Friday, December 11, 2015

The shades of life..



Once upon a time, life used to be simpler, and going about at a cordial pace. Incidents, planned or impromptu, were always accountable to certain legit circumstances.  Everything seemed to have a reason; for good or for bad, it used to be acceptable. For all those things that were acceptable in the past, there used to be someone mature enough, who was accountable to. There were people you looked up to for answers to such questions which life posed ominously. And naively, with all the innocence that could exist, you used to accept those answers with assuring belief. Those people were your philosophers. Their viewpoints shaped your ideology. And they could never disappoint you in their ways. For me, it was my parents; and they still are, but certain things have changed now.
In the years that fly by (seems like a fortnight to me!), and with life seemingly getting out of your hands, with nobody accountable to the series of events happening in your life, when your begetters are themselves riveted by the circumstances, we are expected to switch roles with them. They need the light that they had been guiding us with all these years. We now become their pillars that they had raised us to be. But what I doubt is, do we really become that capable when the time comes?
To see your own support system crashing, the kind of helplessness one faces cannot be expressed (atleast I cannot!). Someone whom you had always relied upon, suddenly not being there in that place, is the hardest blow to one’s existence. You can never be prepared for it, unless it becomes this slow gradual process where you are bound to go through all the stages of grief: i.e. Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression and Acceptance. By the time you reach the final two stages, you are most likely to be prepared to switch roles. To smile when a situation demands so, to be tough and make decisions without always choosing the happy one, to stop questioning the occurrence of events, and perhaps to be someone else’s support system.
I feel the need to clarify this here that I have been writing this post because I see so many cancer patients everyday, and talking to them I see those patients and their families bring out all of their anguishes and apprehensions towards life. I can never know what it feels like to be in their individual situation, but I certainly can empathize with them, since I have my own share of personal setbacks. I just had an elderly patient today with stage IV pancreatic cancer, diagnosed after an entirely healthy life of no addictions, still in the phase of anger, and questioning me as to why did such a horrendous disease take over him despite of him being such a decent man all his life. I obviously stood there speechless listening to him, realizing it all perfectly that there is no answer to any of his queries. And finally he told me to fear that one supreme power that lies above us all, because nobody perhaps can understand his ways.  And then there are so many other patients who have been in remission for quite a while, distraught with a relapse of their disease. All in this perpetual cycle of hospitals and therapies, being hopeful on the outside, and daunted on the inside. The children taking care of their elderly parents, and the young parents bringing in their sick toddlers. Each of them being a support system for the other. And we merely as pawns, finding out that it is all a part of the inevitable circle of life. It might be every individual’s separate story, but it is certainly every house’s. For some it happens too early, and for some quite late, but the times change, and the roles do too. And there is nothing you can do about it, except for reaching the 5th stage, which is of Acceptance. And there is no way to fast forward to it. It is going to take, what would seem like, all the time in the world.
But it shall pass too; the scars may remain, but I am hoping for times to change again..

Friday, December 4, 2015

Denial to Acceptance..

Does it still count as denial if I am aware of it that things are terrible, but still try my best to overlook them. Care for things and break down when the surge is at par, but still try to cover up for it by filling my head with random trivias, so as to not let these feelings resurface at other times.
I have so much content running in my head all at once, that I often feel it's just gonna explode. And if not, it might as well give me an exquisite neurodegenerative disorder for having exhausted all the neuronal fuel too soon to keep my machinery functional for a reasonably long period.
Does expressing my denials (or more technically, suppressions) via this post make it even more complicated, as to what this really is that's piling up inside me? And what is this leading me into? Because had I succeeded in suppressing these thoughts, it wouldn't have lead to this post! It is all so super confusing!!
I mean there is just more than enough chaos around for one to handle. It starts from your own personal life crises, goes on to your family's, then comes the professional and academic frustrations, then the over-crowded & hard-to-breathe-in city, the intolerable media debates, the fucked up world peace,  the dying Earth, the poor beggars on the metro stations, the sick in the hospital beds, the illiterate child labors, the manner-less, the hurtful, the deceitful, the pick-pocketer, and what not you come across!! Why does everything  bother so much? Why does it all take so much of data in my little RAM and why isn't it possible to clear off the cache in reality?
I know everybody has an opinion for all of it. They talk over current affairs, bitch about others lives and actions and pass their naive judgements. I detest it, and at the same time get awfully hurt by it, if somebody judges me; as the saying goes, 'you have never walked in my shoes, you have no idea how it feels like to be me!' Atleast I personally try to rationalize the scenarios in my head, by making sure I do not confuse between being opinionated and being judgmental. And that makes me better at knowing all the facts, about two sides of the same story and certainly gives me a wider perspective of the reality. What happens rarely so, is the realization of 'it is none of my business!' So even though I am not responsible for the horrendous state of affairs and there is certainly nothing I can do about it, I just cannot keep my mind off those happenings so that I could have some peace of mind. Why is it so bloody difficult?
I am literally trying to reach out to some sort of spiritual means like meditation centers or chapel visits, but even that seems far fetched since I'm scared I'll find some more people around there who's lives might start affecting my psyche.
I am not obsessed in any way, I can let go off things, only to find something else as a filler. My life is turning into a havoc with all sides raising tall walls, trapping me into the darkest of holes of pessimism. I am clearly unable to carry on with the mask of being a  simple, organized little girl anymore, especially with this sort of turmoil in my head. I am not able to see hope in anything now. I need a tiny weeny reason of joy.. A minute little something maybe, just so that I can restore my faith in hope for good things to happen. To believe that there's a scope for life to get better someday. For the circumstances to take the far left road of happiness. And to be able to accept that there can be two sides to my story as well,  and the good part of life is one of them, which perhaps is yet to come. But certainly i just need it to be a reason enough to keep going, and not giving up on life!

Sunday, October 11, 2015

A New Girl in the City- Going with the flow, or trying to stand apart!

Coming from a small town, life swirls you right from the bottom of your feet on coming to a metro city. 
Delhi it is for me. 
And even though I have been here countless times in the past, moving here cannot be compared to any of those previous leisure trips. Be it finding a not so great abode for myself, or the daily commuting; be it the struggle for the everyday meals, or the terminal exhaustion to just go to bed without much ado, all of it seems like a trap to an endless maze. I do explore some new paths and add those chapters to my life everyday, but by the end of a week I am back to the perpetually same tracks. Still fighting the urge to ask myself the same question, if this really was my purpose in life? 

There is this thing with dreams, that they make it really difficult to accept the reality! And more so,  when the reality never at all occurred to you in those dreams.
I mean, I have got tired of explaining this to people I come across, that I am in a specialty that I chose for myself. (Nuclear Medicine, a branch which is not so popular among my fellow medicos, let alone the commoners. Please Google for further details on my role as a Doctor here.) And I'm happy to have chosen it over the many other branches which the crowd follows uncritically. I did my research, and weighed all its pros and cons before I decided to get into it. I needed to be in such a branch to be able to live my life my way. Just that the whole idea of what exactly 'my way' is, what I have dreamt of through these years, keeps changing as we grow. And to be honest, I am with the clan here, hating to grow up! But still making a choice and accepting the present, which perhaps is not straight out of my dreamland, but it is clearly the right plan now.

How I miss those times when things were as simple as attending lectures, studying for the next exams, and enjoying with friends and family. According to me, that is the realm in which one has the guts to have ambitions, and dreams, and to believe. To Believe that you are capable of achieving it all, and any kind of restrain in your path seems insignificant then. This is how I had imagined and planned things for myself all these years, because I had always been brought up in this coddled dome of optimism and love made by my family. Believing I can do the extraordinary, and somehow achieving those little milestones in the long run, made me an exemplar for them. But now, the reality of this cosmic city makes me feel no more than ordinary! Having seen life at its crudest, I now have the wishes of any other common man, that is to have a job, a degree, a family, some peace, and eventually happiness. Nothing more really matters! I'm grateful to have met the most of it at this point in my life.  And I'm fervently looking forward to reach out for the remainders.
But the ugly truth is that the ideal world that we tend to seek, the one with a perfect balance amongst work and family, success and failure, joy and sorrow, can never exist in reality. Because there is always going to be some part in excess of the other. And this would cause colossal shifts in our psyche, altering the definition of our dreams and desires, eventually scarring our lives to impact all our future goals. 
(I recently read this somewhere and got really inspired, quoting Mrs. Georget- Scars mean survival, it means that we showed up for the fight rather than running away from it.) 
It makes me realize how it is all a part of growing up. That we are supposed to develop into these indifferent beings, rather than what we used to think of ourselves in our carefree tender days. It certainly makes our emotions stronger but sadly our psyche weaker. We learn to value relations more than the merits of our career and we tend to prioritize discordantly to our own foregone whims. Atleast that is how it has occurred to me, and it seems perfectly legit now. The ways of life are not predicable.  And so should we be taught to go about life. That come what may, I shall adhere to these few agendas of living my life this new way- 
Seeking not only academic merits, but also joys of little happenings;  being prepared for worse, while trying not to be doomed in pessimism;  being hopeful of more, yet cherishing the little that I may have; 
 and finally, wishing not for the exceptional, but for the amicable.






Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Metamorphosis (Transition)

The one thing that I never thought would change in me; that, which I thought was innately mine; that, which defined me, as to who I am. 

I used to call myself a perfect Leo- and so did people agree! And I still am a perfect Leo (with some regression, maybe!). But from what used to be defining my character, a typical extrovert, that I used to be once upon a time, that I am no more..

What brings upon changes of such momentous extent in one's life cannot be comprehended and put into mere words. When I entered medical school 6 years back, I was a different ME. I was known to be that perky, chatty, affable girl. And I did not realise it until late that I was inadvertently curbing all these traits of mine to confine my life within a few people. But I now believe, that is how it is supposed to be, for one's good. As they say, 'It doesn't matter how many friends you have, just how many you can actually count on.' So, from being known to be a conversation-starter and easy-to-befriend person, I transformed to one of those shady, murky, and, difficult-to-know persons. And the reasons for this aren't really precise. Maybe it was the first head-on experience with the outside world by living away from home; meeting all sorts of people- diplomats, hypocrites, some genuinely naive, and, some truly blithe individuals; or maybe it was the likelihood of losing some old friends, whom I never wanted to outrun.
Nothing teaches you life more than living away from home does. Stepping out of our mightily cosseted environment, when we are bound to survive and take decisions all on our own, changes are inevitable. For better or for worse, my story involves me becoming an overtly ruminative reticent. With zillions of thoughts roving my mind, reckoning what not about the various permutations of life and the people I met, I could barely feel the need to be simpatico. I had been living with some of the best people that life could give me, enjoying their company more to my own. And what more could I need! While things were at peace, with college coming towards an end, and me finally getting ready to venture into a completely different phase of life, that, which I had dreamt of perpetually, Life had some other plans for me!

So, I reached USA, with all the hard work and blah blah.. I finally made it come true! Clearing Step 1 of USMLE, getting all the clerkships that I had wanted, getting the visa after final MBBS (Yeah, that  certainly needs a mention!), having planned up all so well about the life that I was going to have.  
But *OOPS* 'I might NOT like it there!' Why didn't I think of that? C'mon! I mean, Who does that? Planning a backup, thinking that you might not like that new place, which is 'The United States of America'! Sounds absurd right now though, not so in practice. 
Because I am that rare, atypical person who ditched that top-notch new lease on life, because I did not like it there. And the reasons for this are quite precise. I have issues with the enervating cold temperatures that they have about half the year round. I am an Indian Vegetarian foodie and found it very difficult to find anything Veg. on the menus there, except for bland leafy salads. I might have been enjoying my own company for long, thinking I don't need a lot of people around, but in actuality, I am a people person! I needed my people around, to talk to and to hang around with. More so, I never had a sense of belonging to that place. It was always that I am an outsider, struggling to survive. Where comes the point of living my life to the fullest if I had a setback at survival? And even though the hospital was a dream to work in! The residency I might have gotten into, is still an achievable dream! There is nothing I missed more than my family. I needed mum and dad around me, and more so, they needed me back here at home. And it was horribly depressing to be all alone out there. Even though everybody told me that it is gonna take a while, to get adjusted there, and then I will make new friends, and start liking it so much that I would eventually settle down there. I did not want to settle down there in the first place. I did not want to start liking that place to such an extent that it made me stay in US forever. I had always planned of coming back to India after residency. But after living a month's life in US, I was certain of not wanting that life even for a few years. So, I made my choice, to come back to India, and not continue with US anymore. I did not quit or give up on my dream. I left it by choice, just as I chose it, even when I had no guidance on how to go about it. It still stands achievable for me, but I am just not interested in living that dream anymore. Because it ain't as beautiful in reality as it appeals to me in the dream!

And here I am now, without a determined backup plan. As I did not make any backup plans. I am back and I am happy to be back. And now I am scared of making any more plans, because Life doesn't go by our plans!

But going by the norm, what my peers go on doing, what is right and what is not, I am a-motivated to conform to any of that yet. And a little aimless, wandering, trying to figure out, between so many  different non-medical streams that I could pursue now, I feel constantly being pushed to go by the norm. To do what everybody else like me is doing at this point, prepare for an absurd examination which doesn't interest me at all. I am stuck fighting with myself. Need some air to breathe in my purpose in life.  What to do and What not to do, an ever disputable dilemma?!? 

Waiting for a new dream to accomplish. Waiting for a new passion to work on. 
Waiting for another Transition to take place.