Tag: wellness

  • Hold on/me

    For the past three weeks, words have failed me.

    So I did what every Tamil eventually does when language falls short. I turned to Sangam poetry.

    Perhaps this can say what I have been trying to.

    Translation and my thoughts are at the end.

    குறுந்தொகை 40

    யாயும் ஞாயும் யாராகியரோ?

    எந்தையும் நுந்தையும் எம்முறைக் கேளிர்?

    யானும் நீயும் எவ்வழி அறிதும்?

    செம்புலப் பெயல் நீர் போல
    அன்புடை நெஞ்சம் தாம் கலந்தனவே.

    Translation:

    What are you and I to each other?

    What relation is my mother to yours, and your mother to mine?

    How did you and I ever come to know one another?

    Like rainwater falling upon red earth, our loving hearts have mingled and become one.

    My thoughts

    There is a reason this poem still finds people after all these years. It understands something I have never quite found the words for.

    Sometimes, people just happen to us.

    They are not ours. They do not come from where we come from.

    There is no reason for them to matter as much as they do. And yet, they do.

    Two people, born into different families, living entirely separate lives, somehow meet and feel as though they have known each other for much longer than a lifetime permits.

    “Like rain on red earth.”

    I think about that line often.
    Because once the rain falls, can you really ask the earth to give it back?

    Maybe that is why some people never quite leave us. Not because we are unwilling to move on, but because somewhere along the way, they became a part of us and we, a part of them.

    Kurunthogai 40 isn’t trying to explain love.

    It is simply acknowledging that some things were always going to happen.

    And perhaps that is the saddest thing of all. That some people are written into our lives in ink, even if they were never meant to stay.

  • How do people stay un-tired?

    Because I am exhausted.

    We’re at the midpoint of this week and I’m already tired.

    It feels like we’re stuck on a hamster wheel and the thought that we are racing against each other while going around in 3D circles makes me giddy.

    Sometimes, I ask myself what the point is.

    The disenchantment is real. I sometimes find myself craving darkness and silence after a day at work.

    What is work and why do we have to work? Don’t give me the usual answers.

    I find myself going back in time and questioning whether our modern economic system is really a natural way for society to function.

    It is, after all, a human construct rather than an immutable law of nature.

    At times, it feels less like a system designed to serve humanity and more like one that concentrates wealth, power and control in the hands of a relatively small group, while the rest of us spend our lives chasing numbers.

    What is currency? Why does it have to exist? Can money ever truly and fairly compensate someone for their time, labour and service? Or is it simply a construct we have collectively agreed to believe in?

    If we removed currency from the equation and returned to a system of barter, perhaps the world would become a simpler place.

    Value would no longer be measured by numbers on a screen or pieces of paper, but by what we could genuinely offer one another.

    Sure, one might argue that this is a step backwards, a sign of becoming less civilised. But look at where we are now.

    On the grandest scale, the world is still consumed by war.

    Closer to home, within our own little ecosystems, we fight over things as trivial as status at work or the power to make decisions that rarely matter or create any meaningful positive change.

    What is the point of it all? And can we really call this progress or claim that society is moving in a positive direction?

  • Protected: Rant: Work is a sh!tshow with processes that have to go

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  • Inconsistency

    Correct me if I’m wrong, but the lack of consistency in almost anything annoys many of us.

    When you order soup at a restaurant and if that soup has an annoyingly inconsistent texture, it almost immediately spoils the experience of dining.

    You put on some makeup and when that powder you have on becomes inconsistent and patchy, it ruins your mood to leave home.

    These are all inanimate things that we purchase or own, and still somewhat have control over and every right to feel some way about.

    But what happens when it comes to the people in our lives? Should we reject inconsistency as immediately? Or do we then have to force ourselves to understand and accept that we humans cannot stay the same way all day every day?

    Where do we draw the line with acceptance, before we decide that we are being taken for a ride?

    It’s never easy.

    While inconsistency from a human feels sickening, confusing and irritating, we can neither immediately reject the person nor tolerate it for longer than it should be tolerated.

    The consistency for this situation: sticky

  • I’m wordless today, not worthless

    Pardon me today. I’m currently losing a fight with writer’s block.

  • Laugh lines, it’s fine.

    If you had told me 10 years ago that I would spend my days laughing uncontrollably more times than I could count, I would have laughed at you.

    Because what a joke that would have sounded like to ever-upset me back then.

    So imagine my surprise when the first lines I got on my face from age were nasolabial folds — laugh lines.

    I was expecting something around the eyes from crying so much in life.

    But, it’s a no to botox and fillers (not that I think it is wrong or judge anyone who gets those — everyone gets to choose what they like).

    I just think wrinkles and lines are special. Like tattoos, they tell a story of how (well) you’ve lived. And if laugh lines are my first, I’m truly blessed.

    It is my honour to wear it like a medal. Battle scars can step aside. 

    Kthxbyegn!!!