Saturday, 11 January 2014

The Growing Up Paradox


The Growing Up Paradox







Happy New Year 2014 !!! We sure did welcome the new year with crackers, sweets and lots of enthusiasm. We hope that we pick up good things from last year, forget the bad ones and expect that THIS YEAR at last , we will complete our previous left-up resolutions. We lose interest in some resolutions, continue fighting for some and make some new ones every year. This year I have also made a resolution: TO GROW UP.



"Growing Up" has always been a big thing for me. Elders seem to like the idea very much. It comes in different forms, different times and always has something new associated to it. It is some kind of hypothetical ritual, that everyone is expected to perform so that they get equipped to deal with the real world. If you dare not do it in parent’s eyes, every fault of yours is linked to it. So you see, how important it is to grow up ( or at least convince people so :)  ). If only it was a simple thing to do, we would have done it and not make a big deal out of it.



Growing up has different definitions associated to it. Acting maturely ( no bachpaana ) , being responsible , becoming serious about things and realizing bigger picture are some of it. Though I have mentioned only a couple, these cover a lot of ground based on human behavior. The problem here is it rationally opposes things we truly want to do ( on ground of growing up and finally figuring out what life is ) and has the idea of always having less fun than you want. I agree everyone has different perspective but again they can state so on their own blog :P



Why is it that on mention of old friends all that we remember is the useless things we do that make us laugh like anything? or why is it that overachieving persons/scientists have childish traits ? Why is it that great people end up saying that childhood as their best time or keeping the child in you is the most important thing?


To quote a few 

Every child is an artist. The problem is staying one when you grow up. -- Picasso


Grown-ups are complicated creatures, full of quirks and secrets. -- Roald Dahl


The most difficult thing about being an adult is to act like one. -- Anonymous


Lahanpan dega deva ( Maybe God give me childhood ) -- Sant Tukaram

My favorite one is one particular strip of Calvin and Hobbes.




( To Calvin, Hobbes is a live anthropomorphic tiger; all the other characters see him as an inanimate stuffed toy.)

I think you can see my confusion now. 

This is what I like to call "The Growing Up Paradox".