It’s always a breathlessly
exciting topic to talk about. Isn’t it? For lack of a better word, the
bachelorhood is fucking great. Bet you! Because I know it; after all, I’m a
bachelor.
*Wink*
So to speak…I live in a
rented apartment in Motithang. And guess what? Motithang is the talk of the
town (most beautiful women and elites of Thimphu live here). But I tell you
that the world here is bizarrely crazy: the sounds of kids and cars during day
time; and volley of noises of barking dogs at night. Ha-ha!
And this bachelor doesn’t
own car. Yes, not even a motorbike. Honestly. Because the idea of buying a car
had slipped through my grasp as I could never learn to trim my spending and the
saving always remained negative. For me, everyday was the Pedestrian Day.
This is one reason why many
girls denied going out with me, yes, for date. LOL! They say, “Druk 11, please
no, no!” or “i11, eh, no chance la.” Well,
this is embarrassing and also hysterically funny. And I only scratched my head and muttered,
“Huh, jedha”.
The truth is, while I reveled
in bachelorhood, I also sought companionship. What I’m referring
to is that I did date girls. Occasionally, though. Tsk. Tsk. Not kidding.
Ahem…I
got too little sleep and rest. Allow me to become honest with you, which I
prefer. Most nights were spent with rowdy friends bar-hopping, sipping a
cocktail on a breezy late night and making intellectual
noises (throwing cool comments on politics and business). After that, dance
partying, head-banging.
There
was no breakfast, and no proper lunch and dinner. I was in hurry and running
late, all time: to office, meetings, social gatherings, on dates, everywhere.
Sometimes, things got a wee bit out of hand. I had notoriously erred and also survived
several desperate scrambles. How insane!
I dare say a bachelor’s
life is very intense, full of milestones. It’s undeniably the most exciting
part of my life though. That said, it added further gloss to my life’s experience. It
helped me become contemplative, more complete. Now I’ve a greater talent for
joy and a larger embrace of life.
Let’s admit that there is a
reason why I’m still a bachelor. You would wonder what the hell was wrong with
me. My point is that it’s important to give myself enough time to discover who I’m
and where I want to go before I can bring somebody along for the ride.
And pleasing others or just
to follow what our society wants us to be must take a back seat. After all, in
the end, what matters most is our own happiness. And we’re always starved for
that laughter that bubbles up inside you and cannot be faked.
Frankly speaking,
bachelorhood has worked to perfection for me. At least, for now.
But I’m realizing something,
and trying to accept it, too. I know that with time, things will change and it’s
never going to be same forever-not precisely, not ever. There comes a time when
bachelorhood won’t anymore serve its purpose to me and another phase of life, marriage,
would perfectly suit me.