Gulf News

When we find ourselves at an awkward age

- CHERYL RAO Special to Gulf News ■ Cheryl Rao is a writer based in India

Most of us go through an awkward age at some stage of our lives, don’t we? We don’t make sense to anyone, least of all ourselves. We try our best, but somehow don’t achieve anything we consider worthwhile, we’re confused, confounded …

You’ll understand if you have been through it — and you’ll also know that the best thing to see us through that awkward age is someone who is going through the same awkwardnes­s as us.

Well, maybe not exactly the same: She may be growing taller and ganglier and therefore falling over her feet because she is not yet used to how far her extremitie­s extend, while you may be puffing up in all directions, getting rounder and rounder, unable to keep your balance. But you can certainly empathise with each other because when the bell rings, both of you are together on the floor while everyone else has raced out to the playground.

If you belong to a large family, you may find similar awkwardnes­s in another sibling, but I was not so lucky there. I could never find common ground with my elder sister during my awkward age. So how could she understand my many flops, and those frequent faux pas and foot-in-themouth moments?

I could have been all alone in my miserable youthful awkwardnes­s, but luckily, I wasn’t. I had a friend!

She was not awkward in my eyes, but she was definitely so in her own — and as we moved from preteens to teens, adulthood, work life, parenthood, and way beyond, we were constantly together or constantly in touch across the miles and time zones. (In the prehistori­c, pre-internet times, “constant touch” meant that we wrote snail-mail letters to each other.)

Awkward again

Misunderst­andings at work, the awkwardnes­s of relationsh­ips we were failing at or succeeding with; awkward moments with our children, whether it was in their delightful years or those difficult ones when we tried desperatel­y to help them get over their own awkwardnes­s: who could we share our cluelessne­ss with but each other? And when we pooled our wits and our shaky wisdom, we somehow emerged

OK — to the extent that for long years we almost forgot we had been awkward at all!

What’s more, along our journey, each of us met a few others who somehow clicked with us — perhaps forging those friendship­s because of some shared versions of awkwardnes­s — and eventually we even met up with each other’s friends to share happy times together. Now, more than halfa-century later, we once again find ourselves at an awkward age: with dodgy elbows, creaking knees, osteopenic hips — or all three together in a triple whammy!

Once again, we share our moments of discomfort and awkwardnes­s, both physical and mental. We’re liable to fall over our own feet as we did all those decades ago. Or we find ourselves sprawled on the floor without a clue as to how we got there: did we forget to steady ourselves before rising, did we fall over that overturned stool, did we fall off the stool? Wish we could remember!

Twinges, aches, painkiller­s, pick-meups: “You have some and I have others,” we laugh, when we WhatsApp or FaceTime each other. And we can laugh because we still have the same company — and sharing dilutes the awkwardnes­s and increases the acceptance, doesn’t it?

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