Dear God
Picture this:
I was going to park my vehicle and suddenly someone tries
to direct you about the ‘how to’ of manoeuvering your vehicle. Or you are in a
crowded street and someone narrowly misses your vehicle all the while glaring
at you. Now we have two options if it’s a guy he will step down from the
vehicle and start a dhishum dhishum right there on the street, a lady
will glare at you with daggers in her eyes and move on. Then comes the
unladylike yours truly, who will roll down their window; give the person in question
some unsavoury words and then move ahead.
God, for women like me you have made certain rules and those rules are
meant to be broken. I must haggle with street vendors, deal with repair walas
and get my car to the auto centre all on my own.
I handle my finances whichever way I can and regularly dodge financial
advices or lucrative schemes. I get a lot of advise regarding how I should or
should not do certain things certain way and turn a deaf ear to all. I am
constantly being frowned upon by the way I sit, talk, look or behave. I know
people want to peak into my private life, but I firmly keep the blinds shut.
And then I get judged!
I am someone who does not know how to depend on someone anymore. I run my
household and run it any which way I can. There are days when I don’t feel like
getting vegies from the market and rely on maggie for days on end. And there
are weeks of healthy eating spree. There are times when I wish I could have
someone to plan my trips, pack my bags and take me to the station… and then
there are bouts of adulting when I manage all like a pro.
There are times when I feel there should be someone to open the door when I
reach home and then sometimes I enjoy the solitude. There are times when I get
unwanted attention for simply being there which makes me uncomfortable and then
there are times when I enjoy the limelight for the right reasons.
Living alone has its own perks and pains. I welcome both!
Then there are times when I look back on how far I have come and the things I
accomplished. I have a little thing about missing the conventional way of life.
Yet I feel complete in my own wake.
Then when people call me Not ladki jaisi ladki I hold my head high, look them in the eye and
say:
Right, I’m a tad bit un-lady like and I love myself for that.