Past Musings

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Life > Romance

I was talking with my good friend M. the other day and she asked me about the state of my soul (because this is what oburoni loves do). And truth be told, I don’t know if I have ever felt this way about my soul. My soul feels so… quiet. Which it never is. In twenty two and a half years, I don’t know if my soul has ever has been calm. Most days it is both fire and ice.

But I’m not freaking out about leaving in a month and a half. I’m not freaking out about the black hole that is my future. I’m not devastated about leaving. I mean, after spending this morning with P., I was reminded that I will be sad to go. I have met people here who are extraordinarily beautiful, and they have made my life radiant.

But days come, and days go, and you live into them and then out of them and then into them again.

I was telling my parents the other night that I don’t feel like this has been an experience. Ghana was an experience. But this has just been… my life. And each day just feels like living.

M was telling me that one of our good friends A. feels similarly about her abroad life. It’s not romanticized. It’s not hugely overtly emotional. It’s just her life. Good days, bad days. Her people are there, her job is there, her life is there. She said that it is like falling in love for the second time. You are grounded. You feel things less intensely.

That doesn’t make it less beautiful. But maybe it makes it more real.


India has meant falling in love for the second time.

M. was saying that the way I write about India as an experience. And I do. I write romantic. And for a long time I felt romantic. For the first 7 months it was another experience, another challenge, another opportunity, another set of stories.

Then it just started to feel like LIFE.

I don’t feel the need to come home and talk at length about India, or outwardly mourn for the village life I will have left behind, or tell people the ins and outs of my time here. It is what it is. I am here. And then I will no longer be.

Maybe part of this is growing up. I think part of it is the realization that you are not actually that special.

After your first abroad “experience” you think that you have just seen the world in a way that no on else has. Look at me, I went and lived in (insert exotic location here). You feel so GOOD about yourself, like you have all this knowledge and experience and wisdom. And it’s true, you do. You have seen and experienced something wonderful, something profound, something new.

But then you grow up and realize that everyone is doing rather spectacular things with their lives. You realize that someone who has lived longer and committed to a life partner, who birthed and fought with and raised their children, that someone who has loved further and weathered more sunsets knows (excuse my French) a shitload more than you do.

And then you get over yourself.

And then you just start living.

I don’t feel special anymore. Yes, I moved to an Indian village. Yes, I started a small women’s empowerment program. But I am simply doing what I love, just as I think most of us are (or are trying) to do.

And sometimes it is romantic.

And sometimes it is shit.

But mostly, it’s just life.

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