SHARED
FROM:
StarMetro, Friday,
27 September 2013
Different
Spins by Sheila Stanley
REVISIT THE
CHILD IN YOU
forget the burdens of
adulthood and have fun dreaming sometimes
The price
of adulthood also covers the way we behave in our friendships. In the playground, if we don’t like someone
because they pulled our hair, we would just say, “I don’t want to be your
friend anymore.” Then we would stalk off
and not speak to the person for one whole day.
The next day, we would be back in the playground playing with the very
same person again.
Adulthood is
different. A metaphorical hair pulling
will result in us getting peeved, but not necessarily voicing out our
opinions. Or even if we do it, it would
be with a positive spin aimed at not rubbing the other person the wrong
way. Most of the time. Sometimes we get so peeved that we tell off
the person outright. But as the general
rule, Asian politeness dictates that we tread softly round these things.
Another price
of adulthood is making choices which you never thought you would, and learning
the ultimate truism of never saying never.
Ultimately,
even with the price we pay for adulthood, there comes a definitive moments on
one’s life when we have to be like the child we used to be. And that includes having some fun, drawing playground
boundaries and dreaming dreams we will never fulfil but dreaming them anyway
just for the fun of it.
For every adult, dwells the child that was,
And in every child, there lies the adult that will be
-John Connolly, The Book Of Lost Things
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