What use is it to close my fists if everything that I hold is water anyway?

This is a question that I recently asked the universe during one of the most befuddling and all-consuming periods of my life. The answer to which has not been gifted to me yet, neither by divine intuition or an Instagram quote nor as loud words on the back of a pickup truck- it remains undelivered, perhaps lost in transit. It is ironic that I mostly find all my answers in places such as that, yet I must admit, it is a result of a lot of my own questing and being in places that I shouldn’t be.

 

In all the answers that I have ever received there runs a common thread- an element of knowing everything and nothing at the same time. When you’re creating an anecdote in your mind, you often try to make it as discreet yet clear as possible, like a mouse that can parole through the entire house, eat its appetite’s worth, and scramble off, still having left enough for about everybody else. So when I am spoken to in metaphors, I assume they are written for me- yes- the half-faded and misspelled words on the back of the aforementioned pickup truck were put there for me 14 years and 57 days ago- so that one day, while being fashionably late for a dinner with my best friend, I can look at them and find the answers that I was looking for. It is a delusional belief, but it is a belief that keeps me alive, knowing that every single day there is a factory of forces laying down the answers to all my questions for me- in places that I am only half sure to end up in but certain to notice them in. And that was the first lesson of adolescence- for a whacked-out child such as me.

 

When I was 14, I convinced myself that I will die within the next 365 days, not because I wanted to, but because I must. Obsessive-compulsive disorder? Anxiety? Microdosing on plastic? I do not care to know. What is important is that this belief was so solidified in my mind that I would spend every waking moment of my life thereon in panic. I couldn’t have ever put it into words, then, or now. But to me it was real, and every second of my life was a ticking time bomb that I had set off for myself.

 

“I'm pretty intuitive” and “this is my gut speaking”, I cry to my mother-“this is your stupidity speaking" -she laughs back. I was dumbfounded when she laughed at it, but 5 years down the line, I do not blame her. How absurd must it have been! That night I fell asleep after the usual rumination-panic cycle, to the circling thoughts of what I’d make of the self-proclaimed “last year of my life." In my sleep, the biologically scheduled film rolled, and I dreamt of a man and a staircase with a white hairy dog on it, the wall had pictures- about 8 of them, and I could only see up to the neck of the man with the white hairy dog. He approached me and showed me polaroids of my life- from the years I haven’t lived to see yet and weirdly believed I never will. He struggled to annunciate his words. He slurs and tells me, “this is you at 25, still believe you are going to die?” I wake up with the hot June air hitting my face; I look at the ceiling, and with a smile, brace myself to live till at least 25. That night I slept.

 

I have thought about that period with much curiosity since, and ever so often imagine the relief of turning 15 after that fear had embodied me- just to watch it die. That paved my way for another lesson- we will often find the answers exactly where the questions came from.

 

So when you love, you are ridden with the risk of losing it, and if that wasn’t bad enough- the risk of losing yourself. But how do you confront the endless pondering of the whys and ifs of it all? You assume that it will be enough when it is said to you in words or in writing, but it isn’t. And yet again, you find yourself riddled with endless questions of what is enough and how much can you change about the complex wiring of your mind- the same mind that controls you enough to convince you that you must wither and then brings you back to life, unprovoked, on its own- to undo these thoughts. They run like a program of prerogatives, and no words can stop the next set of commands from running.

 

These questions come in waves and spare you very little time to actually experience any of it- and you run yet another risk- of being too much, which runs another risk- of being underfed. It is one command after the other- one answer opens up hundreds of newer questions that cannot be asked nor answered, and the program never ends until the engineer burns out.

 

So, when these questions seem to have no end, I counter them with a bigger question- perhaps the most existential of them all-

What use is it to close my fists if everything that I hold is water anyway?

And for my third, and last lesson of adolescence, I watch this question become the ultimate answer to every single one that I have ever asked.



Picture credits- Pinterest 

Comments

  1. reading this reminded me so much of myself and how i used to write. the second half of this feels personal, maybe i just cant accept the transience of things. i'll use your question (or answer) to affirm myself, lets see how that goes. good post.

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