Drpciv - Chestionare

Aarav bubbled —correct. But again, a note: “Correct. But encapsulation isn’t just for tumors. It’s for people too. We wrap our loneliness in small talk and call it ‘fine.’”

It was a humid Tuesday afternoon when Dr. Pramod Chavan—better known to his students as Dr. P(Chiv)—unlocked the door to his cluttered office. The air smelled of old paper, whiteboard markers, and academic ambition. He was a legend in the department, a man whose multiple-choice questions had made generations of medical students weep into their chai.

The professor stared at the fluorescent light overhead. He had been teaching for 22 years. No student had ever written existential marginalia on a multiple-choice answer sheet before. drpciv chestionare

Today, however, he wasn't giving an exam. He was checking one.

Aarav had bubbled . Wrong. But next to it, in tiny handwriting in the margin, he had written: “But the real answer is regret. Regret passes through every foramen of the human body, Dr. PChiv.” Aarav bubbled —correct

He graded it 0/200. But in red ink at the top, he wrote:

Dr. PChiv adjusted his spectacles and leaned in, not because Aarav’s answers were wrong—but because they were strange . It’s for people too

And somewhere in the hostel, Aarav stared at his ceiling, unaware that for the first time in years, a professor had actually read between the bubbles.