
Ten years later, I returned to India. Nothing seems to be changed.
I went to India on my own a decade ago. This time, I am with my wife who I met four years ago. We finally managed to get married a few months back, and this trip was our honeymoon.
Ten years ago, everything was so uncertain and unknown. Every day, I had a new encounter and was never alone. I loved talking to those who had the same passion for traveling. I even fell in love with a beautiful German girl and traveled together for a couple of months. We were very passionate about each other. I had the time of my life.
It was all ten years ago. Since then, my life has become stable and I've started earning a regular income. Everything looks secure and straightforward.
Yet, nothing has changed in India. We all know that the economy has boomed here in last ten years and people have become far richer than ever. Probably, the profit has not been spread very widely in India. Chosen people enjoy the wealth and the rest trudge on with the same life they had ten years ago.
Choice is a luxury in life. I've chosen my life as a photographer, but a lot of people in India have no choice but to accept life the way it is.
My belief is that today is the best day of my life. I hardly recall my past; it seems quite distant. India stands as a bridge between my past and present. The memory of India somehow remains vivid and I feel as if there was ten-year void in my life.
Sometimes it is good to encounter your past. Your wrinkle may deepen and your hair may turn white. But there are still things that remain unchanged in yourself.
Ten years ago when I went to India, I wanted to change myself. I wanted to change everything. Now I see, things change without trying and you don't even notice how and when. They simply change without you knowing.
I was looking for my place. I thought I had to try to find it, so I looked everywhere and went as far away as possible.
I am now falling, falling to my place where I should be. India makes me realize that we can not go anywhere. You have to stick to who you are and what you really are.
The real change only occurs after you find your place. |