Change

Change. It can’t be pleasant for everyone. Neither can it be harsh for all. Change has two opposite effects on people. One’s loss might be another’s gain. When one person wins the others inevitably lose. A single change can offer both joy and grief at the same time. After all that’s what change and life are all about. We can’t ask for change nor can we choose what it will be. A short story about a change and its consequences.
Lonely girl - Open To Interpretation

A Change

I gripped at the steering wheel in anger, knuckles white. Beside me Carla sat fuming. I had definitely decided that the drift between us and our ‘cherished’ daughter was final. That’s when I registered the feeling of the car rolling. The last thing I see is a face disappearing with the flames. I only thanked god that my young girl had decided not to accompany us.

The Losses

I let the rainfall mix with my tears. I never thought I would cry over them: that I would feel pain in losing them.  I was in my hideout, the only one that gave me solace after a big blowout. However now there is nothing to hide from in this house. Nothing left to detest. My long time ‘wish’ had come true. I was going to get a new ‘set’ of parents. The ones who I had always detested were gone, dead. I always thought that I wanted someone else who would not hate me so much, who liked me for who I am and not for whom I wasn’t. And now when there is nothing but a void for what used to teach me, I know I had in some ways always relied on it. And now when I get another chance, I realize that I never really wanted one. I always had to be content but I wasn’t. I hated them for being them, for changing me and in bad moments, even destroying me. I knew too little then. It is now that they have destroyed me. And this time it is irrevocably. And now I can’t even hate them for it.  My new caretakers, I can’t call them anything else, were going to arrive in an hour to take me from the one place I called home. I had now started hating two new people, now even before I knew them.
The wind blew out two leaves from the almost barren tree, now left with just another one. Yes, that was me, me who was going to have to grit my teeth and tough it all out to survive. The worse thing was that I was not even sure that I should try. Now I just wish I had gone with them to that stupid party. They had tried a lot of ways to get me to come. But now they had given up, on life and on me. Maybe it didn't change much. I wish it had in the way I wanted it to. I loathed it now, that change that I had wished for and the one I was sure would be good.

The Gains

I was almost nauseous with the feelings of worry and excitement desperately trying to win me over. And this battle was one of those ones which I never think I will ever learn the outcome.  Soon I was going to have somebody to call my own. Somebody who would completely belong to me, look up to me and love me. As Matthew drove down the car surprisingly fast for his ‘never-break-rules’ attitude, I allowed myself to consider the girl that we were now going to adopt. Her parents had died unexpectedly. Matthew was not exactly the happiest person when I proposed the idea of taking a ‘traumatized’ child under our wing. Traumatized in his eyes, that is. But I was sure that the simple psychology of children would help her put her past behind her soon enough.
In a way the death of her parents was a blessing to me. After all it had given me a chance to have a new future. A future with me being a happy mother and she being my adoring daughter. Maybe it will be a new future for her as well. Perhaps she will be happier with me. Maybe I am just trying to make myself believe that it will work out.
                                              
And then, no matter how it effects you a change will change you.



~ Niranjana Menon




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