Friday, April 24, 2015

Home Bittersweet Home

When I went back to Malaysia for Easter break, I developed a sun rash, called Polymorphic Light Eruption. It's different from a heat rash, and usually happens when skin is exposed to sunshine after a long period without sun. According to Patient.co.uk, it is "more common in countries with temperate climates."

Considering that I've now been residing in the UK for 4 years, I guess it's not a big surprise that my skin has gotten used to the weather here, and the tropical sun of Malaysia was enough of a shock that my immune system panicked and caused a red and extremely itchy rash on my exposed hands and feet. Yes, it should not be a surprise.

However, what surprised me was the feeling of betrayal, and of not belonging.

I felt that my body has betrayed my homeland, how it treated the sun that warmed me all those years growing up, as an enemy, as a stranger. I felt that my skin has betrayed me, by being more comfortable in a foreign land than in the land I was born and bred in. 

I felt like I no longer belong in my skin; my skin no longer belonged in my home. The discordance and dissonance between my physical being and my emotional state tortured me more than the constant itch of my raw red hands and feet. The sense of rejection by the skies of my childhood was more painful than the scores my nails made in my traitorous skin.

It's the little things like this that make me feel like a stranger in my own home. That new shopping mall where there used to be just empty space, the restaurant that's now my family favourite that I've never heard of, that street stall that was a fixture in the neighbourhood but no longer there, that relative who passed away but I was never told. Little things that are splinters in my heart, small but persistent, so difficult to dig out, running through my veins.

Going home can be a bittersweet experience. But it never changes the fact that my heart and my soul always yearns for that place I call home.

"Oh, London is a man's town, there's power in the air;
And Paris is a woman's town, with flowers in her hair;
And it's sweet to dream in Venice, and it's great to study Rome;
But when it comes to living there is no place like home.”  

-Henry Van Dyke

Saturday, April 18, 2015

Single is Sin

Ahh, there it is again.

"You're still single?" The surprised look.
"So, have you got a boyfriend yet?" The expectant tone.
"Any good news?" The teasing question.
"There really isn't anyone you're interested in?" The disbelieving expression.
"You're just too picky. Your standards are way too high." The insensitive reply.
"You've gotta go out and meet people, socialize and mix around. You're not going to meet anyone if you don't put in some effort." The carelessly thrown advice.
"Maybe guys are just intimidated by you, you're so accomplished." The attempts to console, backfiring.

Is being single such a sin? Heck, I'm only 24. Still a student, barely out of the cocoon of childhood, the wings of adulthood still barely unfurled.

I don't even know myself well, how am I supposed to know another human being enough to trust and give them my all? 
I'm a stranger still to myself, how do I find another stranger and become intimate? 
If falling in love means letting someone in, how do I do that when I still can't find the door to my own heart?

I know the questions are well meaning, the teasing and the jokes merely good-natured fun, and their concern (that because I am single I am lonely) is only because they care.  Still, it makes me feel like I've failed somehow by being single; that my failure in finding someone to love and to love me back is a sign that there is something wrong with me. Perhaps there is, I don't know. Perhaps the fault lies with me, and I have to fix it so people will stop being worried and I can fulfill their expectations.

But that's not right. I shouldn't be trying to find someone to love for reasons like that. Shouldn't love come naturally, like a bolt out of the blue, or like the gentle swell of a wave, or is that another lie spread by movies and novels? 

Well if it's a lie, at least I know this must be true: that love should not be for anyone else's sake. 

Love should be because your heart couldn't help but fall, not because that person fulfills all the criteria on your list, or because people around expect you to be with someone, anyone. Love should be " not just because you can see yourself with them, but because you can't imagine your life without them."  I want my love to be for that reason, and that reason alone. 

If that means I have to be single for a bit longer, and endure the barrage of questions and advice for a bit longer, and continue my awkward attempts at finding "the one", I don't mind. If the reasons and the person is right for me, that's when it'll be the right time for me too. And that's all that matters. *smile*