A Mirror called Manipal

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Sitting with couple of B school friends at a fast food outlet in Delhi, I watched, mildly bemused, being introduced by a friend, to someone else and as introductions invariably are, this one was a pretty boring too, till Manipal found mention. It drew an immediate reaction, unwarranted by any and all social protocols, proof enough of the fact that someone was now looking at me with a set of new eyes. Which made me realize it wasn’t just that I spent the last couple of years studying in MIT Manipal; it wasn’t also that Manipal gave me a new lease of life; it is much more than that. Manipal has become ingrained in me, so much so, that that there can never be another introduction, which doesn’t have the M word in it.

Say Manipal and everyone has an opinion. Everybody has something to say about the place. Some might go on about its cool culture; some might even criticize it as a place that makes no bones of having no “moral culture” and even though I doubt it, but you might even find some, who might even go on to extol its education standards. This isn’t about Manipal’s education system or what Manipal should do to compete with the IITs. Ask me and I would say for a system Manipal is as good as I ever wanted it to be.

When I first heard about Manipal, I was told that it’s a place where rich people send their kids to, a place that is so very fast that people get into literally everything they shouldn’t. I remember someone describing Manipal in six words, “Fast life, Fast bikes, Fast gals”. We used to kid that the only thing South Indian about Manipal was the location. In hindsight location must have been the only thing that was Indian about the place. For a city, nay, town, nay village that had an area smaller than some Delhi localities, the outlook was as global as it can possibly get. Name me one more town of its size that has more ATM machines, CCDs, Baristas, Dominos and other international outlets and I will happily eat my words. When mobile phones were becoming a rage in the country, Manipal was sitting at the top of the mobile density table all over India. And as we later found out bikes were not a mere medium of transportation for us, it was means to greater ends. And until somebody got drunk and hit the chief warden who was happily walking on the pavement and got bikes banned from the campus, Manipal had the maximum bike density in the country.

I learnt long back that it was better to do something and face the consequences later than not to do it and go through life wondering all the time, what if, a mantra that allowed me to dive unremorsefully and unapologetically into the pool of fun and magic in Manipal. So all the while , all around me people were shoving each other in the unforgiving rat race, I merely sat on the side-lines and did what I actually wanted to do and it ranged from going to the library only to check out the paragons of beauty from the other sex, to sitting online for 20 hours a day or sitting on a lighthouse lit beach at 4am , totally wasted, marvelling at the sight of enormously powerful beams of light hitting the breaking waves in psychedelic sweeps, to buying a bike from the money that was earmarked for my tuition fees, to going into hibernation , to finally shedding off the lethargic fat and starting up my own firm.

So what is it about Manipal that is so intoxicating? Is it the unparalleled glamour and glitz, or the breath-taking beauty of the place that appeals to a romantic in everyone? Is it the awesome weather all year round or the abundance of single girls all looking to be hooked? Is it the booze or the drugs or the unorthodox culture or is it all of the above? One word that can sum up the essence of Manipal is “Freedom”, the freedom to be totally you. It’s a place that will make you realize who you really are and then let you bask in that realization. It is about doing everything you ever wanted without caring for any dictates; it is about the new social order where nothing is frowned upon by narrow social or cultural dogmas. It is about the thrill of living an international dream without even having to cross the seas.

It is hard to put a finger on what makes Manipal tick. It simply is one of those places that simply dropped out of the heaven and are unabashedly what they are and makes no bones about it. Sample this, throw around the M word, dopers look at me with respect, rock aficionados look at me with awe and in general guys look at me with envy. Like the famous Manipal video says, “Don’t you wish you were here?

9 Comments

  1. Wah, feel aa gayi..
    Only if one experiences,they can know what is hidden beside this small place tucked away in a corner of Western Ghats, nice article!

  2. Totally ! like totally !!

    I donno whether its your writing skills or thinking but this is one hell of a artical I read on MB in sometime also one of the best about Manipal.More than saying "Great ,rocking etc etc" I feel like saying "Congrats"

  3. In your euphoria, don't forgrt that the Manipal dream is run the tears and toil of 'poor' parents of bullyish children while other dreams like IIMs are run on the sheer labor of the students!

  4. @anonymous: Why do you confuse freedom with vice? : Let me take the example of ManipalBlog…if it was not for MB then maybe it would be difficult for so many aspiring writers nd bloggers to get such coverage nd appreciation! Dis is also freedom..nd it does not cost the 'poor' parents…

  5. Manipali students are 'makkar' and selfish. They don't understnd the value of money. They grow sumo-asses, drugged bodies and b…. net-bugged brains.

  6. @Anonymous: Are you sure about that? Really? Have you even seen the amount of things Manipal Students give to the local economy and also to the community as a whole? There are a minority of students who may fall in to the category you have deigned to fit all the students in to! But the majority are hard-working and sincere!!

  7. @anonymous: Well, if God has given some of us birth in well to do families then there is no reason that the others should be jealous of that fact. I know the value of money and I know how hard it is to earn. I second Vishaal when he says that dere is a small section, which is there in every major insti. As far as sumo asses are concerned…well..lol 😀 workng on it!

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