrangement with Chinmesh KJ* worth Rs 30000..." Let's make that one an off-balance sheet transaction please?!

4. Who's bigger? Avdhesh Kumar (or Ravan) has a study group partner named Abhishek Kothari. Me: You should be renamed AK-56 and Abhishek should be AK-47
AK-56: Why like that?
Me: Cuz you're the bigger "bore"...

More such stuff. I just realised, as I was describing the ISB extra-curriculars to a friend, how warped and unreal it must sound. Well TOO BAD! We're having fun this way, you aren't! Hehehe.

Friday, May 16, 2008

Have you ever..

...felt cheated?

Sometimes, you're offered a four-course gourmet meal for what seems, at the price you're paying, like a bargain. The soups aren't made from preserves, starters are unlimited, the main course is about as widespread as they come and dessert leaves you sated, yet begging for more.

Then suddenly you discover that the food is really leftovers from yesterday. What's worse, it wasn't even made in that kitchen, it was brought in from outside. Your stomach churns... but its too late now.

Elvis has left the building.

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Another week goes by..

Week 2, Term 1: Less stress than last week for sure, and I think people are settling into a rountine. Circadian rhythms have been sufficiently altered to think of 0200 as "not yet time to crash." Eco and Stats have been horrific, whereas marketing has been super! Financial Acctng has yet to really strike us between the eye, it'll only get tougher. This week, I think I've hit the average. Woohoo! Yes, hitting the class average in ISB is reason to celebrate! No marketing case = chillout week. Chillout week = Mass dunking+parties. We had a basketball tournament and a Dumbcharades competition... for once, acads had taken a bit of a backseat!



In a fairly curious developement... I've been getting random Facebook alerts in my Gmail saying "So-and-so has just added the iThink application". Better late than never I say! More power to you dudes. That's a slightly roundabout way of coming to the point (Actually it isn't). My knee is sore because I missed a landscaping feature as subtle as a tree (A tree-log actually). I thought (maybe I need that Facebook app too) that there was nothing there. In my defence, it was dark, and I was drinking away at the party. Now to complete the fairly long roundabout way of getting to the point, we were having a party for the profs leaving us at the end of next week. They have been simply superb, and it's been an absolute pleasure to sit in their lectures. So, kudos to Messrs. Bell, Venkatachalam and Stine and to Amit, who we'll see and hear more of in the rest of the year!



David Bell: Marketing prof from Wharton. Amiable Kiwi... someone who has managed to arouse interest in marketing from even the most hardcore quant jocks. David has a great sense of humour and a fantastic way of handling the entire class, considering marketing has 20% marks designated for class participation (CP) and it could descend into a fish market of sorts. Great start to what could have been a subject that could have been all gyaan and faff. Ladies swoon over the man.



Bob Stine: Another Wharton prof., teaches stats. Has explained stats more clearly in two weeks than I could understand in three years of studying it. Feel very comfortable with the subject now, more than Eco for sure, thanks to Bob's clarity in teaching. Very witty again (guess that's a pre-requisite to teach at wharton!). Good man, and a great and no-nonsense teacher.



Mohan Venkatachalam: Fin prof from Dooook. The guy with by far the most energy from all the guest faculty that we've got. Makes something as dry as book-keeping seem the most exciting possibility. And has the ability to come up with some real gems worthy of standup comedians! Also loves to party with the students a lot. The only prof who dresses formally in class.



Amit Bubna ("Call me Amit"): Eco prof, humble, erudite and sarcastic. A killer combo. Great in class, but he makes sure his assignments are screwy. Very nice to talk to outside class, where he lines up just like the rest of us in the cafe. Has ensured that MR=MC will remain entrenched in our brains for ever. Again, for just half a term of economics, he has taught microeconomics better than most other profs I've studied under.

Footnote: Abhijit Kulkarni, ISB Co2008, TA for MGEC and future McKinsey consultant. The guy has the most unbelievable patience, taking on all six sections for Eco tutes. Four sessions over one weekend (without any substances!). Hats off dude! I think AK is teacher material to rival Amit.

In other news, the menagerie at ISB has a new addition. Two tiny snakes had been spotted in SV1. Things never stop getting exciting... so we now have a snake appreciation course of sorts (no credits, so guess waht the turnout will be!). I'm wondering now if that elephant with red dots that I had dreamed of will finally show up on campus.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

What's a day like?

There's a stark difference between reality and expectation at ISB. In an ideal world, we would have finished off work by 7 PM and played snooker for an hour before retiring for some pre-reading for the next day. But the day transpires somewhat like this...

7.30 Am - The alarm buzzes, you put it on snooze. Before you know it, you've slept through three snoozes and its already 8.13 AM. No breakfast before the 8.45 lecture. To top it all, your roomie has invariably occupied the loo and bathroom and seems to be meditating (no offence Aseem!). Nicotine count starts. Family members reading this, don't get agitated, there's lots more where that came from.

8.43 AM- You're waiting at the lift, idly wondering whether the average wait time for the lift has an average wait-time that follows a poisson distribution. You're then wondering whether you've become a total loser.

8.45 Am - 10.45 AM- Lectures. (Snoozetime)
10.45 AM-11.15 AM - Break. Nicotine count upped by 4. Caffeine inputs - 2
11.15-13.15 - Lectures. I guess I'll devote another post to the lectures. The profs are truly unbelievably amazing, but we're invariably sleep deprived. You'll see why. In the meantime we've been given a ton of assignments.

13.15 - 14.45 - Lunch. One of ISB's great distinguishing characteristics is the lines that form everywhere - CCD, lunch room, cafe, loo (between lectures). Hence the mind goes back to idly wondering about the average wait-time distribution.

14.45- 1800 - The dark time. Nobody knows where the hell these three odd hours disappear. In a cloud of smoke, you may say...and that's accurate actually. Nicotine count upped to 10.

1800 - 2030 - Meet with study group. try to read stats. Wonder why you're not getting any sum right out of CI and Control Limits when you suddenly discover that you've been reading the answer key for the chapter on Sampling. Phew, you're not that much of a dumbass.

2031-2200 - I guess you can call this dinner. By this time, my Classic Milds box has but a few tobacco leaves left. Where the hell did they go?

2215: Sit with study group/friends again... try to figure out 3sigma limits, normal curves and other such beauties. Before you know it its close to midnight. You've not started on the Eco assignment yet... and not done any pre-reading for Marketing. NO CP IN CLASS TOMORROW...HOW DO I MAKE THE DEAN'S LIST?!

0100 - Three games of TT later, you wander around SV1. There's more clouds of smoke filling the air. You decide to get back to the Eco assignment but thats about 1 hr of socialising later. Stray beer bottles pop up ... and it's a welcome break!

0300 - All you've understood from Eco is MR=MC. Decide that you'd rather keep your mouth shut... and sleep. Someone is pinging you on Gchat for another sutta, but you'd rather keep an eye out for Lizards, monitors and others from the menagerie that we're occupying. Is it morning yet?

And so it goes... fun innit?

Sunday, May 4, 2008

So how are YOU doing today?

I now know what zombies feel like. There's about 400 of us here on campus at ISB (the remaining 43 seem uninfected)...and we've been found out like deer in lights. Just a week of lectures and suddenly day and night have united, and we've turned into the living dead. Wander around SV1 (thats Student Village #1, easily the most happening place in ISB) at 1 in the morning and you'll find a bunch of people with the same dazed, glazed expression. It's early evening, by campus standards. No need to talk, just nods suffice... we're all wondering - "yeh kahan aa gaye hum?" Marketing, Eco, Stats, Accounts - that's all there is to life right now.

And after you're done with whatever assignment it is at 3, you've got to get up in time for the 8.45 lec, finish your assignments, meet your study group, pre-read, pre-read some more, anticipate the MGEC (managerial eco for you neophytes) pop quiz, get your LDP thingummy in place and see if you can read the paper when you're done late in the night. Then throw in random b'day dunkings, an all-nite party or two in a week and lots of nicotine and caffeine, and b-school becomes a blur.

To think that when the ISB Co2009 began coming together, we wanted to have IPL nights in the SVs. Haha!

I would miss my pre-ISB work life right now, if only i could remember what it was like.

Edit: The wildlife isn't restricted to the students alone. After numerous sightings of boars, peacocks and squirrels, some poor guys found that they were cohabiting in their SV3 quad with a 3-foot monitor lizard. He was a real beauty, and the subject of a 100+ mails within a few hours. Waiting for the first sightings of the cobra now.