Have you ever given a thought on why you are placed where you are now? Like why is this your path rather than that other paths that we would've preferred?
"I'm sick of this town, this blind man's forage, they take your dreams down, and they stick them in storage. You can have them back son, when you've paid off your mortgage and loans…"
Many years ago, four years, to be precise, that part of the lyrics from Passenger's Life's for the Living became my daily mantra. Fresh from failure, very lost in life, and filled with a never ending stream of regrets, I cursed myself for the lost chances in life, for the innocence and stupidity of youth, and for the times I was foolish enough to believe that I was heading in the right direction.
I wasn't.
I took a path, reached the end, and found that it was, after all, a dead end.
I spent many months in the pathway of recovery. Walking back to the starting point hadn't been easy. In fact, it would be appropriate to say that it didn't take me months. It took me years. And maybe it's still ongoing. Maybe I'm walking backwards right now. I'm not sure.
I recalled the days when I was a bright-eyed kid, filled with hopes and dreams to become someone big. "What would you want to be when you grow up?" they asked me. Oh, I was certain of my answers. A forensic scientist. A doctor. A whatever-occupation-society-sings-praises-to.
I was blinded, of course. At the age of 12, I had my first guitar. But no one ever told me I was good, that my passion was to be nurtured. They left me alone in the path of musical discovery, and it soon became a lonely path filled with self-doubt. "I'm never going to be good enough to get a career in music," I told myself. When a schoolmate, who at the age of 15 was already sure of pursuing a career in music, told a teacher that that was exactly what she was going to do after leaving school, I secretly asked myself, well, that surely won't help her to pay the bills, will it?
I had many other passions as I grew up. Thai language, writing stories, none of those passions had any relation to chemical reactions or how the organs function, or even how you can get the value of x from messing up with the other alphabets in Greek. But none of those passions were conventional either. My exam results became the thing I held on to, shaping the belief that I was doing well, and would continue to do well as long as I studied and did my best.
It wasn't until I was 18 that I realised perhaps I had been deceiving myself for years. Books laid in front of me made no sense. While classmates discussed about chemical reactions and biological processes I buried my head deep in my curled arms, hidden beneath the protection of my ever-faithful black hoodie.
And it took me two more years to realise that I was a huge liar to myself. Because when I hit that brick wall, unlike my other friends who also had fallen under the curse of the brick wall, I turned away, walked away, and abandoned that path completely. I know two or three friends who marched onwards and are doing well.
But Randy Pausch said in The Last Lecture that it is when we hit the brick wall we truly know our heart's desires--whether we really wanted that thing in the first place. When I hit that brick wall, I was already certain I no longer wanted it.
Hence here I am, in yet another long path towards rediscovery. The days haven't been all sunshine and rainbows. Some days I lie awake thinking how things would've been if I tried harder, or if I didn't walk away from the brick wall but climbed it instead.
And do I think this path is exactly what's meant for me? Truthfully, I'm not sure. Because a pathway isn't a destination, and I realise that for each point in life where I thought I've reached a destination, I've actually just went past a checkpoint to reflect and ponder about what I've learnt.
Some days it feels as if I'm a waste of resources, being part of society with nothing to contribute. Some days when I feel like rebelling against the words of the people around me, I question myself on why do I need to feel superior, and perhaps that shows how I'm in a wrong place with nothing to learn other than humility. And the lessons had never been easy. It's always a constant battle between feeling inferior and superior at the same time. Some days I look around me and scoff, hah, sheep! while some days I scroll through the news feed on social media and feel so small for not being to travel around the world and live independently like most of my peers.
But more often that than, I ride buses. I repeat the same routine for nearly three years and there had been countless times on my ride I find myself being sure than ever that I am exactly where I'm supposed to be, right here, at this very moment. I smile at random strangers, I help the blind and the elderly to shut their windows. I offer my seat whenever I have the chance to do so. I initiate conversations with passengers and drivers. And sometimes I'd like to imagine these bus rides without myself. Indeed I am an insignificant being, so small, so powerless, just like in Casting Crown's lyrics of Who Am I, I am a flower quickly fading, here today and gone tomorrow, a wave tossed in the ocean, a vapour in the wind. Yet I'd like to think myself as a little Perodua Kancil driven extremely slowly in front of a speeding bus. Small and powerless, but whatever I do still makes a difference in someone's life, be it small or big.
And with this belief, with each passing day I grow more and more in confidence that the world around me would be so different if I weren't walking in this path right now. Sure, the world would still work as fine, but it would be different. And I'd be different.
And in the famous words of Douglas Adams, I guess "I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be."