Two years ago, my mom left us. What follows here is not a story of how, why, and when because all of that is too personal to recount here. However, what I do want to share though is a lesson that I learned the hard way and one that I feel should be shared here since some of you
have been a part of that learning.

I was 25 when it happened and after leaving academics (something I loved) and moving to sports and television, I'd done fairly well for myself professionally, thanks to the support and guidance of some people who I'll remain forever indebted.
Strangely though, I never thought too highly of myself, largely because of an impostor syndrome and also because I was too ambitious and always chasing the big breakthrough in life. So, in front of that grand goal, nothing seemed big enough. I was always on the chase.
What that also meant was that I never thought of the small achievements of life worth sharing with my people around me, including my Mom. Unlike me, my Mom was a simple fellow who would get enthusiastic about little things.
The trophies from wins in quizzes and debates that I never cared about because I never thought of them as anything worth being proud of, she'd keep in the living room. She was proud of them. She got to know of most of those wins when they came with a prize that I would bring home
We often fought over this issue where my gripe used to be this - what was the point of keeping a trophy I won in class IXth in the living room. My mom didn't understand my argument and the next trophy I earned also found its way in the cupboard that she was proud of. I wasn't.
For me, that cupboard represented the expectations I had from myself at different points of time that I somewhere failed to fulfill in my eyes.
Unlike how it was in my growing up years, where I would tell her happily about my wins and losses even in intra-class events, I stopped sharing with her the news of these things because I didn't see a point of celebration there. I saw this development as maturity.
It’s not that I didn’t want to make her happy. As a kid, you always want your parents to be proud of you. It’s just that, apart from having grown slightly cynical in life, I was just waiting for the big news that I could make her happy with. The breakthrough that I was chasing.
In hindsight, I can say I got it terribly wrong. As we grow up, our definitions of success change, just as mine did. We put our achievements in small and big boxes. That’s not, however, is the case with people who really love us, especially our parents.
The news of me winning a school quiz or debate put the same smile on my Mom’s face that the news of me getting a good job did. I regret not understanding it and depriving her of many such moments of joy that she could have derived out of achievements that I thought were
not big enough. I waited for the big breakthrough that sadly hasn’t come yet, even two years after she’s gone.

The following years have been harder both personally and professionally. However, I have come to value the little things better now, a byproduct of grief and loss .
A lot of love comes my way from random strangers because of the Facebook page and the Podcast. I read all the comments and messages and try to share some of them with people who care for me. It's nowhere my big breakthrough and definitely not something I planned. What it is
though is genuinely heart warming reward for some hard work that I have enjoyed doing and I proudly call mine. Probably, earlier I wouldn’t have been proud of any of it and would have dismissed it all with a cynical one-liner. Now, I look at things slightly differently.
I would have loved to share some of the kind words with Mom if she was around. But, sadly, she is not.

To all those reading it, do share your happiness, big or small, with your parents and people who really care. Don’t think they wouldn’t understand it.
Even if they don’t, they'd find in it a reason that makes you happy and get happy. Give them that smile. The big breakthrough may or may not come. Don’t wait for it. What you think is a small happiness multiplies and grows bigger when you share it with people who really love you.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with RandomCricketPhotos&Videos

RandomCricketPhotos&Videos Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @RandomCricketP1

10 Feb
Love this photo of @scgmacgill and @BrettLee_58 . There's a story here as well. This picture is from MacGill's final Test in Antigua against West Indies. The leg-spinner didn't have the best match and gave away more than 100 runs in his 21 overs. But he takes credit for five Image
wickets according to Lee's autobiography. This is what happened. West Indies were 314/4 in their first innings in response to Australia's 479. The top-order had taken the attack to the Australian bowlers and MacGill being the leggie suffered. Dwayne Bravo hit him for a six that
landed on some sharp rocks surrounding a crowd-control moat and fence. After 90 overs, it was time for the new ball but the Australians didn't take it. Brett Lee came back in the 93rd over. His 16 overs earlier hadn't yielded a wicket. But things changed in no time when he began
Read 8 tweets
28 Aug 20
The amount of matches Lance Klusener won for South Africa from absolutely impossible situations in his prime is insane. If he was playing in the era of social media, people would've gone mad about his ability to finish matches. Sadly, he's now remembered for the one he couldn't.
35 off 17. And he won the match here as well.
27 from 14 with only 3 wickets in hand. Won again.
Read 5 tweets
19 Apr 20
#RandomCricketPhotosThatMakeMeHappy (NOT)

For most growing up in the late 90s and early 2000s, Sachin v Shoaib was cricket's battle royale of individual contest. But have you wondered why so little is talked about Shoaib's battles with another great of that era, Brian Lara?
The answer is because it lasted just five deliveries.

YES. JUST FIVE.

As opposed to hundreds of deliveries he bowled to Sachin, Akhtar bowled only five balls to Lara throughout his career which lasted close to 15 years and coincided with the last 10 years of Lara's career.
And this terrible incident happened on the fifth delivery.

And, of course, there's an interesting story to it as well.
Read 9 tweets
23 Mar 20
You triggered the wrong person @ICC

Not Iconic but here we go with a thread of #RandomCricketPhotosThatMakeMeHappy

Richard Hadlee giving a pat of appreciation to Mike Whitney for snatching a draw from the jaws of defeat for Australia by batting out Hadlee's final over (1987)
An exasperated Michael Holding kicking down the stumps after yet another contentious decision on the tour of New Zealand in 1979
Paul Adams celebrating Azhar's wicket in the Kanpur Test in his own unique style.
Read 25 tweets
15 Mar 20
What would you do with no sporting action for such a long time?

Well..
Read 49 tweets
12 Jan 20
#RandomCricketPhotosThatMakeMeHappy

That’s Matthew Hoggard, the English fast bowler who played 67 Tests.

What’s he doing there, you may ask? Winning England a Test match. Interestingly, though, it wasn’t a match where Hoggard played. In fact, he didn’t play the entire series.
The picture is from the last day of the Karachi Test of the 2000 English tour of Pakistan, the final match of a three-Test series where the first two matches resulted in a draw. And in Karachi, it all came down to the wire. In fact, to the last session of the Test match.
England had to chase down 176 in a minimum of 44 overs to win the series. If the bowling attack consisting of the fearsome pace battery and Saqlain Mushtaq wasn’t enough, Pakistan also had a plucky customer as their captain in Moin Khan.
Read 11 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!