
An Awakening Without a Name

As the Buddha stepped beyond the palace,
leaving silk, certainty, and shelter behind,
so did I
not into holiness,
but into the unknown.
I traveled alone.
No mask.
No borrowed identity.
No hunger for recognition.
And in that unguarded state,
the world revealed itself.
I saw how full people are of themselves
how power swells the chest,
how former glory resists gravity,
how knees are bent by life
yet pride refuses to bow.
Life does not bring us low to punish us.
It brings us there to teach
compassion, humility, respect.
But ego—ahankār
clings like armor mistaken for strength.
And so many choose the walls they build,
forgetting that pride always falls inward
before it collapses outward.
The universe is merciful.
It sends angels
in human form, in correction,
in truth spoken plainly.
Yet some refuse to loosen their grip,
mistaking dignity for stubbornness,
strength for domination,
freedom for self-worship.
I saw opportunists cloaked in gentleness,
hands quick, hearts absent
making haste without honor,
profit without loyalty,
motion without work.
They forget:
you may deceive some forever, others briefly,
but never all and never truth.
I wondered, quietly:
do they see the whirlpool forming beneath them?
How destruction does not roar, but whispers
pulling them inward,
away from their own soul.
I saw people recoil from responsibility, defensive when met with fact, weaponizing emotion to escape duty.
Where once duty meant care,
now it asks only, What’s in it for me?
They believe themselves indispensable. They do not hear the earth being dug beneath their feet.
They forget gratitude.
They forget joy.
They search endlessly
for something unnamed,
while insecurity builds a home
they cannot escape.
I saw children wandering
not lost, but unseen
finding comfort in each other
because no one else arrived.
I saw couples fractured by repetition, trying again and again, hoping love might succeed where self knowledge was never attempted.
They chase connection through others without first meeting themselves.
They seek validation
where only alignment belongs.
The answer, I learned, is disarmingly simple: return inward.
Everything else rearranges itself.
I saw people moving relentlessly,
running without direction,
busy without destination.
Life appeared unbearably complex until it wasn’t.
Perhaps the quiet thread revealed itself to me
only because I had been twisted enough to feel it.
I am not perfected.
I am still learning.
But I am awake.
I no longer feel like a stranger to the water I feel illuminated by it.
I learned calm. Composure. Resilience.
I learned boundaries
not as walls,
but as reverence.
I learned to say, gently but firmly:
I am not a doormat.
Respect is essential.
Communication is sacred.
The age of burning bushes has passed.
We are the fire now.
Let those who can hear, hear.
Let those who can see, see.
Those who choose blindness
may remain with their choice.
I am grateful I walked away.
Like the Buddha but in my own, unrepeatable way.
I walked ancient lands
where Rama and Ravana once stood opposed,
and learned that battles are eternal,
but enlightenment is personal.
My father once said:
Journey alone.
That is how unseen doors open.
I listened.
And I am glad I did.
Recent stories
Editor's Pick


My Flu Story

Turning Toward Light

The Beauty of Wishes

At My Parents’ Feet: The Promise I Became

A Gentle Way to Welcome New Year
More Stories...
Author's Pick

Raven Rhapsody

A Fall To Remember.

A Feline Legacy: From Kitten to Kindred Spirits

Becky’s Wild Days: Gooseberry Raids and Saintly Bites

The Animal Whisperer: A Heartwarming Tale of Compassion

My Childhood Dream…..An old Age Reality

My Slice of Heaven

Mustard-Seed Faith

Ribbiting Friendship: A Leap of Joy
Check our website www.tellmystory.in
Follow our socials for more inspiring stories —
YouTube: https://youtube.com/channel/
Hoote: https://hoote.page.link/
Instagram: www.instagram.com/tellmystory.
Twitter: www.twitter.com/tellmystory__
Facebook: www.facebook.com/tellmystory.

