HAPPY REALIZATION
Fashion ,the multimillion dollar business that has only
grown to bigger numbers and might over the years, even through the so called ‘recession’!,
like they say is an illusion. An illusion that has so many ‘real’ lives and struggles
camouflaged into glitters.
I carried dreams of gold on my
shoulder as I walked into the ultimate destination for any kid aspiring to be ‘in
fashion’. Though it was not planned, I somehow knew I wanted to be there and do
it, all I knew was that I was passionate, loved colours and good things happens
to good people.
It did not come as a surprise or
to anyone who knew me or the ‘world of fashion’ well that I was a misfit in the
whole scenario. I was outdated, did not own a Gucci bag or 100 shades of
lipstick or eye shadow matching every dress, I did not have a mother who
attended kitty parties ,I did not have a toned physique and I ate like a pig,
hogged on anything and everything that made me happy without keeping track of
calorie count. I had no clue of the difference between Manish Malhotra or Arora.I
could only look at those ‘beautiful’ creations called the bunch of ‘rich kids’
and admire them. Now when I look back at that phase in my life I realize that
though I envied all the glamour, I never longed to be one of them. I loved
myself the way I was, and I knew I would put it off one day with the grace that
no richness in the world can afford. Hence, I decided to gang up with the other
outcasts, the normal human beings, who felt the same way as I did, out of place
and suffocated, but never small in terms of self respect.
I met some people with amazing
conviction and will power in my four year long journey through the bumpy
terrain in the world of fashion. Looking at their perseverance gave me enormous
strength to hang on, take a deep breath, tell yourself it is ok ,and move ahead.
The easiest thing to do would have been to fake it and try to fit in. The
toughest thing being to accept all the crap that you were being subjected to
and still not care and just be yourself. As i wore the convocation robe and
collected the million dollar certificate, I gave a silent HI5 in my head to all
those who chose the latter. I wanted to shout it out to them ...’yes! We made it, without head help high up and we
did not make it any small’.
I took me a while to realize that
the bunch of ‘real people’ who were constantly struggling to be real in the
fake world of show off has gradually become my family. Though I was excited
about entering the big new world (apparently real), and being on my own missed
everything that kept me up, awake, alert and on my toes. I missed the tiger
that roared inside me all the time.
Now, as i complete a year in the ‘real
world’, I earn just enough to survive and live each day with a new dream in my eyes,
on my own conditions, in my own way, while my friends earn to live their dream
life .I thank all the odd things that came my way and all the awesome people I
met a year ago ,that gives me the strength
to stand with my head help high up still
and have the guts to tell myself ’better things are yet to happen’.
Now thats a nice bit of yourself, But not so nice of others.
ReplyDeleteThe people whom you described as a bunch of "Rich Kids" existence is minority. A bigger percentage of the people getting out of numerous fashion colleges falls under the category you described as "Outcasts", which itself make the describing word pointless. How many people do you thing is earning to live their dreams? Not many. Atleast in India.
I believe in one thing. The satisfaction you get with your hard-work and sincerity of working in the right direction towards your dream is the only thing which is 100% promised. Everything else is a 50-50 chance, including your dreams.
Always enjoyed your Blogs.
Keep up the good work.