“Not everywhere you fit is where you belong.”
A profound statement that most individuals are faced with during their journey of self-discovery. This journey
never seems to end because every now and again one has to sit down and evaluate
the environment they're in and the person they have become. Each person gets a chance to do some introspection on oneself. Am I the person I
would be proud of meeting? Would I befriend me if I were to meet me on the streets? Would I have lunch with me? Am I truthful to myself and not pleasing the masses? This journey leave’s most individuals confused beyond
belief because when one thinks they have found themselves and the crowd they
don't mind being with and have meaningful memories with. This can turn out to be the opposite, where one finds themselves sitting at the
barrier asking if I truly belong here.
Some get disconnected from the known social structures, structures
that they belong to; they have been part of for ages. One gets to ask
God where you want me. What person do you want me to be? Whom should I call friends?
The friends that you have given me turn out not to be part of me anymore or am I not part of them? The known structures such as church feels completely isolate from who I am. Our conversations are no longer in sync, our language seems disconnected. Our thoughts and actions are far apart.
The friends that you have given me turn out not to be part of me anymore or am I not part of them? The known structures such as church feels completely isolate from who I am. Our conversations are no longer in sync, our language seems disconnected. Our thoughts and actions are far apart.
Some say when you grow older you get to cut off a lot of friends and groups.
How true is this statement, if those groups are the very groups that have been part of your growth? These are the same groups that have helped you find yourself, to
know who you are. The same groups you discovered during your
journey of self-discovery.
Have self-discovery become fictitious to a point that it has no meaning but how one defines, it is the
true meaning. Has it become a word that is used without the true knowledge; or is
this another parallel reality, which God wants us to walk through. How can one person look for himself or herself every year and understand their true self. Is it an everyday thing? Do we need to ask God every day to give
us the wisdom and understanding the unknown? To understand the distorted reality of
our being, our journey of truly knowing where we belong.
Are we even meant to belong somewhere? Or are we meant to standout from the rest.
Is there a selected group that belongs?
And the odd pieces of the puzzle who gel (get along) with everyone but do
not truly belong to a particular group. Those who
don't really have a “crowd” to chill with, are they truthful to themselves and society? Are they
missing something within themselves or are they natural wonders?
Individuals who constantly seek adventure, who are easily bored by one set of
group, they always feel the need to disconnect from their familiar social
structures. They just want to be uncomfortable by meeting new people. They challenge themselves by finding new things and ways of doing things. Some of them are natural loners who enjoy their own company but still feel the need
for human interaction. Is their happiness any different from those who are
always set with the same group of people, who do the same things every time and
even their growth is puzzlingly the same yet different according to them. Are
they afraid?
How can the known become so uncomfortable?
Anxieties rise each time the natural wonderers set of to their new journey. This isn't easy or comfortable because one
gets confuse, why would God remove me from this structure or am I being paranoid, it’s not God’s way but my crazy self that feels the need to take off. How can my
“friends” become distant strangers, those who I easily confided in and have deep meaningful relations with become distant? How does such a deep bond become so disoriented?
There was never any conflict or differences yet the bond seems unnatural. How
do the natural wonders cope in such situations?
You look and find, the moment you are comfortable you are shifted yet again, and your inner sense screams; be alone.
Can one say this is
attachment anxiety? That the natural loners/wonderers are so scared of
relationships that they always feel the need to run away. They run away from all their social structures; family, friends, church, social clubs etc. Every group that once felt like home
has become entirely alienated from them. Are they scared of being hurt, that wondering off makes sense and seeking new adventure shields them from being hurt.
Does this adventure have any psychological implications?
Can one say they are suppressing
certain emotions? It can be argued that they are scared of being too close to people; they are scared of letting go of themselves. Are
they that guarded that the moment one sees their true self they run off to a new structure. Or are they such wonderers that
each time they are discovered, they get attached to another
group and embrace their new existence.
How do such people survive the jungle of society?
The adventurers tend to be
creative, that challenging themselves and constantly being uncomfortable in new
structures give them the boost for their new work. Such twisted “unnatural”
reality is their source of strength. They find comfort in
wondering off and introducing themselves a million times each
month. These people are meant for the spotlight yet they shy away from it.
Their survival depends in asking their God for answers, to reveal the discomfort that has arose within their familiar structures.
They find ways to curb their anxieties by focusing on themselves in their
“world”.
“Natural loners and wonderers get their thrill from the unknown
and their world.”
T. Sibiya
T-Angelz Creations
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