Wednesday, 2 July 2025

When Time Is Against You

 When Time Is Against You


When time turns against you, everything seems to go wrong. Amaya was going through one such phase—haunted by unanswered questions.

Why did her cousin brother do that to her?
Why did he threaten her?
Why didn’t she raise her voice against her cousin?

These thoughts swirled in her mind, unanswered and heavy. The incident had left a deep mark on her behavior and her studies. Teachers began complaining about her falling performance, but no matter how hard she tried, she couldn’t improve. Something inside her was broken.

One morning, Amaya was cycling to school, which was about 2 to 3 kilometers from her home. The road was busy, her mind even busier. She missed checking the road before turning, and suddenly, something unexpected happened—a bike crashed into her. The bicycle handle hit her leg badly, sending a sharp wave of pain through her.

But Amaya stood up, holding back tears. She picked up her bent bicycle and limped to a roadside cycle repair shop. With a quiet request, she asked the repairman to fix it. Then she walked the rest of the way to school on foot.

Once there, she cleaned her wounds, wiped the blood from her hands, and went back to class—as if nothing had happened.

When the final bell rang, students poured out of the building, laughing and chatting. Amaya collected her damaged bicycle and went home quietly. But again—she didn’t say a word to her mother.

But why?

Why Do Children Stay Silent?

I believe there are many children like Amaya—carrying heavy, silent stories within them. They hide bruises, both on the body and on the heart. But why do they stay quiet?

Who taught them to zip up their feelings?
Is it fear? Shame? Guilt?
Or is it the environment around them that makes them believe they won’t be heard—or worse, won’t be believed?

Maybe they’ve observed too many moments of silence in place of support. Maybe they’ve seen that sharing only brings more pain, blame, or denial. So, they learn to keep their mouths shut and their hearts full—of hurt.

This is not just Amaya’s story. It’s the story of many unseen voices. And it’s time we start listening—not just to what children say, but to what they don’t say.

2 comments:

  1. wow! this takes me back. I was that child. For me I think what kept me silent was that I was embarrassed and felt invisible.

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  2. Wow! I felt this! As a child I was taught to prioritize the emotional needs of the adults around me. I was expected to ignore the elephant in the room. Fear, shame, and guilt trained me to zip up my feelings for many years, leading to people-pleasing behavior.

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