NOT A SUITABLE PAIR

Today, I got ready, wore my clothes, and as I was putting on a pair of earrings through the tiny hole, a story whispered in my ears.

And so, I began writing this blog...I remember growing up hating accessories—partly because my ears never allowed me to wear them. I had those tiny, permanent gold earrings that toddlers get, and honestly, I hated them. I would watch other girls wear fancy earrings, matching them to their outfits every day, while I was stuck with the same old pair. It felt like I was trapped, as if my ears were shackled by something I had never chosen.

So, when I was 12 and found myself home alone, I saw an opportunity. My little hands reached for a pair of scissors, and in one bold moment, I cut the tiny wire of my earrings. As a little girl, it took guts to do this. When Mom came home later and saw me, she obviously yelled… but I guess, at that time, it felt like my only way out.I still remember the feeling—like I was cutting the rope that had tied me down for years. It was liberating, a breath of fresh freedom. But freedom, as I soon learned, comes at a cost.

As if the universe had its own plans, my ears refused to accept anything other than gold. Every new earring I tried brought pain, swelling, and discomfort. Eventually, I quit fighting and made peace with the situation. Maybe that’s what growing up as a girl often feels like—learning to let go of battles you know you can't win.

And so, I stopped caring for accessories altogether. I attended weddings with no jewellery, never bothered with earrings again. But I was always fascinated watching other girls casually change their earrings, swapping them out without a second thought—something I could never do. It sounds bizarre, but maybe we long the most for the things we are denied.

Years later, I decided to reclaim what I had lost. I got my piercings done again—not just one, but three. People warned me: "One piercing is painful enough, how will you handle three?" But pain wasn’t my fear anymore. I had already lived through the ache of longing.

Now, every time I change my earrings, I no longer see a wound that once bled—I see a passage that healed.

Comments

  1. Anmol, You are such an amazing writer. The way you observe little things and bring life out of them is commendable. More power to you! πŸ’ƒπŸΌπŸ’ƒπŸΌ

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