Wisdom makes you old, or does it
come with age, I could never understand. But the irony is, when you are wise
enough to know what’s right, you might have already lost the time to do the
right thing. We lose many battles to win a few. And in the end, when our life
has nothing but a history, we revisit its pages and pause at the unwritten
words.
As I lay here, coffined by
peaceful pastel walls, in the care of my memories, and with no future to be
afraid of, I couldn’t not help but wonder if I would have done things any
different. A proud voice inside of me says no. I sigh in compromise.
I have had more falls in my life
than a non-adventurous person, but less than what a rebel might cherish. But
then, I was never rebellious enough. But I don’t know if I regret it. After
all, a choice is always deliberate. More often than not, I was so lost in
calculating the pros and cons of my options that I knew no more what my real
calling was. So even though I could make peace with the bigger milestones of my
journey, I know I have missed out on some important pit stops.
Like right now, I see it raining
through the window opposite to my bed, the only solace from this comfort zone.
I want to touch those raindrops and see if they can revive my wrinkled and
parched skin, so that for a moment I could relive those blissful moments,
rather than suffering the nostalgia. Alas! When all my senses have nearly given
in to the force of time, sensibility somehow prevails. It tells me to refrain
from this short term joy, else it will leave me with long term of illness that
my feckless body is no more prepared to meet. It is funny you know. At this
point I am not sure if my mind is being sarcastic and mocking me for all the
times I listened to it let go of small pleasures, because there is nothing long
term to live for now. I wish I could shun it for some time.
“What stops you?”
A voice comes ringing to my mind.
“I am warning you. You are going
to miss it big time” He says again, that boy who lived across the street,
almost like across the world I lived in. His part of the world had the same
material laws, but different metaphorical interpretations. We were friends for
the better part of my youth, and I never saw him unfollow his heart, ever. He
could stay up all night on a terrace just to see the stars melt into the
morning sky. He could pack his bags and leave for an unknown destination just
to explore where a road led to, when the rest of us in the neighborhood would
be studying for one of the many exams lined up for the week. Once he
disappeared for a couple of months. Later I received a post card from him
saying that he is at some hill in Himanchal travelling with the wandering ascetics,
and how life has never been better than on foot. That post card had a picture
of sun rising from behind the snow clad mountains. He had scribbled William
Blake’s line below it –
Great things are done when men and mountains meet
I kept looking at it for a while,
trying to find myself in those milky creases running down from the peak,
imagining how those icy winds might feel like.
“You know what you want, but you
are too much of a coward to really do something about it” He argued with me, a
lot.
“And you know you don’t really
want to do it, but you are just too much of an attention seeker to let it be”,
used to be my reply. I really thought that he was quite pretentious about his
guts, at times.
Despite our frequent arguments,
he never forgot to invite me to his adventures. And I almost always declined, as
there was always something ‘better’ to do. But I never doubted his faith in the
beauty of adventure, in the fulfillment that lies in being one with your heart.
I enjoyed listening to his stories as I tried living in them. Even though I
could never step out of my material zone and step into that other world, I
cherished his freedom too much. It was like a ray of hope that may be life is
not so clichéd like ours. And that’s why, when there were times when he felt
bogged down by social conventions of giving in to the ‘practical’ choices, I
never let him give up on his dreams. I always knew that he would achieve
something that none of us ever could, as we could never nurture that flame
inside us.
I stopped knowing him before I
could know what became of his dreams. Life did me this mercy of taking me away
on my own venture, and leaving me with this hopeful anticipation that he never
suffered the pain of doing the conventionally right thing. I remain hopeful that his wisdom is different than mine.
I always believed that we are destined to be where we are; only the path is left to our choice. So when I was always meant to have this life to love, remember and learn from, I wonder if it had been better if I took those untraveled paths. When I thank God for what I have today, I wonder if I should scorn myself for what I don’t. When I rest here in the warmth of this room writing my final chapter, I wonder if I must step into the rain one last time, to be free before I am free.
6 comments:
The emotions and notions of life have been so brilliantly worded, and one could so easily and deeply connect to them.... Loved reading it
Loved the whole thing a lot! but somehow felt the opening para and the boy's story lacked an inter-relationship. Reading the two separately, beautifully written!
Thanks Shely :) I will work harder on the transitions next time
Thanks.. glad you liked it
I thought i was the only one with these crazy conversations in my head..its sad and intriguing both..i wish there was one right answer that the world had for these quandaries, but the more i think of it, the more it feels like - while we've made significant progress in science and other areas as a community - there are but many fundamental questions that stay unspoken/rarely discussed..i like to phrase it as - "Each one of us live our own definition of life"
We do have a lot of questions, all of us. Mostly we just mull over them for a while, and leave them answered. Very few set out to seek answers. But no choice is a wrong choice. Like you rightly said, 'Each one of us lives our own definition of life'
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