It's almost 3 hours to go for my 28th birthday and it's been such a mixed-up, mish mash of a day...ermm..year!
I didn't want to write a reflective post, and this blog is usually my happy place, but I feel like for once it's time to be a tad reflective.
Or maybe, maybe, it is time to get up onto some rooftops and shout to myself - "Look how far you've come! Look at where you're standing!"
These days I am so very fascinated with the concepts of happiness and sadness. How social construct affects our perceptions of our life. How some people manage to be genuinely, intensely, carelessly happy, inspite of every hardship life throws at them; and how others tend to drown in sadness at every little hitch (or perceived shortcoming) in their path.
I wonder at how difficult it really is to change your inner equilibrium; the one you were born with and/or acquired over the years; to change that and to train yourself into becoming something you're not. We read and know of so many inspiring, amazing success stories. People who have seen and overcome unforeseeable circumstances. All of us know someone like that - either in our personal lives or in the form of persons we've admired; stories we've read about.
People, in general, tend to persevere. People shine. People go on. People triumph. People live.They beat the odds.
How is it then that some of us get caught in the quagmire of life and are just unable to find our shine? The exact frequency we were supposed to be attuned to? Some of us spend our entire lives feeling like we're out of tune with the world. Some of us just can't stop feeling like there's something wrong, somewhere.
Maybe this is what mental illness is. Maybe this is what it looks like.
I'm sure most of us don't understand what goes on in another person's head. Everyone's mind is a beautiful place. Only difference being, some of us get the morning light kind of beauty, and others get the midnight storm kind of one.
I think that's probably what happiness and sadness are all about. Light and storm. And maybe, just maybe, it's possible to graduate from one to another. To find the light in the middle of a storm. To balance all that shine with some rain.
And isn't that what we're all really trying to do?
Let's stop trying to make our lives a competition, for once. A sad rat race of who shines brighter. Let's focus on ourselves, only ourselves, for a change. Let's shine for ourselves. Let's weather storms by ourselves.
Let's love ourselves.
Let's just BE ourselves.
Halsey once sang - "I hope you make it to the day you're 28 years old."
I officially made it.
Let's see what happens next, shall we?
I didn't want to write a reflective post, and this blog is usually my happy place, but I feel like for once it's time to be a tad reflective.
Or maybe, maybe, it is time to get up onto some rooftops and shout to myself - "Look how far you've come! Look at where you're standing!"
These days I am so very fascinated with the concepts of happiness and sadness. How social construct affects our perceptions of our life. How some people manage to be genuinely, intensely, carelessly happy, inspite of every hardship life throws at them; and how others tend to drown in sadness at every little hitch (or perceived shortcoming) in their path.
I wonder at how difficult it really is to change your inner equilibrium; the one you were born with and/or acquired over the years; to change that and to train yourself into becoming something you're not. We read and know of so many inspiring, amazing success stories. People who have seen and overcome unforeseeable circumstances. All of us know someone like that - either in our personal lives or in the form of persons we've admired; stories we've read about.
People, in general, tend to persevere. People shine. People go on. People triumph. People live.They beat the odds.
How is it then that some of us get caught in the quagmire of life and are just unable to find our shine? The exact frequency we were supposed to be attuned to? Some of us spend our entire lives feeling like we're out of tune with the world. Some of us just can't stop feeling like there's something wrong, somewhere.
Maybe this is what mental illness is. Maybe this is what it looks like.
I'm sure most of us don't understand what goes on in another person's head. Everyone's mind is a beautiful place. Only difference being, some of us get the morning light kind of beauty, and others get the midnight storm kind of one.
I think that's probably what happiness and sadness are all about. Light and storm. And maybe, just maybe, it's possible to graduate from one to another. To find the light in the middle of a storm. To balance all that shine with some rain.
And isn't that what we're all really trying to do?
Let's stop trying to make our lives a competition, for once. A sad rat race of who shines brighter. Let's focus on ourselves, only ourselves, for a change. Let's shine for ourselves. Let's weather storms by ourselves.
Let's love ourselves.
Let's just BE ourselves.
Halsey once sang - "I hope you make it to the day you're 28 years old."
I officially made it.
Let's see what happens next, shall we?
I have opinions about many things you said but I'm too tired to type them out. But you talked if things that I've been thinking about too and ive been actively trying to cherish what is, instead of always feeling out if place or out of sync with everything else.
ReplyDeleteIt takes time.
Congratulations on making it :-). Happy Birthday!
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, if we just stopped wondering about what other people do or think, we would be much happier in our lives.