Skip to main content

All Grown Up



I saw a notice on the notice board the other day. It said ‘New library for kids in flat no. xxx.’ 
‘This notice doesn’t concern us anymore does it?’ I jokingly remarked to my friend, who was standing next to me. She looked a little hurt. 
“I was going to take a look", she said.
 “For your little brother?” 
“No, for me. We’re still kids, aren’t we?”

On children’s day, another friend asked me if I was participating in the children’s day event in the apartment. " No. Are you?” I replied, thinking ‘We’re too old for such things.’ I was about to say that out loud when he said, ‘Yes, I’m dancing.’

Both incidents left me a little taken aback. When had I started classifying myself as not-a-kid?

At twelve, I was officially too old for the children’s playground in the apartment complex . At seventeen, I was too old to attend the summer theatre workshops at Ranga Shankara.

On my eighteenth birthday, society decided that I was an adult. That meant I could live by myself, drive, earn, vote, watch movies rated A and even get married if I were so inclined. It also meant that at every event for children, I would be an escort or a volunteer or an organiser - never an invitee.

When I was a kid, the adults’ world looked boring and scary. Textbooks got thicker, fonts got smaller, illustrations became black and white or disappeared altogether. There were no merry-go-rounds, no balloons at birthdays parties (if there were birthday parties). Adults worked in big silent offices with cubicles. They typed things I could not understand on computers all day. They didn’t play board games or, to tell the truth-any games at all. And worst of all, their conversations had layers. Adults around me were often upset or offended by what I had thought was perfectly polite and friendly conversation.

Now I understand the things in the thick textbooks. I take part in conversations that I couldn’t comprehend.  I even enjoy them. Offices are not so scary when you’re as tall as the workers (at least the shorter ones)  there. But while I like the new world that I am becoming a part of, I can’t say that I don’t miss what I’ve left behind. I still love the colourful illustrations and posters in school classrooms. I still love balloons and word-building and Jenga. I still hum nursery rhymes. And I still dislike conversations with layers, especially now that I can see them.

‘Must I leave my childhood behind, then? Can I do it?’  is a question I realise I already have the answer to. It was clear in my laughter as I spun around in the merry-go-round in the middle of the night at eighteen and a half.


****
I wrote this a few months ago and forgot to post it. :) But my nineteenth birthday is the perfect time for this post, don't you think?



Comments

  1. Age is no bar for anything. Childhood memories are for ever.

    ReplyDelete
  2. "Conversations with layers". I had been looking for a phrase to describe the rather unsavory phenomenon. Found it. Thank you!
    Adding layers to conversation is tiring tbh. It's unfortunate that it is rather prominent at times :'(
    Saying what one means and meaning what one says is the best. Simple.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Thoughts from lonely days

Some nights before I started to write this in mid-2022, I dreamt that I was in an aircraft that was plummeting to the earth. I was not surprised by this dream - less than a week had passed since a tragic plane crash in China. What did surprise me was that I had continued to hope that the plane would right itself until the very end. So when I woke up, breathing hard, still alive, what upset me the most about my nightmare was not that the plane had crashed, but that I had not made peace with my death in those final moments.  I've spent a lot of time thinking about death in the last two years; many of us probably did as we anxiously watched counters on dashboards, each uptick marking the end of another human life. On nights when my overactive imagination conjured up terrible scenarios, I protected myself by taking a mental step back and reminding myself that death was inevitable. But creating distance made me feel guilty. Was it not wrong to feel anything less than all the sadness I...

Hot Potato

 _ ____ is like a hot potato  I don't want to hold it  It's too big to throw away ____ is  like a hot potato  I hold on to it  So you don't have to  ____ is like a hot potato  Watching you hold it Still hurts somehow ____ is like a hot potato  I throw it at whoever's around When I can't hold it any longer ____ is like a hot potato  It will cool in time If ____ really is like a hot potato  Maybe we should pass it around  So when it cools,  Our hands are reddened,  but still whole  And we could make a salad  - Ananya  10th December 2024

On Bangles and Car keys:

We remember and register the strangest things. Lots of  Indian women who drive wear bangles and own a set of car keys. When I was younger and anxiously awaiting my mother’s return from wherever she’d gone- the sound of those bangles and keys was what I would listen for.When I heard the sound of her fumbling for the keys, I would rush to the door to greet her ( as I grew older I would do the opposite- turn the TV off or shut the novel I was reading and run in). But whatever the response was to the keys and bangles, I would always know they were my mother’s.  I may hear other keys and bangles, but somehow, they always sound different. To this day, that sound means ‘mum’s home’ and thus, even today, I cherish it.