About a year ago I
woke up before dawn from a dream I was convinced would make an incredible
story. I went for my journal to note it down. My head was feeling the kind of
heaviness feels like a command to go back to bed, so I scribbled some key words
and slept again. When I checked it in the morning, all it said was ‘Putin dream
case.’ I could not remember the dream at all; the words did nothing to jog my
memory. I was left with the feeling from a few hours earlier that I had
stumbled on to something incredible. I had nothing to show for it. I remarked
to a friend recently that was really good at achieving a lot of meaningless
things. It was in the context of repeatedly getting into the final stage of PhD
interviews and then getting reserve listed. It is so easy to have nothing to
show for anything you do. After arriving in Europe a second time, I have been
trying to take stock of what the past year was like. Most of what happened
feels out of reach, not unlike that lost dream. Having very obviously tied my
sense of self-worth to an occupation, I spent a significant part of the year
observing my mental health take a freefall. That was interrupted by the slight
inconvenience of having to drop everything and run to Delhi to free someone who
subsequently showed little to no regard for what it asked of me. Everything I
got up to after was uncharacteristic, and a surprise to myself as much as
anyone else. But I sit here now in Germany with the feeling of having got to
the other side. As you were, one could say, but it is not as I was.
Leaving the
Netherlands last year, I did not feel like I was going home. I was being sent
away to a country as foreign as the one I was leaving; it contained even less
of what I considered home. But I left India with a similarly heavy heart this
time. For the first time, I felt like I was leaving something behind. I was
thinking about when I would get to return, when my first visit “home” might be.
I have always thought of home as people rather than places; this time around,
there are more pieces of home at ‘home’. One thing I have always maintained is
the possibility that everything I think I know, including about myself, could
be wrong. Having made almost an art out of running away, I think I am finally
opening up to the idea of running towards. In Giovanni’s Room, Baldwin talks
about always having a home to go to, as long as you do not go there. In another
book I read recently, I saw a joke that went “ you came to me like a cow, I
trembled like a Muslim.” This past year, I lived through events that were unequivocally
some of the worst in my life. And when I was on the flight out of this country
and into a life that promises to be (and already has been) better than the one
I leave behind, I cried real tears. If Bibin’s mom called me today, I do not
know how I would answer.
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