The smell of Blue Tokai’s Bibi Plantation coffee
lingers in the air of my Polish and Indian friends’ room. We’ve had some milk
to put in it, for once – something that I once took for granted but is now a
luxury. It’s 12:24 am on the 30th
March. The temperature is still close to a 30 and I feel a drop of sweat running
down my stomach - the Maharasthrian summer has started. For far too many
people, summer before monsoon means drought that takes away their livelihood –
but in my own, individual, small world it means that graduation is coming. In
my own, individual, small world it means that what once seemed like an eternity
has begun to approach its end – my years in MUWCI.
Slowly,
careful comments of the mortality of our time here have started to slip into
the caf table discussions.
“How
do you feel about it?”
“I
don’t know, it’s scary.”
“I
know man.”
(Or
well, sometimes it’s more like an overtly excited comment from a first-year
about their first-years. and then a panicky burst of frustration from a
second-year.
“Hey,
did you here about the zero year who-“
“NO.”
“Sorry,
it’s just that I just got to know my firs-“
“I DON'T WANNA HEAR IT.”
“But
they’re arriving and we need to plan for-“
“NOBODY’S
ARRIVING. WE ARE NOT GOING ANYWHERE.”)
Slowly, stocking up on food is becoming unnecessary
and my sweaters are better off in my suitcase. Slowly, each morning seems to
matter more than before. Every conversation and every face has become more full
of details I want to remember.
I’m leaving India in 52 days. 51, in fact, since it’s
past midnight at the moment - not that it really makes a difference - I
mean, what is 24 hours gonna do in making me realize what the hell just happened.
So in 51 days, I’m putting on the blue and white cap
that indicates my declaration as “ylioppilas” – meaning a high school graduate,
or as our weird language puts it “an over-student”. In 51 days, I have spent
638 days in India, living with people from 60 different countries, on a hilltop
in the valley of the Western Ghats mountain rage in rural Maharashtra, five
kilometers from the closest village called Paud and two hours of bumpy roads from
the 5-million city of Pune. In a tiny corner in Wada 3, geographically very far
from the world but mentally closer than ever.
Ernakulam, Kochi (2016)
It
sounds like an illusion, I know – and more often than not has also felt like
it. Listening to guitars in different languages, dancing under flags from six
different continents, watching the neon purple sun set right below your window
and taking a 36-hour train across the country all sounds like some cliché roadtrip
movie, before you remember that for the past two years, that’s been your life.
And
funnily enough, reality has started to feel like an illusion as well. Normal
life feels like an illusion. I mean, normal life, with breakfasts that I made
myself? With 8-hour work shifts and not knowing which café to pick because
there are too many to choose from? With a good night’s sleep under a fluffy
duvet and – my god – a thick mattress? Normal life, with packed subways and 9
pm news? What is that? I don’t remember anymore.
All of that sounds like fun and games and dreamy days when
you’re staying up for the fourth night in a row, trying to finish your
millionth IB assignment and binging up on the coffee shop brownies that have
already made you gain five kilos. That’s when you can’t wait for it. That’s
when you’d give anything in the world to wake up in your own bed with
absolutely no shits given about anything.
But then time flies, and suddenly you’re here. With
half of a hundred mornings left. And it stops being funny, because that makes
seven weeks - when I so clearly remember sitting on the edge of my bed,
counting weeks until Christmas of my first year as I scrolled through my
calendar. To be honest, I’ll probably get too scared to count soon enough,
because let’s face it, it’s nerve wrecking as hell. I should probably just
stop now and pretend like it’s not gonna end. Like this dream I’ve been living is
actually a dream because I’m a coma patient and they’ve decided to pull the
plugs. So I stay here forever.
Yeah, I've realized I tend to get more attached to places than people.
Yeah, I've realized I tend to get more attached to places than people.
But after all, that’s not how life works. After
all, we knew it was gonna end, right? Right?!
Because there are 8-hour work shifts to do and college degrees
to complete in American small towns and European capitals and South East Asian
megalopolises, as we’ll soon see when we burst out of this bubble, scattering
around the globe the same way we were spread around when we were all just
strangers. There are breakfasts to eat with extended families and childhood
friends. There are things that are hard and not so nice, but there are things
that need to be done, and most of all, things that will make you realize why your
years here were meaningful. There are greener meadows, as they say, but there
are also better days and comfier beds and tastier coffee and after all, quite a
lot more freedom and goals to achieve. (Although the 16-year old naïve me,
standing at the gate of the Helsinki airport 1,5 years ago, boarding a plane to
Mumbai, was very sure that I was on my way to freedom.)
It’s going to be incredibly scary to leave. I was
never as scared to leave to India as I am to return home. On most nights, I
have no idea what I will do without all this. Against all my expectations, I’m
returning home (temporarily, duh) which was pretty much the worst
outcome I could imagine when I stood by that gate in Helsinki in August 2015. Not getting into the prestigious US university I wanted was a hard hit for someone for whom the Finnish everyday life is the perfect epitome of mediocrity, dullness, monotonousness and detachedness. Humdrum with no great shakes. Settling.
But gladly, that most likely means I’m going towards the unknown again, just like I did when I was 16 and boarded that plane – and turns out, that the unknown can be quite good. Turns the unknown makes you discover things. And if I'm so afraid to not be doing something that pushes me to my extreme limits, if I'm so afraid to experience what I narrow-mindedly see as "failure" for myself - then maybe I should face those fears. Maybe I should live a bit of normality, if normality is outside of my comfort zone now.
But gladly, that most likely means I’m going towards the unknown again, just like I did when I was 16 and boarded that plane – and turns out, that the unknown can be quite good. Turns the unknown makes you discover things. And if I'm so afraid to not be doing something that pushes me to my extreme limits, if I'm so afraid to experience what I narrow-mindedly see as "failure" for myself - then maybe I should face those fears. Maybe I should live a bit of normality, if normality is outside of my comfort zone now.
Because gladly, we cannot stay in an eternal dream. I’m pretty
sure it would become quite nightmarish after a while - I'm quite done with showering with frogs, to be frank with you. I believe in everything
having a purpose, and yes I'll soon look back to all of this and think "was it real?", and I'll scroll through the pictures and videos and unnecessary mass email chains and wonder why I ever let myself take it for granted. Yes I'll miss it like crazy, when I suddenly can't jump into my roommate's bed or go make coffee in Wada 4 or spend time with AC and good internet my friends in Wada 5. I'll look back and think damn, if I could spend another day watching the sunsets on top of the valley. I'll look back to everything and miss it like crazy - but I also know that it’s my time to go.
Home? I don't know where that is anymore. But it's time to move forward again.
Home? I don't know where that is anymore. But it's time to move forward again.
And to be
honest, despite my 50-day crisis, the weeks that remain will most likely be one of the best ones we’ve
had so far. On Saturday’s Pune-trip I’m stocking up on coffee though – it’s
game on towards the final exams.
It's only the beginning, even if it's the beginning of the end.