“The 9 O’Clock Knock: Boarding Life, Hunger, and the Art of Finding Food”
Memories from The Bishop’s School, Pune, where boys were always active, always hungry, and somehow always fed
A quarter of a century has passed, but somehow it still feels like yesterday for me.
Those were the days at The Bishop’s School, Pune – the boarding years from the mid-80s through to 2000 – when life on campus moved with a simple, steady rhythm that only really makes sense when you look back.
I stayed in the staff quarters in Lunn Block and later in Simba Block. Both homes were beside the dormitory, with the house door and dormitory door very close to each other, so you were constantly part of what was happening inside. You could see it, hear it, and feel it all the time, and that closeness also meant responsibility never really switched off – discipline, safety, routine, and everything that went on in the dormitory. In both places, I was the dormitory in-charge as well.
In Lunn, the middle school dormitory had around thirty-five to fifty boys, while Simba had a similar number of senior boys. Lunn was younger and more restless, always on the move, while Simba was older and more settled, with head boy, prefects, and senior prefects forming the structure of order and daily life.
Life was always active, with hockey, badminton, volleyball, table tennis, boxing, and football filling the days as boys moved from one game to another with endless energy. Even when formal games ended, that movement never really stopped, as if the day itself was not ready to slow down.
Then night would settle.
And with it came a familiar pattern.
Hunger.
Not something dramatic, just that steady feeling after long days of study, sport, and routine, when supper was done, lights were dim, and yet the day still felt unfinished for many of them.
And then came the knock.
Soft, hesitant, never rushed.
My wife would usually go to the door, and there would be a boy standing there, sometimes alone, sometimes with another, speaking softly: “Ma’am… can I have some coffee or milk?”
Then slowly the rest would come out – bread, butter, eggs, Maggie noodles – simple things, never demanded, just what was needed to get through the night or a long stretch of study.
It became a rhythm, especially during exams, when sleep was pushed late and the dormitory had already gone quiet. The knock would come again and again through those nights, always soft, always familiar.
And somehow, there was always something – bread, butter, a warm drink, an egg quickly made – enough to carry them through the night into morning.
It was never only in our home. Across The Bishop’s School, Pune, in staff quarters close to the dormitories, the same thing happened again and again. Different blocks, different doors, but the same exchanges – the same knock, the same soft voice, the same simple request. It was simply part of boarding life then, unspoken but understood everywhere on campus.
Somehow, we always felt a quiet sympathy for the boarders, because life in a boarding school was never easy. There were cold winter mornings when geysers didn’t work and baths still had to be taken, hot days in dormitories without fans in those years, constant movement between games, study, and routine, and all the small things boys had to manage on their own. Above all, there was the distance from home – for many, just two visits a year, sometimes even less.
Life in boarding was tough, but within that toughness there was something deeply human. Those of us who lived on campus – masters, teachers, and families – shared a close bond with the boys. It was not formal, but lived every day through presence, familiarity, and small acts of care, and over time it became mutual respect and, quietly, affection.
We knew the boys well over the years, many from their earliest days right through to Grade 10. We knew their families, their strengths, their habits – who ran hardest on the field, who lived for hockey or badminton or volleyball, who spent hours at table tennis, who took to boxing with focus, who never missed a football game – and we also knew the steady ones, the restless ones, and those still finding their way.
They grew up in front of us, slowly and without drama, until one day you realised they were no longer children.
Many are still in touch with me, and I have met them in different cities across the world. Each meeting brings those days back for a moment – the dormitories, the fields, the routines, and those quiet evenings – and although time has changed their faces, it has not changed the connection.
Looking back, what remains is not any single moment, but the feeling of it all – the closeness, the shared responsibility, and the everyday humanity of that life.
Simple days. Full days. Real days.
And in those soft knocks on the door, there was a quiet trust that never needed words, and somehow still lingers to this day.