On the eve of Independence Day, a dear friend shared an incident with me...
Last year she had gone to office in a tri-colour dress.
Don’t I have the freedom to choose what to wear! she thought.
"Answer the boss first before lecturing us," mocked her colleague.
"So?" I asked.
"I'm wearing the same dress to work. But this time with matching accessories, colour-cordinated nails and a tri-colour hat to boot. Howz that?"
Good Luck!
Last year she had gone to office in a tri-colour dress.
Don’t I have the freedom to choose what to wear! she thought.
She strutted
in and none of her suited and booted colleagues commented; She slurped up cups of masala chai and no one sneered; She hummed a song and the stiff-lipped boss smiled.
She rang up the husband to say, "It’s no cooking day," and he replied, "Chill."
Everyone in
Independence Day spirit! she thought
Her teen
cousin screamed that he bunked classes to go to the cinema and his parents
wanted to know more about the movie.
Another
announced she’s seeing a guy and her until-then orthodox mom patted her cheeks.
Wow! Now she
pinched herself, to check if she was not day dreaming. Convinced, she wasn’t,
she sat conjuring up an ideal India…if only we were so patient, understanding
and accommodative of one another…
In the
evening, the husband called to say, "I’ll be late. Don’t wait for me."
This is
freedom! She sang, rolling in bed.
The next
morning she found him beside her. "Get up. It’s time." She shook him awake.
"Can you
leave me alone!" he barked.
She walked
into office and heard colleagues chuckle, "Someone’s fancy dress is over."
She logged on the computer and an email stared at her, "Give me one good reason
why the file was not forwarded yesterday?"
Dazed as she
sat, the mobile rang, "Mom’s threatening to stop me from going to college!" the
youngster cried.
"Freedom
lasts just 24 hours in a year, my dear," she sulked, but within ear shot of
her colleague.
"Thank God,
for that. What all would we have had to put up with," her colleague sighed
aloud, and others broke out in a group laughter. Even their laugh was alike,
she noted.
"Pity!" she
spat. Stood up and said to no one in particular, "There’s something called
individuality. Gluing on to lines drawn by others, so much so one day you’ll
suffocate and you wouldn’t even know if it’s you or your neighbour gasping for
breath.""Answer the boss first before lecturing us," mocked her colleague.
"You are
sure to die your neighbour’s death!"
********************
I regret being nasty to my colleague. But that was me last year. In the last one year, I've made it a habit of exercising my freedom to live my life every single day. No more am I offended by silly comments. "So?" I asked.
"I'm wearing the same dress to work. But this time with matching accessories, colour-cordinated nails and a tri-colour hat to boot. Howz that?"
Good Luck!
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