Living in the moment
Living In The Moment
I am old enough now,
I can be on my own,” I vividly remember saying before leaving for my college
dorm to pursue for my Bachelor’s degree. I was pretty excited about moving to
Dhulikhel and being on my own—to experience being an adult. Why wouldn’t I be
excited? It was my first time away from home. I felt it was about time that I
leave my parents’ nest and start afresh.
The first few days
were the best days. I enjoyed making new friends and wasn’t homesick at all.
Everything was new and exciting, and I was basking in that ‘newness’. Slowly,
my life slipped into a routine and monotony clouded my days. It was then
that I began missing home. I used to drag myself through the week waiting for
the weekend and catch the earliest bus home every Fridays.
I was rushing to be
an adult, but I now realised what it really meant. According to Niharika Dugar,
a content developer at Grade Up, to be a man means to be mature and act your
age, to take care of responsibilities and be serious about one’s life. In most
situations, it means to act like a methodological person is supposed to act at
one’s prime—courageous, proud and basically, not afraid to accept the
consequences of their actions. To be honest, I didn’t fulfil any of these
precedents but was I not an adult at the age of 18? I used to think that it is
the age when most American teens leave their homes to be on their own.
As if the universe
wanted me to dig deeper into my conscience and sharpen my worldview through
personal experience, I didn’t have a home that was just a bus-ride away after a
while. My dad left for overseas and my mother and sister moved back to
our hometown. After that, I had no option but to be strong enough and keep
things going. I would try not to breakdown emotionally and get engulfed by the
feelings of loneliness.
But these were the
times that made me reflect on my life and choices. It was an opportunity for me
to appreciate the good things I have in my life. There were many days I used to
feel low and remember how much of a spoiled brat I had been with my parents.
The place where I was so excited to go, my university dorm, felt like a prison
cell to me. I couldn’t even make time to meet my school or childhood friends.
I could not find the
charm of the old bonds in my new friendships. I was dying for the comfort of
the familiar faces I had known since school days. On few weekends, I went
to meet them but it was never enough. I always clutched to the phrase that
‘time heals almost everything’. After all I had no choice other than to wait
patiently to complete my degree. It has been one and a half years, just another
two and half year. Now all I long for is to reunite with my friends and family
and be able to live closer to them.
I often look back and
regret not making time for my family even though I had time to spare. Even when
I was with them, I wasn’t fully present at the moment. Now I’ve been taking
life as it comes and trying to live in the present. I may even regret not fully
experiencing my college days before it too comes to an end.
Live,
love laugh and enjoy! Good day people!
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