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Can engineers be 'Touchy feely'?

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Can engineers be 'Touchy feely'? Apparently they can... says
author Chetan Bhagat
I
remember the incident - I was in a restaurant, and one girl in our group was
especially charming. So I, like any other male, tried to put on a wooing act.
You know the routine, a nanosecond extra eye contact, a few more nods to
whatever she says, and attempts to throw in those one-liners which you know you
wouldn't if she weren't there.
And
it seemed to be working. She leaned forward when she spoke to me, and every now
and again, we'd have a small conversation of our own, separate from our group.
She laughed at my approach with the fork and knife, and I teased her about her
hair band, which had little teddy bears. Yes, we were flirting. A while later,
she asked me the question - what did I study? I said engineering, without any
particular meaning attached to it. And then like a cold metal rail, she went
stiff. My jokes weren't funny any more. Her eyes wandered to everyone else. What
was it?
Why?
Why? Why?
Two
days later, I still couldn't get over my great start that had dissipated
listlessly upon mentioning my education. Engineer? What was wrong with that? My
mom had wanted me to become one since I was five! I had to call her. 'So what
happened to you that day, hot and cold, missie?' And then she said, trying to be
nice, 'Well, it's just that I am skeptical about engineers as friends. I don't
know, they can be, you know, very logical and everything... not very touchy
feely'.
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Not
touchy-feely. Now what the heck did that mean? Well, she obviously did not mean
it literally, since girls don't really suggest that sort of stuff, certainly not
in the first meeting across the table. I guessed it was something to do with
feelings, sort of having an emotional side. The stereotype being, the nerdy guy
who sees relationships like laws of physics, to whom love is just a bunch of
chemicals going crazy in your brain, and getting to know a person means
obtaining their bio-data.
It's
time to set the record straight.
It's
true that a lot of what engineers study (and they end up studying quite a lot),
has to do with formulaes, laws and numbers. No matter how hard we try, some of
the vocabulary we read all day gets into our language. So when my mother said,
'Are you getting married next year or not?' I was liable to say, 'Well, at this
moment in time, the probability is relatively low,' and felt it was completely
normal to say it. And when my sister went sari shopping and couldn't explain the
shade she wanted, I told the shopkeeper the percentages of pink, orange and red
in the sari.
Yet,
ladies, I don't think we're bad at relationships, love and getting to know
people. We too, can be touchy-feely, as that is part of our education as well.
The reason for this is that most engineering students live in the ultimate
educator - boy's hostels. Now, let me explain how this plays into this
'touchy-feely' thing. Relationships. Imagine eating, sleeping, brushing your
teeth, bathing (ok rarely this one) and partying with the same people all the
time. So, when you are kicking that bathroom door down for the tenth time, or
when you stand in line for 'gulab-jamuns' in the mess, and when you are done
with the vodka bottle and sharing all your secrets, you know it is good
practice. Yes, hostels maketh the man.
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