Unveiling the Enigma: Exploring Albert Einstein's Childhood

Albert Einstein Childhood


"How dull-minded the boy is!" "Why doesn't he answer, the bastard?" the teacher growled, looking at a small boy with contempt. Who was six years old. But the boy sat there, unconcerned by his teacher's heavy dealings and thunders, as if these things were being said to no one but him. It wasn't the boy's fault that he couldn't answer. The one who didn't want to give sooner.


He used to think everything through carefully first, and then he would try to give a reasonable and correct answer, but it took a long time. One day, when Uncle came to his house, this teacher was mentioned. The mother, favoring her son's unusual seriousness and quiet nature, said, "What has this teacher understood, my son? My son will become a professor one day.


Professor!". Uncle Mian laughed loudly: "Albert Einstein and Professor! Ha ha, ha ha. Then one day he came, and that boy, Albert Einstein, really became a professor, and what a professor! The world's most famous professor! While Einstein loved mathematics and physics, he hated school exams. Due to this attitude, he had to face various problems during his student days.


This time has passed. When the job phase came, many tests had to be given for it. Finally, he got a position as a clerk in the patent office at a reasonable salary. People registered their inventions or industrial methods at the patent office. It was Einstein's job to scrutinize the countless drawings and photographs submitted by people and decide whether they were copies of a previously registered design or invention.


When Einstein was asked in his interview for the job, "Would you be able to do this?" He habitually took so long to answer that his application was almost rejected and someone else was hired. But when Einstein nodded and said, "Yes, I think I can do it," his face showed signs of self-confidence and satisfaction.


These themes were not even given a name until now. Ambiguously, Einstein named them 'excess'. This simple word added new knowledge to the world. As the days passed, Einstein plunged deeper into his "Theory of Relativity." In his small house, troubled youths used to get together and discuss this doctrine. Among them was an Indian named S. N. Bose.


It is noteworthy that Bose was not only a close friend of Einstein but also a distinguished physicist. The paper that Einstein published in 1914 was not his own research but was based on Bose's paper, which Einstein himself translated into German and published. Yet Bose is nowhere mentioned among Indian scientists. Among the young people who gathered at Einstein's house was a student from Switzerland.


The discussion of all these gave Einstein a good opportunity to test his theory. There was a date in June 1905 when people saw that Einstein took a quick step towards the post office with a dotted envelope under his arm. On our way. The envelope was weighed at the post office, and then many stamps had to be affixed as the thirty-page paper, written in fine print, was being sent to a scientific journal in Germany. In this paper, Einstein presents the essence of his theory and research. While handing over the envelope, Einstein had no idea that his writing would lead to a great revolution in the world of science.


When he returned home, his legs were unsteady. Which was proof that he had been doing immense mental work. Einstein's wife was very grumpy. He made a big noise that Einstein had become careless about his health and that he should consult a doctor immediately, but he was not ready. He kept explaining to his wife that nothing had happened to him. Just a little tiredness, which will go away after a few days of rest. He has no diseases.


Then came the day when Einstein's paper was published. Along with this, there was a panic in the scientific knowledge and research circles of all of Europe. In Berlin, Paris, and London, great scientists everywhere began to study it in wonder and try to understand what Einstein was saying. Everyone had the same question on their tongues: Who is this Einstein? At which university does he teach? In which laboratory does he work? How strange that no one had even heard of his name until now! The answer to all these questions was simply, "Einstein is a clerk in the patent office in Bern, Switzerland!"


Mathematics in the office Einstein started working and soon mastered it with his extraordinary intelligence, to the extent that he could complete a day's work in a few hours. Care was taken not to let it be expressed, lest the other clerks in the office be regarded as lazy and useless and action be taken against them. After finishing his work, Einstein would take out a file from his desk drawer that contained very complex mathematical and physics problems.


He would start solving these problems. If someone appeared from the front, he would secretly hide the papers (which were in the form of scraps) in his file. Indian comrade Einstein was very happy with his job. On the one hand, he got freedom from worrying about his livelihood; on the other hand, he got enough time for his beloved hobby. The problems of physical mathematics he chose for research and study were unique in nature.