Saturday, March 7, 2015

Catching up.

There was a time before when I felt disdain for a lot of people. I probably wanted to try and incorporate a lot of ideals into people. The ones I lacked, they didn't matter. The ones I had, mattered and if you didn't have them, I would probably judge you. And probably still do. Being vain and quixotic at the same time is hardly a good combination.

It's funny how suddenly one day, after a brief spell of something you never were, you realize that you will always be yourself. It may have been a hiatus of a few months or a few years. We ride along and we get lost in our ways, but we're fooling nobody in the end. The inner me, the real me, was here all along. Probably lurking back, smirking, letting me believe that I had gotten away. That I'd morphed into this fantastic being, doing all the right things, going up the ladder real quick, emanating charm and deserving unwarranted praise. People helped along the way, applauding you for all the things that didn't matter. You got lulled, and not just that, you wanted to get lulled into being a everybody-pleasing-bitch. No more discussions in your head about what you were really doing. The sense of insecurity was gone, and suddenly everybody was smiling.

It was great while it lasted.

Sure, there were times you couldn't even look into the mirror. There were times you didn't even have to courage to say your own name out loud in the dark - it was almost sinful. But then there was blinding light, and all the adulation, and all the praise, and they were all fawning over you. It should have troubled you back then - what really were they doing? And why? Perhaps you had actually stumbled upon the secret to life, and they couldn't stop admiring you? Or maybe they wanted you to believe in them all along, and trust their smiles to make you feel accomplished. Whatever it was, it worked. I believed in them, and so did you. We're not that dissimilar, you and I. Maybe I'm the bigger fool, and maybe the word 'maybe' was just put in to not make me feel too bad. But it really shouldn't harm you pride, I would have the bigger fall to go with it. The long, hurtling ride down to nothing one fine night when I would realize that it had all been for naught. I'd almost made it to three-fourths of the chart being happy, and it makes me glad that it tipped over before it went further. I'll be 25 this year, I may still be able to salvage something out of this. But what about those who have gone through this their entire lives? All the Peter Keatings working fervently to fulfill dreams they never had, forgetting in the process that it was meant to be for their personal joy before anything else? When did we become such others-pleasing people that we forgot who and what we wanted to become? They came and applauded when we stumbled down alternate paths, and soon the pleasant cacophony was all we could hear.

So I got the jolt one fine night, while watching a movie and thinking about how I'll never finish reading a particular novel. It has been a stumbling journey, the past few years collectively crashing in on me, making me wonder what the fuck I have been doing. I don't need them to tell me what I'm going to do or what I'm going to become, and neither do I need their applause. I'll know when I'll have reached there, and I'm sure you'll know too, and we'll drink to that then. Till then, I can at least try doing something I want. I've floated in the limbo of their fake adulation for too long.


I haven't written anything for many years now. I can't even be bothered to read back on what I have written, because that'll be too much crap for one night.

2 comments:

  1. The very realization takes the life out of life, doesn't it? It happens to those who understands life a bit more than the everyday everybody. The path to success, happiness, life, whatever you equate, is all alone. There is no one to pat your back, no one to say what they mean and mean what they say. Except a few. Family, for instance. You got to have them beside you and be beside them. But do realize that the world only sees the success, not the struggle. Everybody wants a share of the success, your success. Because they are in that sense hollow. Or do not have the courage to live the lives they wanted to. And if you are living without cheating or blinding yourself, while the others do that to you, then it doesn't matter what the world sees or says. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give others permission to do the same. Remember that? But there's a catch. You have to have harmony with the voice in your head, your mind. And it can only be achieved in times of struggle, difficulties, pushing limits, those dark, hopeless times, not when you are partially happy. Happiness like love can be sustained by the efforts of others. And when it dies, you are left all alone. It is a very strange place to be in. Have the knowledge to differentiate between this and the real ones. Be in the ever pursuit of happiness and find them in the small moments. It exists, trust me. I have seen the other side to appreciate them.
    P.S. You can always wipe off these feelings with chocolate or George Carlin. Try the latter, it always works!

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  2. The toughest lives I suppose are of the souls trapped between the Peter Keatings and the Howard Roarks. Never knowing which one will trump the other next moment. Reveling in the (sometimes imagined) glory of the individualism, the next minute conforming, trying to fit in, losing it all.

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