THE SHY, CRESCENT MOON
“Sweet sixteen today.
She’s looking like her mamma a little more every day.”
Bob Carlisle
I
love to watch young kids - especially those sweet-sixteens - when they carry
themselves in their special clothes, with grace, elegance and confidence. I
don’t think, everyone can do that. I may
be wrong when I say this, though…
I can say about
my own discomfort when I was a teenager. I felt desperately shy whenever I
tried something new. A simple change, like tucking my shirt in… I remember
feeling so awkward whenever I attempted that. Inside the house, I would try for hours doing my dress-rehearsal before the mirror; but, the moment I stepped outside
my house, my shirt would come out, too!
Trying a new
style was a nightmare for me… “Everyone is watching me”… “Everyone is judging
me”… “I don’t look good”… Yes, as a teenager, I have battled with these poor
self-esteem issues… the ghosts of self-doubts.
Today, when I
will be 67 this year, trying a new attire still isn’t easy for me. Yes, I may
not be as uncomfortable as I used to be in my teens; but, the traces of shyness
and embarrassment haven’t disappeared fully.
So, when a young
boy or a girl, a sweet sixteen, wears something special for the first time - like, a girl trying a saree or a boy in a tie or a blazer – on their
traditional days or farewell parties – I watch them in excitement… They take me
back to my own school farewells or traditional days… I remember, how I used to
skip them, with no courage to show up in something ‘different’…
I know, it sounds
silly to many; but, I see hundreds of teenagers around me today, just the way I
was once – shy, desperate, embarrassed, and low in self-confidence…
Lucky are those sweet-sixteens,
who feel thrilled and proud to present themselves in their special attires – a
boy in a blazer, a girl in a saree, yes, for the first time. When I see them
carrying themselves with grace, elegance and confidence, I really feel happy…
Out there, there
are countless teenagers in their special outfits, who are desperately wanting to be in the shadows. On the other
side, there are countless teenagers, who are dying to be beheld and admired by
the world out there…
Last week, when this
sweet-sixteen came to show herself to me in a saree (on her school farewell-day),
I could feel her excitement… She had specially come to show me her saree-look…
I was so happy
to see this sparkling full-moon, while remembering the shy crescent-moon that I
was, some fifty years ago…
“My feelings are
too loud for words and too shy for the world”… This is how Dejan Stojanvic
describes the plight of every shy, crescent- moon…
You see, in the
garden of Life, a touch-me-not has its own glory, just as a Morning Glory does…
Smile… and cry in joy...
GERALD
D’CUNHA
Pic’s: findmykids.org 2. www;psychedconult.com 3. Kotian
Video: Anthony Miyazaki
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