New Delhi: She wants to have nothing to do with books. Armed with an Asian Games medal now, sailor Harshita Tomar has managed to convince her parents that she wouldn't be missing much by prioritising sailing over schooling.

The 16-year-old missed her Class X examination to be in Jakarta for the Asian Games. As it turns out, the risk was worth taking, as she ended up with a bronze in the Open Laser 4.7 event.

If Harshita has her way, she would happily miss the exams again but she can't. "I don't want to have anything to do with studies. After all, it is not the only thing that educates. But I know my parents will be after my life and I do have some free time from sailing so I rather appear for my board exams," Harshita said in a tongue-in-cheek style during a felicitation ceremony organised by the CBI where her mother Rani Tomar is a constable.

Harshita’s proud parents, Rani and Devendra Singh Tomar, pushed her to school in an already punishing schedule that required six hours of training on the water. Like normal parents, they wanted their daughter to be well educated but now they realise education is a lot more than just getting lost in the books.

"Education is important and that is why we wanted her to do normal school and college but with the exposure she has got through sailing, we feel she is much smarter than the kids her age. We have not gone outside (India) but she has travelled the world all by herself. Now we realise that is very much a part of education," said Harshita's emotional mother.

Harshita, who grew up swimming in River Narmada in Hoshangabad, was born to be in water but is equally good at drawing and cycling, her mother said.

It was sheer destiny that Harshita became one of the youngest medallists from India at a multi-sporting event, the Asian Games 2018. She was an accidental swimmer before she became an accidental sailor in 2012.

Harshita’s mother was in the CRPF for almost 20 years before moving to the CBI and that meant she had to keep changing cities. Rani was posted in Srinagar when Harshita was born but soon moved to Hoshangabad in Madhya Pradesh.

The nature of Rani's job adversely impacted Harshita's health. "Since I was away, I could not feed her that much in the first two years. Her constitution became weak; so the doctors recommended that we take her to some cool place.

"That is why I started taking her for a swim in the Narmada and there she took to swimming as if she was born for it. It is only after she turned six that she got healthy. It was a long struggle for her as well as for us," said the father, who works for a Hindi newspaper in Bhopal, near Hoshangabad.

Harshita won as many as 100 medals in swimming before sailing suddenly happened when she was spotted by the coaches of the Sailing Academy in Bhopal. "I did not want to be a swimmer, I did not want to be a sailor. It just happened," she said.

Harshita competed with men in the Open Laser 4.7 class in Jakarta and still came home with a bronze. "If it was not an open race (comprising both men and women), I would have won gold," said the champion sailor.

Besides clearing her board exams, Harshita knows she has got a herculean task at hand before the 2020 Olympics. She currently weighs 50 kg and needs to gain at least 10 kg to compete in the laser radial class, which is an Olympic event.

"It will be tough and I know I have to work doubly hard for it. It was fun competing against the men but in the higher class, I will only have to deal with women. For now, I want to enjoy some free time," added Harshita.