Many people ask me what it was like going to the UK at the age of 12. What was English public school like? Well here goes.

It was very strange arriving in Epsom. I knew no one in a school where the majority were English boys and the weather was bitingly cold.

The houses they put us in were sparse. There were 12 boys to a dormitory and we slept on beds worse than prison bunks.

Cold showers were common and we became fresh meat for for prefects who loved to pick on first year students.

But it was hell for me, the gawky newbie, only for a week as I quickly made it my home. I spent a wonderful five years there and my closest friends are still those from Epsom. There is something special about going to boarding school which lets bond with people who become lifelong friends. I suppose it’s the fact that you had to eat, learn play and sleep together.

I was thrilled that so many of my Epsom mates turned up at the AirAsia X Inagural flight party in London especially my two best friends, Roddy Williams and Charlie Hunt.

Good ‘ole Roddy and Charlie and I were all residents of Holman House, the furthest away from the school’s main building. In the school grounds, we had our share of fun and mischief; on the whole harmless stuff but such schoolboy exploits are best filed away in the memory bank.

Roddy has become a master brewer. His four-year degree and I suspect, more importantly, all those trips to the pub, paid off. He now runs a brewery in Cold Habour, Melbourne. Roddy came all the way from Australia on AirAsia X with a bottle of specially made beer to commemorate our maiden voyage. That is what friendship is after 32 years.

Charlie, who now lives in Wales used to go watch planes with me at Heathrow airport, on top of carpark 5. I used to tell him that I wanted to own an airline. I won't tell you his reply hahaha. I love planes and the trip to Heathrow on the green line always gave me a warm feeling as it meant I was heading home.

I had five great years in Epsom and now I'm the governor of the school. Many of the masters who taught me are still there.

Epsom wasn't just where I learned the textbook truths of maths, science and history but so much more values that have shaped my beliefs.

Despite being a different colour and different nationality it taught me that you earned your rewards by merit. I was captain of the hockey team, head of house and college prefect. I guess I was good at sport and it made a difference. It's hard to imagine me being good at sport, I know.

At Epsom education is not just about getting 15As in exams it was about meeting and communicationg with people. It taught me ambition, humility and leadership. It taught me that sport and creativity are crucial to a successful lifeBut the most important lesson I learned was to value friends and that friends are forever. You can't buy loyalty and friendship. You earn it.

The Epsom crest. Our motto is Deo Non Fortuna, Latin for "not through luck but by the help of God"

Holman House, where I slept. We were the furthest from the main halls and buildings

The rugby and football fields. I was hardly on the bench, of course

It wasn't until much later after its founding in 1855 that football came to Epsom...

... And so did girls. They were the first batch of 6th Formers

The main building from a distance

Mr Hobbes, my biology teacher, head of biology, tutor of Holman house and still serving Epsom after 28 years!

The Quad

Inside Big School, where champs and achievers get their 15 seconds of fame

12 comments

iamamonkeysoareyou from United Kingdom wroteon May 16, 2009 at 00:17
Nice to see ole Epsom again. I left in 1999. Just spent 2 years in 6th Form there at Propert House. Housemaster was Mr Hartley. Also great to know that someone as successful as you was from Epsom College. I had one of the best times in my life there and wouldn't trade it for anything. Nice to meet a fellow old Epsomian. -Dan-
kflyer from Sri Lanka wroteon May 16, 2009 at 00:18
So do my school, Royal College, Tony. And I'm finishing school this year. :)
bluebeng from Malaysia wroteon May 16, 2009 at 00:33
'At Epsom education is not just about getting 15As in exams it was about meeting and communicationg with people. It taught me ambition, humility and leadership.' 'meeting and communicating with people' is what we should be nurturing. I was quite as school, the radio was almost silent. We should have more loud speakers, letting students to speak, to think, to interact. Learning without thinking is like doing the routine chore again and again. We should be doing is thinking of the better way of doing the chore like using automatic watering machine instead of watering the plant by analog. We should expose our children to real life experience like letting them to run the school's co-op shop. Let them have the first hand experience of running the business. Teach them how to care for the environment, using recycled products, planting fruits, vegetables, rear chicken. Let's our children use the school as laboratory to experiment new things, challenging their ingenuity. Our children simply need challenges. Don't left them idle but get them back to work. One word of advise-don't punish them for all the wrongs but we should guide, encourage, and persuade them to do the best. Just like working in AsiaAsia is fun.
rohan premachandra from Sri Lanka wroteon May 16, 2009 at 03:21
wow! epic tale! Reminds me of a time when I lived in Sri Lanka as an 80's kid from England and found myself in boarding school too!... couldn't speak a word of the local language let alone read or write it... but 4 years of dedicated "study and sport" soon put me right! I'll never 4get those days..tough at the beginning but oh so rewarding at the end.. and yes we all still keep in touch and meet up on occasion too...especially during the "Royal Thomian" Which you may be interested to know is the oldest cricket tournament in the world.. 130 years old to be exact! (there is an argument to say that Eton vs Harrow is older, but that encounter was interrupted when World War II broke out!) Esto Perpetua - St Thomas College......... rulz!
bdolphin from Malaysia wroteon May 16, 2009 at 10:08
AA..ABSOLUTELY AAWWEEESOOMEEE..XOX
tiwaana from Malaysia wroteon May 16, 2009 at 10:25
Dear Tony Sir, I am humble 26 year old Malaysian from Ipoh, Perak. I must say you are one hell of a good entrepreneur and one fantastic Boss (as testified by my brothers). I have attended some of your talks and presentations and follow up whenever I can, on issues pertaining to AirAsia feats in the media. I love the very fact you incorporate humor into your work life and always appear to be the jovial character on the outside (god only knows what torment you're going through). I salute you for talking up the bold change of making AirAsia Berhad what it is today, surpassing all odds and expectations. I one day hope I may personally achieve something I have in my mind which will take lots of time and effort to be materialized. But that something wont be as great as AirAsia Bhd. May god continue to bless AirAsia to scale greater heights in the future, best of luck to you and thanks for letting me leave a comment. You are my third idol after Jesus Christ & Vijay Mallya (hahahaha). Cheers !!! Lloyd Donovan Victor
abi from Malaysia wroteon May 16, 2009 at 11:07
Nice one...always nice to go back and revisit what made you :)
kimsoon84 from Malaysia wroteon May 16, 2009 at 14:59
Hi Tony, Do you think you were a lucky guy since child? There is only little peoples has a chance to study oversea and the education oversea is better than Malaysia. Ofcourse I beleive that you're hardworking too. If there is an opportunity, will you give some suggestion to improve Malaysia education? And d you beleive in God?
kitaro_allaboutmoney from Malaysia wroteon May 17, 2009 at 12:14
hi tony,wat a great story,u made mi tink of my school period,acctually no matter who we are rite now,we have to spend little bit time to recall about our schooling life,im a self made businessman rite now,im still contribute to my school,because they are the one who shape up mi,i miss my st michael (ipoh),i miss my bro ultan paul,i miss my principal mr louise rosario,thank you for everyting,bye Datuk...
zekodd from Malaysia wroteon May 19, 2009 at 11:58
beautiful memories are a real treasure.
shabri5 from Malaysia wroteon May 27, 2009 at 04:08
very good school.since your passion on education, i think you should open a private secondary boarding school.the school should be self reliant and survive on student fees but profit is not the main objective.i read somewhere, that nazir razak have same idea as you on what education should be if the fees reasonably i will be the first to enroll my kids.
mdghouse from Malaysia wroteon Jun 02, 2009 at 17:27
Dear Tony I pray that you will get well soon. Malaysian and the Greater World need you to be in good health. God Bless You.

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Welcome

Hi guys. Thanks for stopping by. This is where I plan to share my ideas, thoughts and observations on a variety of topics with anyone who cares to listen. There's just so much to say these days and with new developments in areas of sports such as the 1Lotus team and the ABL and in new ventures of Tune Talk and more to come, stay tuned. Cheers!
Opinions expressed here and in any corresponding comments are the views and opinions of Tony Fernandes, and do not necessarily reflect the views of the AirAsia and Tune Groups of Companies.

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