Identity · mental health · poetry · social media

Never Enough.

You wake up one morning and you feel weighed down.
You know the things in your life are not enough.
You call up a friend, she endows you with positive vibes.
You like it, you want to believe it, but that’s not enough.
You look at your table and there is a stack of unread books, they thrill you.
You want to read them.
But then you have to log in to your Facebook feed before you start your day and you see a check in of a certain person going on a solo trip or a vacay.
And now you want that.
You are tired of your books and TV shows.
You need money for a holiday.
You finally convince yourself to watch a TV show.
You start with Bojack Horseman.
Great choice, i must say.
You watch an episode about Bojack thinking about how it is never enough and Diane agreeing to the feeling and promising herself to change, to work hard and never complain.
You are inspired now and you wish to do the same.
You enter the kitchen and decide to cook and you are so proud of yourself but suddenly you realise you have nothing to wear tomorrow and again it is never enough.
You start working hard and hoping that someday it will all be fine and that someday it will be enough.
Days pass, months pass, and then a certain festival occurs.
You realise you don’t have enough money or friends or clothes.
But you live on with that too and suddenly it’s examination time and you realise your half baked knowledge isn’t enough. You are dumb and never the best and you are clearly not enough.
And that someday fades into a distance…

Years pass.
You have bought the clothes you’ve wanted to.
You have married the lover you never thought you would have.
You have a good life.
You have traveled.
You have given birth to beautiful children or have adopted adorable animals.
Your house is full of love and support.
Your someday is here.
And then you wake up one day, you look at your Facebook feed and your colleague has won an award you think you deserved and you roll back to not being enough.
You are never going to be enough.

Picture: Random frame of the setting sun metaphorically signifying how we are never satisfied with darkness or light,winter or summer,happiness or sadness. Never enough.

Identity · poetry · social media

Irrelevance: #thingstheydonottellyouaboutmediocrity.

You see, you do not acquire mediocrity.
You are born into it and it keeps changing
with your social surroundings.
As a child, they do not call you mediocre
because there is hope for you yet.
As an adult, they do not give your mediocrity credibility
because there is ‘apparently’ hope for you still.

Being average comes with an unspoken terms and conditions manual.
Yes, the ones you never read on any forms or instructions.
Like those.
These conditions being:
“You are good enough in the right crowd.”
“You might not be the best, but you are not bad.”
“You can always get better.”

But like those unread manuals
you are not much good either.
Yes, you exist.
You take up air and space.
You are matter.
But do you really matter?

With the right amount of ideas and exposure
and around the right people
you will get recognised as the underdog
who will make everybody proud someday.
But, not today.

You will have Academy nominated movies after you,
“the year of the underdogs”, people will say-
just with the right amount of luck and hard work,
at the right time, around the right people,
with the correct alignment of stars
correct colour of clothes, shampoo and soap
those movie people make it,
and so will you, if you believe.

And let me tell you something about your dreams,
the dreams you saw as a child because everyone assured you
you had just enough to achieve them,
well, what they meant was you had just enough
not in surplus and dreams weren’t all for you.
Not entirely at least.
You would make it in alternative options-
tinier jobs, tinier homes, tinier dreams.
They are still all you want
What is the harm?

The crudest thing they do not tell you about mediocrity is that
you are not a nebula of brilliance,
who hasn’t yet stumbled upon the right opportunity at the right time and space.
You are not a ball of insecurity afraid of fading into irrelevance
You are the irrelevance.
Until you make it.
If you make it.
Or else you fade into the nothingness you came from,
were always a part of.

Your irrelevance.

Caption: The sun fades.
Gradually…
From a brilliant yellow to an orange to a residual red.
Leaving behind at first a tint, a slow transitioning
And then a sudden all conquering darkness

The sun fades, into temporary irrelevance.
The sun isn’t the irrelevance.
Because the sun is mediocre, cannot be mediocre
am I right?

Identity · social media · Uncategorized

Tales to Tell : Meal for One.

This is a Thursday evening and I am at a comparatively empty fast food joint, sitting alone with some fried chicken and apparently reflecting on my life. It took me hardly 15 minutes to get here by a public bus except, I waited for an hour straight before I actually got here – I was waiting for a tram. I had planned a solo tram trip to one of the only hyped cafes in the hub we call North Kolkata, but like most plans in life even that failed. I didn’t manage to get a tram and neither did I manage to go that cafe. I hopped down a stop before having remembered my prior experience and got to this place (where I am now) and ordered a meal for one. In truth, I am not hungry. Rather, far from that. But I still prefer being around food because it makes me happy?

As it is not very crowded, people are keeping their voices moderate and bearable, well at least for now. Around me, I can see a group of friends (something I simply do not have today), 2 people dining alone – one over the phone and the other also over the phone. My guess would be, both of them are watching videos. But I do not judge them. I am doing quite the same. After I write this, if I am still here, I plan on reading You, which I left half-finished like I left Huxley’s Brave New World to move on to Atwood because c’mon, who wouldn’t, right? When I walked in, I had initially decided to order a cup of tea, and even though I am always overpaying for tea everywhere, the place I am at today does not even serve in fancy cups so no pictures for the gram and hence, I preferred a meal for one. While placing my order the waiter asked me if I wanted to pack my meal, and I felt a tingling sense of liberation in saying no and that I wanted to eat it alone sitting here. I am sitting at a table for 5-6 people and it is the most independent I have felt today.

On my way here, before I took the bus, I noticed a few things. A small boy tried stealing a sweet from a shopkeeper and was caught and teased. His father bought him the sweet anyway. I do not know why this boy suddenly reminded me of Estha and that entire episode with the “Orangedrink Lemondrink man”. I overheard a girl asking her friend to wait on the opposite pavement. I saw a man run across the road because the signal had opened and I saw a person on a bike having to pay fine. I missed a bus with better seats for the tram that never came and finally took the bus and got here instead of the cafe (all of which I mentioned before). The bus I happened to take was the very bus I used to take for tuition back in the day. That bus ride used to be my bestpart about traveling to and fro from that place. There was a life in that journey which I cannot possibly explain, but no matter what I did everything to wait and occupy a window seat every 2 days a week.  The reason why I preferred coming here instead of the cafe is because the cafes in North Kolkata are not cafe-like as they are in South Kolkata. It maintains a certain autocracy in trying to decide your seat and your menu, the constant gaze and wonder as to why a person must visit a cafe alone, the question in their eyes of if my home wasn’t enough for my me-time and, why must I occupy a seat for longer than I take to finish my order is everything that I needed to do without. That does not mean there aren’t hovering eyes here. A family just came in along with a grandmother figure, and I swear it, each of them has taken turns in looking at me. I do not mind though, it gives them something to talk about. Maybe, they feel sad for me. But I am happy sitting alone. At least, right now.

Since my waking minute this morning, I have been feeling a certain low. A certain hopelessness in everything I do. I wanted to get out the house because I needed to believe it helps, but I don’t know if it does. It is a change of scenery, sure. But life remains all the same. This afternoon I thought of writing an overtly negative write up and then I didn’t because I didn’t feel like it anymore and now I am writing something I never planned to. Maybe, this is how life is. Full of moments and nothing continuous in a linearity. Today I sit here imagining my future as a writer, a blogger, a scholar (a professional ideologist as Althusser would say) but who knows if I am not just a month away from being another girl in PR or Sales. I didn’t even plan to come to this place, or to commute here by bus, I didn’t even really want this meal for one, but it all happened, mostly all for nothing or maybe all for everything, who knows? Who knows if this ever gets better, and who knows what better is? We ask the questions there aren’t answers to because life doesn’t answer. It doesn’t.

53110882_3461540557219574_3296384436152565760_o                        Picture : Darjeeling tea served with crackers at the cafe I refused to visit                                     today.

hybrid · Identity · International language day · post colonialism · social media · third space

Tales to Tell:- | Stuck in Reverse |

As a toddler, my father took immense pride in me learning how to write অ,আ (Bengali alphabets) without anyone having to help me through it. As the legend goes, I apparently, quite easily learnt how to imitate the alphabets straight off my Sohoj Pat.

His pride, however, was to fade very soon.

As soon as I had settled in my pseudo Victorian boarding school, which took (and still takes) immense pride in being one of the oldest establishments (1789) in the business in the country, their Anglican ways began to rub off on me. In the beginning it was quite slow and then it was all at once.

If I have to start at the beginning, the story can be very simply put – with my very little exposure at the age of 7, every other person speaking in Hindi were non-bengalis, every north-eastern was a Chinese, every person using English as their primary mode of communication was a foreigner. In my defence, I was a child and I didn’t yet know geography. As I had entered the premises of my school, I was greeted in English, expected to communicate in English, and in fact told to as it would be next to offensive otherwise. But these are things most people from convents face. However, what is a little different about my experience comes quite literally from having to live in such an atmosphere.

Every time, in every situation, when you happen to be a minority, of any kind, your first instinct is to try and fit in. Our boarding, like I said, with its anglicized culture, housed very few Bengalis at the time. Which automatically resulted in us having to mould our ways even in the slightest. Within the first week of my stay I started making sense in English, by the second week I was eating in English, by the second month I was dressing in as westernised clothes as I could afford, and hell! by my next vacation I was apparently dreaming in English.

Gradually, the girl who was growing up watching and hearing ঠাকুমার ঝুলি & চাঁদের পাহাড় and Ray’s movies on Sunday afternoons on DD বাংলা (of course I didn’t understand them) got over them pretty quickly. If I had been spending sometime in learning my Bengali poems for elocutions and trying to read short stories along with cultivating my English, now I had moved entirely to my Grimm’s fairy tales and slowly on to my Enid Blyton. This change, not very surprisingly but quite automatically made it so much easier for me to fit in. I started relating to Anne from Anne of Green Gables and Harry Potter because my condition seemed to align with theirs and I hadn’t found an equivalent in Bengali. I started hearing and learning and even performing (quite terribly to Shakira’s Whenever) English songs. I started learning about Bands and actors absolutely so foreign to me. When I came home for vacations, my father encouraged me to eat with my fork and spoon to keep up the habit and it of course made eating fish increasingly difficult and so I rarely enjoyed my fish any longer ( and this definitely does say something because I had quite a reputation of a cat as child for almost chewing up all the bones effortlessly). I started asking my father to decorate for Christmas and I even said my prayers when I was asked to, like a performance artist in front of my relatives (things you ought toa do as a child).

By the time I was in class 4, I had anglicised quite a bit. I was no longer the butt of all “bangali” jokes but voila! I was making some myself.. Every Saturday, when my father used to visit he used to bring me dinner from home and having remembered my love for fish, he almost always packed some for me. Initially they were everything I waited for. Then I began to feel embarrassed because people constantly associated Bengalis with “machlis” (fishes). At first I tried avoiding taking them for dinner. I used to try and eat my fish in front of my father so that nobody else can see. My father always wondered why and I of course could never explain and then I asked him to stop getting me fish for dinner entirely. I asked him to get me Chow mein, get me chicken, get me anything, buy me dinner even but not fishes. I made up excuses like, I cannot share a piece of fish or two with many people and eating alone is selfish and my father eventually obliged.

At around this time, I met another girl, a Bengali, who happened to be from Bangladesh (we had quite a few people from there. Very loving and beautiful people indeed) She was just about my age. We were in the same class and unlike most of my boarding mates, she was the first one from the boarding to have Bengali with me as her second language. And oh! She was good. She knew her Bangla and with pride and she was brilliant and every living day I wished to be like her. But instead of doing anything noble and supportive, I did the only thing I shouldn’t have done – I made fun of her. Because it made me look cool. And also because, (now when look back in retrospect, I understand this with the little education I have) I wanted to make her give up all that she believed in and her identity and become like me; misplaced and so ridiculously a pawn of a sort of reverse racism or a reverse bangali-ism if you may call it. I am not trying to say anybody victimised me, I may have victimised myself, but of course I didn’t know better. And I wanted nobody to know better.
The more I started to grow up, the more my habits began to settle in. They became more a part of me than I was myself a part of them. I began to literally think, talk, eat in English. Quite effortlessly by then. My lifestyle, by that point, had been influenced quite wholly by what I read and wrote and wore which were all in English and I had no complaints. People often called me ট্যাঁশ (pseudo), or they told me how the Britishers left but they left me behind as some leftover sample and even though now I understand they were quite scathing insults, I didn’t mind any of them then. I still don’t really mind. Because my colonised mind does accept these criticisms to no effect.

I came back home again and I started eating my meals and taking a piece of fish with it again. I began watching some Bengali movies and listening to some songs. I began fleetingly observing and making assumptions regarding the Bengali community. I began enjoying Durga Pujo even though Christmas still remained my favourite time of the year. And even though things did begin to change, I did understand I am stuck in my reverse.

At this point, I have come to accept my misplaced identity. I have come to regret and even wish so many things otherwise. I have come to regret not reading, not learning, not singing, not embracing enough Bangla to be a part of this community. But despite it all, I do know, I don’t really belong here. I don’t truly belong anywhere. I am just a knock off of a supposed Anglican culture and a quite rejected member of the Bengali community. I am no longer the child who used to wait for her sister to read the serialised stories from শুকতারা. I neither am much of the carol singer.

I am stuck somewhere in between, a hybrid, in a space I don’t entirely belong and never will, a half-shared, half-isolated expanse for a lifetime. A mix of the Orient and the Occident. Sometimes I feel like I belong in another time, in another era, in a cross between an English countryside and the Modernism of Paris- myself being just as conflicted as these two modes of living.

But what I truly find comfort in is how I am not alone. How my space is mine and also a shared space with million others. How my identity is not in a language, in Bengali or English but in stories. How I have always and will always find myself in between, always alone in terms of a community and always surrounded in terms of experience. How my isolation isn’t mine alone but it belongs to a certain us instead.

An International Language Day week special, where I try to elucidate my relationship with language. 🙂

Picture: Like the lights fading away, my being knits disarray.

depression · social media

Depression-Invisibility.

Have any of you watched Fargo season 3? I am sure a lot of you have… Remember Gloria Burgle? The police officer investigating the Stussy murder? Yeah, her. She was pretty much a relatable character from the start. The way she felt invisible (and if you have watched the show you will know that it was both literal and metaphorical), I feel the same too. I am sure that some of us do…

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                                                                   Photograph: FX


“Every time I make a call it’s like I’m in a silent movie.”
                                                              – Gloria Burgle.

Anyway, so the reason I chose to rant about it today was because of this new Sarahah trend. Not that anybody cares (because no one’s going read this anyway) but if you do want to know, it is an app where you can “leave constructive messages” for people anonymously. Now, my Facebook feed has been trending green since yesterday and these “constructive messages” mostly include rants from stalkers and crushes, unrequited lovers, compliments and hate. Quite a lot of hate.

Sarahah-rich

                                                                         App Logo



Guilty as charged I did try and follow the trend too. I installed the app and created an account. I don’t really know what I was thinking, but I was bored, so I will use that as an excuse. Gradually the first hour passed and I received one sweet anonymous message – it got exciting. But however, by the second hour I realized that nobody was messaging me and unlike most people on my Facebook feed, nobody was really interested in me. A few more messages followed but obviously they were from friends I knew which obviously were not really anonymous, violating the purpose of the app entirely. I decided to remove my account and uninstall it this morning, because well, I am an insecure YA looking for validation.

What was really interesting about this experience (apart from the fact that it openly promotes hate) is the shout out to people who are popular or pretty or famous. Validating people who are already validated and sidelining people who are already sidelined. Making it more legit for people to feel nonexistent by highlighting the apparently existing . I am not saying that it is anybody’s fault that they are pretty or talented or famous but it is showing how unseen the unpopular side is that creates the problem. Studies have shown social media as a propagator   of depression, and maybe I should not have created an account knowing all of this, but then again, why should I not? I deserve to have “fun” in this game too? And so do all the others out there, like me. (In case you are wondering, the grapes are sweeter on the other side. A little hypocrisy in my opinion, I am aware but why not? I can look for validation in my own post at least. Can’t I?)

I do not know what to tell you guys, (the people who share my feelings I mean) because let’s be honest, you are not going to read this, but if you do, stay strong through this trend. It is just a trend like ‘confessions’ were a few months ago, and God, if you are anything like me you must’ve hated that too, but just like that one this too will pass. I know some of you are strong and you have immense faith in yourself. Some of you have iron clad self-belief and I look up to each one of you. But it is people like me who need to be boosted and need to be told and I am telling you, being one of you, that someday, just maybe, we will be happy with just ourselves or recognized for who we are. We will be seen. But today, my darling, is not your day, but till then please just stay strong. Love yourself even if you don’t want to. The day will pass and the night will too and you will move closer to your day, even if it is again, not today.