"She was the youngest, arriving in the wake of two elder siblings and a twin brother whose delicate health demanded the family’s entire reservoir of attention. In that crowded house, she became the "silent twin" not ignored, perhaps, but constantly hemmed in by a fence of "don’ts" and "can’ts." While others were encouraged, she was instructed; while others were praised, she was warned of her own perceived incapacities.
Living in an era before Google, she had no search engine to find an alternative reality. She simply waited for the "second half" of her life, hoping for a lavish turn of fate (simulated the best days ahead). And on the surface, it arrived: marriage, children, a home, a car, a career. Yet, the script remained the same. From her initial days of marriage, she began collecting a different kind of "medal" sharp, painful certificates of failure issued by her in-laws and partner. "You aren't good at this; you're failing at that."
At the office, colleagues urged her to fight back, to find her voice, but the years of being told she was "incapable" had reached her marrow. She earned a living and built a professional reputation, but the weight of her mistakes born from a fractured self-confidence finally became too heavy.
Exhausted by the "unexpected medals" of criticism and having knocked on the doors of counselors who could not reach the depth of her hurt, she has walked away. Today, she resides in an Ashram. She has traded the noise of family for the silence of the divine. She is no longer looking for validation from people; she is waiting with newfound patience to see what the Supreme Authority has in store for her second act." - A tale of a girl.
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