The Cost of the Luxury of Freedom
When Independence Teaches You More Than Comfort Ever Could
Firstly, is freedom a luxury or a very fundamental virtue of humanity?
There are many versions and definitions of freedom,
existing at different levels. But for a woman—especially for a girl from a
humble middle-class family—freedom is a pair of wings. Wings you slowly learn
to build on your own, to fly and explore an infinite universe of possibilities.
And when I say explore, I don’t mean fancy
nights out, dates, or a glamorous life. I mean something far more basic. Making
your own decisions. Speaking up and negotiating for yourself, even when you
want to hide behind the pallu of your mother. Planning your outings,
managing your finances, even though it’s easier to leave it to your father or
brother.
No, this isn’t about being feminist or “taking
power.” It’s about stretching yourself—building the muscles needed to become the
person you always admired. A blend of your mother’s nurturing, your father’s
strength, and the companionship of your siblings.
Today, I read a beautiful article on LinkedIn by a
woman who recently embraced the solitary life of living away from home. It struck
a deep personal chord because that’s exactly how I’ve felt over the last ten
months. For the first time, I stepped out of the comfort zone of my home. It
felt like a defining moment—me, on my own, ready to conquer the world. Perfect
in theory. Well planned on paper.
Reality, however, arrived very differently.
It was a whole new world and the fastest crash
course life could offer.
It begins with the basics—cleaning, washing,
cooking, taking care of your health, building a routine. You no longer have your
mother monitoring and scolding you for everything. Though you’re never truly
alone—she’s always a call away, giving instructions—it’s the phase where you
must pick yourself up and keep going.
You are responsible for yourself, in every sense.
And it’s much harder than it looks. Self-discipline becomes a daily
battle—something you start, break, and rebuild every few days because there’s
always a “good reason” to slip. And all this is still just basic survival.
Then comes work life.
If you’re at the start of your career, you’ll
resonate deeply with this—especially if you’ve been a full-time PhD scholar.
After years of student life, stepping into a “real job” feels surreal. As much
as you love your research and academic journey, somewhere deep inside you were
desperate to be called a professional.
But once you’re here, nostalgia takes over.
You miss your research life. You keep sharing your
academic adventures, drawing parallels between your past and present
work—sometimes enough to mildly irritate your coworkers. It’s a phase that hits
hard. You want to scream it out loud, yet it’s such a deeply personal evolution
that others can’t always empathize with it at the intensity you feel—except
knowing you’re a little crazy in your own way.
Before you even settle into this, life introduces
the next module.
You’re never ready for it. There’s no warning. But
it comes anyway.
I witnessed the death of a colleague I worked
closely with. Friends lost their loved ones. Some slipped into depression. I
dealt with my own health roller-coasters while managing work through it all.
Life continued happening—to friends, to family. Add to this the FOMO, the
exhaustion of constant travel, and the pressure to show up everywhere.
And one day, it randomly hits you—you did it all.
It is also the phase where we truly grow—where we
travel, meet people, and begin to look at life through different lenses shaped
by culture, geography, and social structures. Sometimes, you are the seeker; at
other times, you are the one being sought. It is scary, yes, but also deeply
humbling—to slowly grasp the vastness of humanity as a whole.
Especially in the role I am currently in, I have
been allowed to witness the entire spectrum of lives and their possibilities.
Each interaction, each story, quietly reshapes my understanding of the world
and of myself. I am deeply grateful for the experiences I carry and for the
version of myself that is slowly taking form through them.
It wasn’t easy. But the freedom and independence
you longed for have slowly carved themselves into you. They’ve been building
quietly, even when you had no time to notice. Even this mechanical
survival-mode life is shaping a masterpiece out of you. It isn’t perfect, and
it is definitely not bathed in glamorous light. Yet, it is no less than a fairy
tale—one written not in grand moments, but in the extraordinary essence we
absorb from the ordinary course of life.
Of course, it’s never the comfort of home or the
magic of a mother who manages everything effortlessly. But we chose this path
for a reason.
A ship is safest at anchor, but that’s not what it
was built for.
Neither are we.
Maybe the journey is about moving from seeing freedom
as a luxury to absorbing it as a basic essence of life. And that happens when
we slowly convert FOMO – Fear of Missing Out into JOMO—the Joy of Missing Out.
Flow of thoughts, the way you see life and express 🫡🫡🔥🔥🎉 is ultimate.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteThankyou Darshan...That means a lot😊
DeleteYou did it all 🫂 Beautifully written
ReplyDeleteTjankyou Sharwari
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDelete“FOMO – Fear of Missing Out into JOMO—the Joy of Missing Out” nice one.Very proud of your journey. I wish coming years bring you a lot of opportunities and joy.
DeleteThankyou Poornima
DeleteAnd JOMO is concept by Jim Kwick author of Book Limitless and Brain Coach
DeleteIndeed freedom is the very essence of human form
ReplyDeleteVery true
Delete