Should I give up,
Or should I just keep chasin' pavements?
Even if it leads nowhere
Or should I just keep chasin' pavements?
Even if it leads nowhere
- Adele,
Chasing Pavements
It’s
funny how some things can remind you of something else altogether. That is
something which happens to me a lot. A song reminds you of a friend; a place
makes you relive memories; a shirt gives you flashbacks if it was memory
worthy.
About
three weeks back, I was added to a group on WhatsApp. I was texting my friends
about the confusion as I didn’t have any of the people in that group in my
contacts, except one. I checked the group photo to realize they were all people
from my school. People who were barely acquaintances in the high school squabbles
and ego clashes. People I hadn’t spoken to in the last five years. It was
really awkward and I gave an excuse of exams before leaving the group. Maybe I
resort to first expressions too soon, I thought, as I realized even if I hadn’t
left the group, I’d probably have put them on mute every week and cleared out
any messages that had coupled up over there.
My
earphones have been bust for a few weeks, so I’ve resorted to reading A Song of
Ice and Fire in the hour’s travel back home from college. Today, as I reached a
riveting part of A Clash of Kings, I happened to glance at the girl sitting one
row ahead on the other side of the bus. Her hairstyle reminded me of a girl I
always hung out with at school. I actually looked out of the window when she
got down to check if it was her. I don’t know if I would have approached her if
she actually were the same girl.
It makes
me think. You grow as people every second. I know my sister still mercilessly
teases me about the time I used to listen to Justin Bieber (I was a naïve teenager,
just out of school). Every experience that you have changes you just a little
bit. Every opinion you share or observe is a new data in your brain. At this
point of time, do you choose to stick to first impressions or go back for a
second one?
There
are many close people in my life. One constant who’s always been there is my
sister. Apart from that, as I went through school, junior college, college and
now a year away from graduation, I seemed to have a small group of friends for
each part of the way. However, keeping in touch with all these people somehow
sounds difficult. Even though you spent most of the day together for almost two
years, once that common thread is lost, with some it’s hard to carry on. With
some, the bond just strengthens as you become friends in general than with
respect to common assignments and gripes about teachers.
I
wonder. A year from now, I’d be an exam or two away from never seeing 90% of
the people in my college ever again. It’s not like three years back, where some
people from your classes or your junior college are also in college with you.
We’ll grow up, get jobs, do Masters, and maybe even get married (NOT ME!) I’d
probably see them on the road, give a polite smile and look at my phone, not
wanting to do awkward small talk.
It’s a
sad scene, a new part of your life, a new beginning. At this point, do you let
go of people and see if they hold on? Or do you hold on like a leech,
requesting to meet up only for them to rebuff you every time? The person with
whom you could catch up every six months as if it were yesterday becomes the
person with whom chatting for even five minutes becomes awkward. It’s very easy
to be on both sides of the friendship line. The person who you used to exchange
about 100-200 SMSes a day with becomes the person you go offline to avoid.
There’s a very thin line between being affectionate and being overbearing.
Friendships
do not have a constant state. Your confidant may change depending on the
secret, the occasion, the circumstance. Friendships with some may deepen, while
some may weaken. You may make new friends, and still be able to keep your old
ones. It’s a two-way bond. You can’t wait for the other person to shake first,
but I’ve realized sometimes you just have to dust yourself off and move on. It
doesn’t help trying to think what you’ve done wrong.
I don’t
mean that you should stop trying after a while, but friendships are supposed to
be as natural as breathing, not forced like a blind date. At the same time, don’t
block said person. Who knows, five years later you’d have more in common with
them. Sometimes, the distance makes you closer, sometimes it sets you apart. If
it isn’t working, let it go. Your mileage may vary, of course. You may be the
loner, or you could be the life of the party. This is just some random rambling
by a person who thinks way too much. Maybe this is just some random word vomit.
I’m not sure, but somehow writing this down makes my mind clearer.
If you
have taken something from this, please comment below? Much Love!
:) The post made sense, a lot of sense. I like that you're writing such 'musings'. I shall keep my critique for our private chats. And also so much <3 for mentioning me twice as your constant friend, I really am honoured :)
ReplyDeleteIt's been on my mind and I decided to suck it up and write it down. And poohpooh the honour *hugs*
DeleteVarsh, you've written down everything that's been on my mind for the past couple of weeks! We let our priorities in life define our friends circle, don't we. But its always great to know you have those 4-5 friends you know will always be there for you :)
ReplyDeleteExactly. But those new friends bring as much to your life as your old friends did... yeah?
DeleteSchool friends. The ones I knew, once upon a time who were my best friends, I am not sure if they are still alive. I don't feel interested enough to find out. Later on in college, I made a few friends who I didn't even speak to in school.
ReplyDeleteThat is life. I still see some people very close to their school friends and nothing has changed. Then there's me. I move on. And I am glad that at every stage of my life, I made a friend who would stay
Reading this honestly made me think back to all my school friendships, and how we've drifted apart despite having so much in common.
ReplyDeleteAlso - I’d probably see them on the road, give a polite smile and look at my phone, not wanting to do awkward small talk. - THIS IS ME
Not even kidding, I still do that in the bus here because awkward small talk is awkward as heck.
DeleteI'm happy that this is relatable :D
To give you a perspective of someone who did school and college 25 years ago ... Yes , you do drift and make new friendships as you move but somehow the friendship that you had when you were in your teens is with you thruout your life. When i meet them now, it just gets revived and its not just a polite smile and hello .. I become a teenager all over again. Well yes, i relish these memories
ReplyDelete