Friday, June 6, 2008

Travelling Is Always An Experience

When you realize you want to spend the rest of your life with somebody, you want the rest of your life to start as soon as possible.
- Nora Ephron, When Harry Met Sally
Relatively, the time I woke up today was a lot early but I took a nap again after 11:30 am. There was another gap in time when I slept in the evening. Perhaps this is the time when I can really start spending time to finish watching all those movies I have on my computer and also finish reading all those books waiting for me. In fact a couple of days back when I was in the train I read a good part of one of those books. I realized that it was a 'good part' when I had stopped reading it. Today afternoon I watched a few episodes of 'How I Met Your Mother'. There are many more to go before I can finish the first season and bring home the second and the third.

I have never liked watching 'Friends' for some reason. It looked vulgar to me always. Somehow 'How I Met Your Mother' seems to be fine and I am enjoying it. The other TV series I watch frequently is 'Simpsons'. The best part of watching any of all these is that I don't have to sit in front of the TV. And not to forget the only 25 minutes each of the episodes take. There are many more I have access to but there isn't much space in my computer for them. Taking time to watch them is another thing. There isn't much to do at home but still I need to take time to watch.

Time is a big clause as always found to be a very critical of the elements many have tried to conquer. We have always had many sayings and quotations getting us awed trying to put some interesting observations on time. But even the wittiest of the sayings prove nothing. Allah has showed us in the Holy Quran the importance of time. The pace of time is what we have always been amused of. It goes slow when we measure it and fast when we ignore it. There have been theories and observations and prophesies. I somehow have to go past the next three weeks of my life waiting.

The last two weeks I have spent have been more amazing than I can describe here. All the while I kept feeling glad that I live in Hyderabad. Chennai was very humid. As long as I was in the hotel room or in the car things were very fine. But the moment I came out I had all moisture on my glasses and sticky sweat all over me. It was terrible to be there without A/C. People there must be used to it - even used to the sticky tap water and sticky hair! And no doubt why the complexion of their skin is dark. The best thing about Chennai was the traffic. People have road sense, they follow rules even in the absence of cops, the roads are wide and flat with potholes a rarity. Another interesting thing about the place was that there is hardly any difference between commercial and residential areas. I found offices and houses in the same localities everywhere. Roads being wide never give traffic any congestion. Chennai or at least the places I have been in Chennai are a lot different than Hyderabad.

Mahabalipuram was too small. There was a temple I saw from a distance and a beach. Maybe there were more places to visit there but we skipped. I wanted to go to some crocodile park but it was closed that day. It was nice to be in Pondicherry on 3rd's evening which was the next day. We reached there after sunset but the climate was no different - it was terribly humid. We walked through Rue De Bussy and nearby streets to reach the beach. We went past a place that only had doctors, hospitals, diagnostic centers and pharmacies all through a kilometer long stretch. There was also a place with houses in antique style with woodwork so heavy that we could smell sandal and various other woods as we walked past them. The houses were built in French style and there were restaurants offering several European menus. The beach wasn't so great.

The beach at Mahabalipuram was the first one I ever saw. I had never seen sea before. Then next it was Marina beach in Chennai. Marina beach somehow reminded me of our famous 'Secret Lake' of Hyderabad - there were too many couples there sitting on the warm sands. I wonder how they could find romantic time sitting in a place so congested, humid and sticky. I am sure they will find 'Secret Lake' a paradise. There is love in every part of the world - whether we like that place or not; whether we like the people there or not.

Tamil Nadu speaks only Tamil. They seem to have some deep hatred towards English and Hindi let alone Urdu. Even when a dog barks it barks in Tamil! They are more fanatic than so perceived fundamentalists. I simply couldn't understand why they are keeping themselves backward at a time when a language like English can catapult them into huge intellectual and economic development. Things are more terrible with the auto rickshaws - they want to take as much money they can, explain things in Tamil and cheat us. Hyderabad is a lot better in many ways. We have people here speaking Hindi, English and Urdu alongside Telugu of course. And we still have meters working with the auto rickshaws.

A major difference while travelling with friends and while with parents is worrying about money. With parents I could go to good restaurants and hardly give a thinking to the cost of food. I could travel in an A/C car and have an A/C room at the hotel. I never had to calculate how much money was being spent. And I could sleep all night in the train with the luxury of cooling there. There are different things that come along when I am with friends and there is no doubt about it. They are simply two different experiences and both are good. There are places around Ooty and Kodaikanal I couldn't have enjoyed much if I had my parents with me instead of friends.

I have also observed that Hyderabad has the best of railway stations among all those I have seen. Hyderabad is in fact very different and can't be compared with any other city - even Chennai or Bangalore. It was pathetic to walk that one and a half kilometer to Kalasipalyam bus stand through those dirty streets of Bangalore. I had never seen such a bad place before. No doubt the other part of the city, which has been well developed in the recent years, was incredible with big buildings and bridges. Just this part of Karnataka seems to be something, the rest is in a terrible state. Even the ghats on the other side of Ooty that lie in Karnataka were sickening.

In general the food in Ooty and Kodaikanal was a bit expensive. That should be obvious because it's expensive to transport things to top of those high hills. An interesting point was that there were no plastic bags in use - they have banned them. Everything is carried in paper bags and in a way it looked nice. But I can't easily imagine that happening here. The problem with food didn't seem much as we were more interested in enjoying the other things. The temperature was less than 15 degrees and it was simply fabulous. We all needed to have our jackets with us at least when there was no sun up. When we were not exactly inside the town and out for sight-seeing we had the company of clouds on many occasions.

The train left us at Coimbatore from where we headed for Kodaikanal first. We found a wonderful driver who could speak English. He had a good comfortable car and he drove perfectly well - couldn't have asked more from him. From Kodaikanal the next day we started for Ooty with plans to stop at Coonoor. We could only spend 30 minutes there and some of my friends were asleep when we stopped at its railway station. We wanted to travel in the Toy Train but couldn't get the chance. After a day's stay in Ooty we left for Bangalore. On the way I had a glimpse of the Mysore Palace when the bus passed though that town. It looked like a castle to me which is supposed to exist only in cartoons.

Near Ooty we went to Dodabeta, the highest peak in Nilgiris, which was over 2,600 meters above sea level. It sounded weird when just a few days later I was in Chennai at sea level - 2.6 kilometers below on the ground from that peak. On our way to Bangalore we went through Mudumalai forest reserve which is supposed to have tigers. I saw a wild elephant and lots of trees. After a tiring walk in Bangalore with our bags we boarded a bus and reached home the next day in the morning. When I reached home I had an almost empty wallet, a tired face, lots of sleep to be slept, paper work for the visa still left and almost two kilograms of chocolate in my bag - no one can miss chocolate when in the Nilgiris.

Almost 25 people were issued visas in front of me, one guy was rejected and my visa was put on hold. And the same day my phone stopped working and there was a lot of problem with the network when I started using a spare phone my brother was carrying. My mother's new phone wasn't charged up fully and so I couldn't use that too. It wasn't so nice sitting there not able to receive any calls. There was a time when I couldn't receive with a reason called 'low balance'. They charge a Rupee per minute for incoming while roaming and there were some calls I had take - I had asked a friend to find out what exactly Section 221(g) of the Immigration and Nationality Act was and what a 'pink slip' had to mean.

They are literally distributing visas there. They are asking for some basic documents, asking for finger prints, one or two of the few generally expected questions and that's that. They just want to see the person, make him stand there for a couple of minutes and let him go home happily with a confirmation that he will have his stamped passport in five days. I returned home with a pink slip and a confirmation that I will have to wait for three weeks and then send in my passport to get the stamping done. Some say in 90% of such cases they issue the visa, some say it's just about waiting and Section 221(g) means 'accepted', I have been congratulated by all and some say it means 'accepted but put on hold'.

The Americans there are amazing. One of them was talking in Telugu. That was very impressive of him as he was greeting the elderly people there, asking about them in their native languages and not giving them any trouble by asking for any extra papers. I thought I would get a chance to have a good conversation with one of those people at the counters but they were barely interested in spending more time with anybody. They just wanted to give the visas. In my case they supposedly want to confirm that I am the very person who has applied for it. I assume the problem is because of my surname - the 'surname' field in my passport is completely blank. A guy who was standing there with me said that it might be due to my interests in Information Security - I had taken up that subject as an elective once, done my project in it and MS is supposed to have Information Security as its Major. It could be anything. I only have to wait. I am pleased with all this - I didn't get a rejection Alhamdulillah.

I was too excited to be at the consulate. I wanted to talk to people there, in their language, the way they talk. These white people are very courteous, they know how to smile well, nobody seemed any biased to me. I don't think any person who is planning for a visa interview needs to be worried about anything. Things are as easy as going to a restaurant and having food. The only risk is not keeping enough cash with us - it depends on us. It depends on what Allah wants. I was not asked about my financial worthiness, I was not asked why I wanted to go to America, I was not asked what I would do after finishing my MS. The only thing he asked me while working on his computer was "what do your parents do?"

My parents had already told me that they were not praying that I get the visa. Instead, they said, they were praying that I am always happy. Of course they are right in doing that. I am happy. But there could have been a completely different flavor to this post I have written today. In fact I would have written it yesterday itself when I reached home. They have helped me with everything, spent so much money, gave so much time, I would have only felt better to hear that they were praying for something I wanted. I am glad I went to Pondicherry after getting back from the consulate. I simply didn't know what to do. I could only imagine what I would have done if things were final. Three weeks is not a long time. I remember once thinking what I would ask Allah once I have the visa. In a way Allah has given me more things to ask from Him. It's always nice to have something to ask from Allah. After three weeks I will have to look for more serious things.

Friday, May 23, 2008

Parents, (Z)AA(W)D(I)ASS, Z and Me

The ultimate test of a relationship is to disagree but to hold hands.
- Quoted by Alexandra Penney in Self
I knew my parents would never give me the permission. Yet I had decided to take a chance. I had decided that I wouldn't be asking for the second time if they refused. I had felt I had a rejection even before I could ask. I told my father about the plan and politely enquired if I cold join my friends. He agreed. Few minutes later mamma too agreed. It's not that I couldn't believe but I knew there were new experiences waiting for me. So inshAllah on Saturday at 12 noon I would be boarding a train to Coimbatore with seven more friends. We will visit Ooty, Kodaikanal and perhaps even Coonoor. InshAllah we will be back on 29th.

I had never been out of house for so long anytime before. With my parents and brother I have been to many places but this time I won't have them around and it will be my longest time outside Hyderabad. There is a bit of anxiety and questions like "why am I going?" or "is it the right thing I am doing?" The answer is simple: we have such questions whenever we get to do something for the first time even if it is made perfectly alright by Allah. I only hope I remain in accordance to what Allah wants from us. I will miss my parents and brother with no doubt, but with seven friends around, I will miss the other five, who won't be with me, a lot more. I don't even know how it's going to be. I would have as well stayed back home and met them at least once. But it's time for me to go. Time won't let me wait for them. They won't wait for me.

I had to iron five pairs of clothes - one to be worn for the journey and four once I reach there. I had to spend some time deciding what all I might be needing and what kind of clothes I must carry. I am still not sure if I should carry my shaving kit with me. I am leaving the deodorants back home. I spent time on deciding which jacket I might be needing there. I made my arms and legs do some physical work after a lot many days. I even walked around 5 kilometers today. It wasn't fun at all but it was peaceful. I will be back in five days but it seems to be a bit larger than what it could ever be - I might not get a chance to spend so much time with these friends again. I would butcher the whole world to have the other five with me in a similar way - colloquially! Nobody does that.

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Incredible Lessons From Damned Teachers

Fratres! Three weeks from now, I will be harvesting my crops. Imagine where you will be, and it will be so. Hold the line. Stay with me. If you find yourself alone, riding in green fields with the sun on your face, do not be troubled; for you are in Elysium, and you're already dead! Brothers, what we do in life, echoes in eternity.
-Maximus, Gladiator
Some times it's nice to see people behaving peculiar to their characters and some times it's funnier to watch myself do that. When I see people making mistakes I keep quiet wondering how many times I must have done that and nobody questioned me. The concept of "if... then... else" is amazing. It shows simple ideas implemented as plans, worked on severely, repeatedly, worked with again, and again, unless they become trite and distinctively understandable when simple low level observation is made. It's difficult for me to make that observation on myself. I am more worried about how I am to the person I see in the mirror and toward those I care about.

I hardly took any rest since the time I woke up in the morning. And when I took some time for myself in the evening, I had my parents after me. I had to go out in the afternoon with a friend to give him company for some official work of his. Then it was necessary for us to fill our bellies. We went to a place that serves shawarma which my cousins tell me is a lot like what they ate in Saudi Arabia. The moment I reached home I had to arrange all the documents into sets and leave for my mother's office. We had an appointment with a charted accountant.

The bag I carried to mamma's office was too heavy - it had original papers from banks, income tax department and municipal department. I had to hold that bag tightly keeping an eye on every single move it made without my interference. Some minutes before I was leaving my house I to search for my glasses. I tried to recollect every place I went after I reached home. I searched in the place where I keep my watches, I looked inside the wardrobes, shelves, drawers, refrigerator, into the mirror, in the bathroom, freezer, on the beds, sofas, pockets of my clothes and every place I could imagine myself keeping them. I kept my brother busy too until I found them on the silvery metal of the stove in the kitchen.

Every person who makes a mistake has something to teach without his own will. Every person who makes a fool of himself is the one who teaches us how to keep our dumbness within ourselves. And those who can't make decisions for themselves by using their own value judgements teach us about the freedom and pride we can achieve when we learn to choose the path not having to emulate the masses. Even a flirt and also the one with whom he flirts, both, have something with them to teach us. They teach us what we need to stay away from. I wonder if I am missing something I may teach myself!

I am prejudiced and biased most of the time. I only try to do what I think is right. There are many people out their shouting their thoughts which too are overly biased and speculative. There are people out there always telling us that the sky is falling down. There is negativity pulling us backwards and stopping us from taking any bold steps. There are people who are also always criticizing the rulings of their own religion. Nobody is ready to take the responsibility of an advice they give. They don't take their advice themselves. All these people have something very important to teach - that we should never become like what they are. Being prejudiced and biased is still fine. What matters is what we do.

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

I Wish I Could Write More and Better

Naw, happens all the time, somebody else's blood splatters on me. Hey, wait a minute... you're right! You made me bleed my own blood.
- Nelson, The Simpsons, Season 1, Episode 5
It's hard to decide at times what the right thing is. Especially when it doesn't give any peace and I don't want to lose any friend, especially after deciding that I have to stay at a distance from one it becomes more difficult. Some times I feel I am overflowing with love for some people but because I don't know what exactly to do with it I just have to stay like always. It's just the way it is. It's just the way I am. I sincerely hope that everybody remains happy and nice always.

Yesterday I made a big trip to the bank with my mother in the morning. We opened a joint account which was my second, filled in many many forms, met many people there who wished me good luck and said things about UTD and Dallas. My aunt works there and my mother being her elder sister found a lot of respect almost instantly. From there I had to walk some good distance under that humid sun and get myself sweating. I walked upto my mother's office with her to be in her company for at least for that much time.

Later I went to my maternal aunt's place where I was feeling very sleepy. I had slept early morning after 4 am and it was getting difficult keeping my eyes open there. I took a nap and in the evening with other two cousins went out. My parents called me and asked me to reach home before 9 pm. I decided to stay out till 10 pm at least but still reached in time. I was told that I had to sign some papers when I reach home. And when I was here, it took me less than two minutes to finish it. I asked my father if it was necessary for me to get home early. He hardly spoke anything on that. I wanted to go to a cousin's place even today but stayed home all day and slept. Then had a chat with a friend in the evening and time has been passing smoothly since then.

Friday, May 16, 2008

Every Story Is A Love Story

My momma always said, "Life was like a box of chocolates. You never know what you're gonna get."
- Forrest Gump, Forrest Gump
Mangoes have replaced bananas these days in my breakfasts. I am having coffee no more. It's milk with Bournvita and three small spoons of sugar in it. When summer ends I will get back to coffee. I don't eat fried egg daily anymore. It only happens when mamma prepares it for me before she leaves for her office in the mornings. Today she had it ready for me even before I left bed. I closed the door a good 30 minutes after she left. I was on the divan in the living room as she said good bye and I felt asleep. When I eyes opened again I ran and shut the door closed. All doors are supposed to be kept closed unless somebody has to get in or somebody is going out. They can be kept open to let air in or some times just to see what's going on on the other side of it.

I slept again after an hour. Then my brother arrived and I slept again. I went to take a bath and I was already getting late for the prayers. I was hungry then and while walking back home after the prayers I began to think what meal awaits me in the fridge which would fill my empty belly. I knew there was bhaaji daal with ambada in it. Apart from spinach I recognize none of those leafy vegetables but I love their taste when cooked this way. While walking I imagined how it would taste if I could fry an egg and have it with that daal and rice. I had water in my mouth. The moment I reached home I fried an egg.

The egg was still on the pan with noisy bubbles. I don't like eggs much but some combinations excite my taste buds. I also had to warm the daal and rice before I could satisfy my watering mouth and a hungry stomach. I opened the fridge's door and found the daal's dish right in the front. I looked for rice. In all the transparent glass shelves. I looked in the freezer. I looked on the dining table. It wasn't there. There was no cooked rice home. I immediately recollected mamma asking me yesterday if she should cook some for me for the next day and I had asked her not to thinking what was left in the bowl after dinner would be enough for me for the next day. Now, I didn't know that mamma was going to give that to our servant maid in the morning.

I needed food badly. The egg was ready. My mouth was watering. I asked my brother if he could cook some rice. He offered to get it from a nearby hotel. I didn't find that idea good given that I don't like the thick and sticky rice they cook in such hotels. I could have as well got something like a roll or anything from anywhere but I had craved for daal and rice with egg and I needed it. I called my grandmother and asked her if she had extra rice cooked for lunch which I could eat if I got to her house in sometime with the daal and the fried egg I had. She said there was plenty.

An hour later I was at her house. The moment I reached there I gave her the can which had that had to be warmed. Ten minutes later she served me my food. She even gave me fried potato chips which were prepared at home and another curry made with sojni ki phalli. It had meat in it. I ate enjoying each gulp and I felt I was eating food after ages. My grandmother was glad to see me at her house. I couldn't thank Allah enough for all that He gave me. Sometime later grandmother served me tea which again is a unique preparation she does. She makes it out of pure thick milk without adding water and making it boil for a lot of time. I took a short nap after that.

Yesterday mamma told us that she finally received the money from her office which she was supposed to be given to her several weeks back. It was a part of some arrears she was supposed to get and the management had withheld it for some reason. Even now, she said, they have given her Rs. 48,000 less and it has been kept as FD. She told me that in the last financial she had to pay more than Rs. 100,000 as income tax. Her tone told me not only how much amount the government takes away but also that she had accepted this fact and now lives with it without complaining. Later she showed me her Form 16 which is the legal proof of the tax she pays. I thought, we pay taxes when we are born, we pay taxes when we eat, we pay taxes when we earn, we pay taxes when we spend and we pay taxes when we die.

I spoke a lot while we were having dinner today. Yesterday I had suddenly started sweating and was feeling weak. Today too I began to feel myself weak again. I told my parents as they were still with their dinners. Mamma told me that I was talking a lot and so it makes me feel like that. I just said one thing which stopped her and my father complain that I was talking a lot. I said "this is the only time I get to talk to you all". Later when mamma and my brother went to sleep and father was still watching TV I sat beside him telling him about the times I had dreams showing me the end of our world. I told him that many times in my dreams I have seen this world ending, things coming to the final halt, that I saw moments in my dreams where I was waiting for Allah on the day of judgement to come and see if I had to go to heaven or hell. I told him a few more things before I came back to my computer in the living room.

I came to know from a friend that we have to pay another $100 to the US government before going to the embassy for the visa. That gave me a lot of discomfort. I was never told about it and I had never tired to find out if there were more bills to pay. I had missed that point in the check lists too. Mamma would give that money but it hurt me a lot because I had never planned for it. It hurts a lot when things happen unplanned. It disappoints a lot when things happen and we had not planned for him. There is always, or almost always, a plan for me. This time I had missed a point and it made me sad.

$100 might not be so big. But after looking at how much mamma is trying to have perfect documents prepared for me for visa I somehow felt I am being very unfair toward her. I know she won't tell much when I tell her about this extra bill. It will just be another small addition to what she is paying for me. Increasing cost of Dollar has been another disheartening thing. It makes a difference of another lakh Rupees. I know there are returns, I know it's all for good and everybody is happy with it, but these $100 didn't make feel good. Money, alhamdulillah, won't be a problem but I will wait for a day when I can tell my parents that we will never have to worry about money again. That day I know they will tell me that there was enough already given to us by Allah and it was not anything like a problem. And I will tell them that they both won't have to work for money again.

I had gone to college on Thursday all alone. I couldn't get what I wanted but did figure out how to get it. From there I went to my cousins' place. I had a good time with them though we did nothing like going out or anything specific. One of them dropped me home in the evening. We were supposed to meet again today but he got along with his friends to some farmhouse and we decided to meet later. Facebook is still good. Some times I wish I had a faster network my computer is connected to. Some times I wonder why people read and see about people in love or love stories or movies, enjoy them, show empathy and sacred concern, but never want to be a part of anything like what they read or see.

We always have options. Even in the worst of times; even when somebody is dead. It's not easy and nice to think about options in grave situations like death but when time passes by we realize that life itself had made the choice and has brought smiles back on our lips. I wouldn't complain if I have to go to Infosys instead of UTD. But I would be a little sad that I could have received a few more things than UTD if I could get F1 visa than starting with a job in India. There are always options. In every single phase and leap of our lives. As long as we are alive we have options we must use. We won't have any options when we are dead.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

"We Will Never Be Here Again"

All normal people love meat. If I went to a barbeque and there was no meat, I would say, "Yo Goober! Where's the meat?" I'm trying to impress people here, Lisa. You don't win friends with salad.
-The Simpsons by Matt Groening, spoken by the character Homer Simpson

I received admission confirmations from all the five universities I had applied to. I have received I-20s from two of them till now and third is expected soon. I might not be getting I-20s from the other two university because I am not pursuing the formalities they ask me to complete. I have booked my visa interview slot at the US embassy for University of Texas at Dallas. It is the best of all five universities I had applied to and have received an I-20 from. The average GRE score of international graduate students studying here is well above 1300 and I will find a lot of competition there. They already had a strict cut-off of 1200 which, alhamdulillah, I had cleared with 10 points. Allah, as always, will decide if I should get the visa and go to Richardson or if I should catch up with Infosys in July.

It's always nice to know what I am going to do when sun comes up again. It gives good sleep with a smile on my lips. Though there were small things to be done some day or the other, I hardly found that kind of sleep. I am finishing it taking around 9 hours of rest in every 24 hours. Just that I don't sleep for more than 5 hours at a stretch. It's all fine alhamdulillah. I already have some of the visa documentation papers ready which was completed by my mother. In the coming days I have to pay visits to a bank and a charted accountant who will help me with having necessary proofs of sufficient funds belonging to my parents and evaluate property.

After sleep, it is Facebook that takes the most of my time. I don't do much there - just browse around. Solitaire too seems interesting before something else catches my attention. Then it is music till I get bored again. I am not able to read much - I simply don't get the right energy to move my eyes over printed lines. There is so much to be read and I will regret if I don't finish before I don't find time for it. Somehow, tomorrows come and go and I sit silently not understanding what to think. This at least is better than thinking what was left incomplete. Something seems to be left incomplete but I am not able to conceive it.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Me As Well

"Well," said Pooh, "what I like best," and then he had to stop and think. Because although Eating Honey was a very good thing to do, there was a moment just before you began to eat it which was better than when you were, but he didn't know what it was called.
- A.A. Milne
Though I have so many objects right in front of my eyes I see none of them but only what I have running in my mind. I don't see any faces or hear several voices as we see on TV, things are sharply discrete and they point at only one motif - true happiness. It's everywhere yet there are very few takers. I don't know where to start from. And I have no idea what I can write. Things overflow undocumented and my craving to have that touch never recedes. Not everybody is the same. It is not the same thing that gives happiness to everybody. Love for everybody is not the same.

I desire to write long essays directed to only one person with "you" in the paragraphs, but I do not know who that person is. I do not know why that "you" concerns me - a little less than hell of course. "You" is not a personification or perchance not even a human being. It is a craving. Or maybe companionship or perhaps an indignation or just an emotion not everybody acknowledges. Time is not the key. There are no locks. Those who call these patches as abstracts do not see the connection. They are not blind. They have chosen not to agree with the truth. They have decided to call themselves mature. They see authority as truth; not the truth as authority.

I asked myself a question whether I am the kind of person I would like to be a friend of. Apparently all I could see was I was biased and prejudiced. And more apparently I felt lonely. I would have rather called that loneliness as confusion because some times that is how generally it is perceived to be. We see what we intend to see when we are biased. We speak to create some worth for ourselves. I hear and I think. Will I prefer to be a friend to a person who is exactly like me? I tend to pull out solutions from the several things I hold in my mind. It doesn't mean I am confused.