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Childhood Memories

Shyness

Sometimes I really hate myself for being shy. It feels like weakness like I’m built with some missing component that everyone else seems to have. While others speak up, step forward, or take charge, I hesitate. I overthink. I stay quiet. And because of that hesitation, I often end up doing things less effectively or give up easily.

Shyness has a strange way of shrinking your world. It’s not that you don’t have ideas or you don’t want to try. But there’s always that invisible resistance, that voice telling you to hold back. Don’t ask. Don’t interrupt. Don’t risk looking foolish. So instead of pushing through, you retreat. And sometimes, I give up before I even properly begin not because I lack ability, but because I lack the courage to push past that discomfort.

What frustrates me most is knowing how much potential gets wasted in silence. Opportunities slip away, conversations never happen, and chances to grow are quietly abandoned. People often say, “Just be confident” as if confidence were a switch you could flip on demand. But shyness isn’t something you simply turn off. It’s a habit, shaped over years, rooted deep in how you see yourself and how you think others see you.

Still, I’ve started to realize something uncomfortable but important: shyness isn’t an immovable wall. It’s more like a heavy door. Hard to push open but not impossible. Maybe giving up easily isn’t entirely because I’m shy. Maybe it’s also because I’ve accepted that label too completely, used it as an explanation, or even an excuse. That’s not a pleasant thought, but it’s an honest one.

I don’t know if I’ll ever become outspoken or bold. Maybe that’s not even the goal. Perhaps progress is quieter than that speaking once when I would have stayed silent, trying once more when I would have stopped, stepping forward half a step instead of stepping back entirely. Small victories that no one notices except me.

So yes, sometimes I hate my shyness. But I’m learning not to let that hatred define the ending of the story. Maybe it’s just part of the beginning something to wrestle with, understand, and slowly reshape. Not overnight. Not dramatically. Just gradually, one uncomfortable moment at a time.

Categories
Childhood Memories

Confidence

Till today, I believed that confidence was something I lacked.

People would say things like:

“Be more confident.”

“Why are you so quiet?”

“You should speak up more.”

They probably meant well.

But instead of helping, those words made me feel smaller.

The more I was told to “be confident,”

the more I felt that I wasn’t good enough.

It made me think something was wrong with me.

But confidence doesn’t grow from pressure.

It grows from safety.

It grows when someone listens.

When someone accepts you as you are.

When you’re allowed to make mistakes without being judged.

Real confidence comes from knowing:

I am allowed to be imperfect.

I am allowed to learn.

I am allowed to grow at my own pace.

So if you’re struggling with confidence today,

please remember:

You don’t need to change who you are to be worthy.

You don’t need to pretend to be fearless.

You are enough, even while you’re figuring things out.

I hope that’s how confidence truly begins.

Till now , I am still trying to build my confidence.

Categories
Childhood Memories

Do I Have a Passion or just following Instructions?

What is my passion? I’ve been asking myself for years.

And till now, I still don’t know the answer.

Since I was young, I was taught to obey.

LISTEN. FOLLOW. DON’T ARGUE

So I did. Not because I wanted to.

But because I was very afraid.

very afraid of disappointing.

Very afraid of making them angry.

Very afraid of being “wrong.”

Sometimes, I felt like a puppet. Someone else holding the strings.

As I grew up, I didn’t become braver.

I just became quieter. I learned to hide my thoughts.

To accept their dreams as mine.

Now when people ask, “What do you love doing?”

I freeze. I realise I don’t know what I love.

But at least now, I’m asking.

And maybe… that’s the start.

Categories
Childhood Memories

The Day I Stopped Drawing.

When I was young, I loved to draw.

I would draw anything I could. But most of the time, it was cartoon character especially Pokémon. I remember sitting there with my notebook, copying different Pokémon from books and trying my best to make them look right.

Drawing was something I really enjoyed. It made me happy. It felt like it was my thing.

Then one day, during class, I was drawing as usual when a teacher saw my sketchbook. She took it away without saying much. Just like that, it was confiscated.

And I never got it back.

After that, something changed. I didn’t pick up a pencil to draw anymore. No one told me to stop. No one scolded me. But somehow, losing that book was enough to make me give up on something I loved.

Even now, I’m not sure why I never started again.

Sometimes I think about it and wonder what if that teacher hadn’t taken my book? Maybe I would have kept drawing. Maybe today I could proudly say that art is my hobby. Maybe it would still be part of my life.

This memory came back recently when I happened to watch The Joy of Painting by Bob Ross. Watching him paint so calmly and happily reminded me of the younger me, sitting there and drawing Pokémon in my notebook.

It made me realize something.

Maybe I didn’t lose my passion.

Maybe I just left it behind.

Categories
Childhood Memories

I Used to Talk Too Much.

Now I Hardly Talk at All.

When I was young, I talked a lot.

Too much.

In class, I was always chatting with someone. About homework, cartoons, games, anything. If there was someone sitting next to me, I would find a reason to talk.

And of course, teachers didn’t like that.

“Kong SILENCE.”
“Pay attention.”

Somehow, I didn’t listen.

Then, during the meet-the-teacher sessions, the teacher would complain to my father.

I felt nervous at home , waiting to get punished.

Back then, I didn’t really understand why. I only knew that talking too much always led to problems.

Back then, I thought something was wrong with me.

Slowly, as I grew older, I began to change.

I started holding back.
I talked less.
I kept more things to myself.

Little by little, without noticing, I became quieter.

Then I grew up.

And one day, I realized something.

I didn’t know how to talk anymore.

Not like before.

Now, making small talk feels awkward. When I meet people, my mind goes blank. I want to say something, but nothing comes out. Or I think too much and end up saying nothing.

At gatherings, I stay quiet and scroll my phone.
With strangers, I just smile.

Sometimes I miss the old me.

The kid who didn’t care.
The kid who spoke first and thought later.
The kid who wasn’t afraid of sounding stupid.

Now, every word feels risky.

What if I say something weird?
What if they judge me?
What if I sound boring?

So I keep quiet.

It’s safer that way.

But honestly, it’s also lonely.

Because I still want to connect with people.
I still want to laugh and talk freely.
I still want to feel comfortable being myself.

Maybe growing up didn’t just make me more mature.
Maybe it made me more careful.
More self-conscious.
More afraid of mistakes.

Writing this makes me realise something.

That talkative boy is still inside me.

He’s just been silent for a long time.

Maybe it’s time I let him talk again.