Friday 11 November 2016

I wrote this

“Am I allowed to write about this?” I asked, doubt sinking into my gut.

“Ideally, you have every right.”

 He had a point. I do. I have every reason and I had every possible motive to write this. But the feelings of reservation and worry lingered within.

 Maybe, it’s because I’ve been told time and time again, by a society so hateful and set within their ways that what I believe in and what I am is deeply wrong. It always feels that I am split between realities, one of caring acceptance and the other of hateful confinement; and it’s dangerously easy to believe the one you have been raised within.

 I never, and have not yet felt at home within my family. Sometimes I just wish I could tell them, and for them to love me for who I am and I just want to be open and safe, but I can’t and I don’t. It is tragically comedic the way I fear the act of exposing myself and it doesn’t help that I hear first hand the way some have reacted to the same news. I dread the possible outcomes, the way they would blame everything and everyone, the “westerners, and their ‘liberal’ thoughts”, the “media and their influence on young minds” and even “the devil himself”, and as archaic and tired those beliefs are, a small part of me believes it too. And possibly worst yet, the way they shall choose to fathom the information, “it’s just a phase”, “you need to change your mentality”, or worst yet, “no”. 

 Nobody likes a sad story, so I don’t tell most people; and in place a façade of unimaginable glee, and mask my insecurities with jokes that diminish myself.
Solitary and alone I hid. But as the cliché goes, the truth set me free. For the first time in my life, I could say and be who I truly am, to feel whole and candid about my emotions and feelings. And even though it’s my intentional secret to keep, for now, from my family, I am fortunate to have discovered another in my friends and right now it is enough.

 But, it’s not. It’s not okay to have to put up with relatives hounding you on when you’re going to finally get a girlfriend, having friend’s parents say, “be careful” when they hang out with you, and for my very existence and who I am to be illegal. And neither is it okay that others are able to dictate a woman’s right to wear clothes they decide to wear. And it is not right that some are forced to marry and lack the access to education. And yet, we are still forced to live with it.

 While everyone has the power and capability to form their own opinions, one must not forget that so is everybody else. And by limiting each other and forcing upon other people an opinion, especially from a position of power, has absolutely devastating impacts. Psychologically, constraining and pressuring people to change and conform, potentially, has the power to effectively, pull someone into depression or worst to becoming suicidal.


I write this in hopes that I manage to evoke at least a tinge or slim sliver, of emotion, sympathy, regret, anger, comfort, something, anything that makes you different and that this effects you in whatever insignificant way. My hope for this, whatever this may be, isn’t so you feel sorry for me, it’s beyond that, I wanted to break the boundaries, and the glass celling, that maybe I have created for myself, and the taboo surrounding real issues effecting real people. Like Lauren Myracle once said, “What I find cool about being a banned author is this: I'm writing books that evoke a reaction, books that, if dropped in a lake, go down not with a whimper but a splash.”