
All
of us remember the time we turned into a teenager; hormones racing, making new
discoveries. But this is not a piece about change in sexuality rather about a change
in perspective.
Actually being 13 is not the qualification for
being a teenager. In reality you turn into a teenage when you become a pain in
the ass for your parents, when you discover rebellion hidden in the innermost
part of yourself and when you start making simple situations around you arduous. So you may turn into a teenage when you are 13 or 16 or 18. No, I
did not skip Biology in school; I know the process of puberty and how it’s difficult
to cope up with all the metamorphic changes in our bodies.
Something
all of us can absolutely relate with is feeling alone. 'You don’t understand
what I’m going through', was everyone’s favorite dialogue while arguing with
their parents. This is the first time in life we realize that it’s been a long
time since our parents were young. In the decades that passed, their normal
became orthodox for us and our normal, an unacceptable way of life for them.
You
might recall often feeling trapped, incapable of making sense to them. But as
we grow out of our teens we realize it was just a phase, a fogged glass in
front of our eyes. Our vision and perception were blurred by an overflowing
string of hormones. Our mood swings were only second to that of a pregnant
woman.
But what if it doesn’t
pass? The feeling of entrapment, not belonging in your own house. What if while
growing up, the feeling only grows? From a phase it turns into something more
permanent like a way of life. Your faces match, people often joke how all of
you are slightly different versions of the same person but the hearts are just
not in place.
Have
you ever noticed the new kid at school? He feels
awkward, nervous and detached, with children looking at him as if he were a new
species. Imagine feeling like that when you look at your family. A constant
reminder lingering in the air that though we share the same blood, you’ll never
be one of us. ‘How did you grow up to be so different?’, they ask you. ‘Why
can’t you accept me?’, you only ponder.
Stuck
playing by someone else’s rules, you feel suffocated. You just want to escape
to a place you can feel free, do as you please and where you don’t have to
justify your every action. A place where you find support and love instead of
rules to obey. Often your own thoughts become your sanctuary. And it creeps up on
you that maybe your rebellious days are not behind you, rather you feel a battle
building up inside.
You
prefer the company of friends over going back home because it just doesn’t feel
like it. How can you call a place home where you aren’t valued; where your
absence goes just as unnoticed as your presence; where no one cares what you
think or want from life? You live there, eat there, bathe there but that is the
extent of your involvement. You are the last to know about anything important
and are excluded from the most worthwhile decisions; may they concern the entire
family or be limited to you.
And
sooner or later you accept it. Accept right now as something transient, leading
to your destination. You walk through life in the search of a place filled with
warmth. Somewhere your heart can feel at peace. A place to call HOME.

Very articulate.
ReplyDeleteGood going :)
Thank you :)
DeleteI am reading my story....
ReplyDeleteThat's something real.. isolation is something you face at every age.
ReplyDeleteIt is actually real. I hope it was relatable :)
DeleteI felt connected..touch of reality..keep posting
ReplyDeleteI am really happy that you could connect to the post :)
ReplyDeleteThis one is good. Considering that you are just 21,there is so much potential. Read masters like Dostoevsky, Jorge Luis Borges etc, understand how they peeped deep into the human mind. After that, just detach. And look around with keen observation. With your senses and mind wide open. Without being aware of your own identity or presence. A new world will open before you. It's just a humble opinion of a common man, hope it helps.
ReplyDelete