FYI
LIVING INDEPENDENTLY IN A FARAWAY LAND
Posted on July 26, 2019 by Rahul Bajaj

I have often made references on this blog to how living alone for the first 
time has been a key reason why the last year has been so transformative for me. 
I can see why that might seem odd to some. Why should a 25-year-old man living 
away from his family be noteworthy? Isn’t that just how things are supposed to 
be, they might wonder. However, when I step back to reflect on how my life has 
thus far unfolded from the standpoint of independent living, it becomes 
apparent why this has been such a significant development. Until I moved to 
Delhi to take up my first job, my life in my home town was very circumscribed.
I’d have always access to a driver to get to places. Things like doing the 
laundry independently, cooking my own food or washing my utensils had never 
even crossed my mind. I always took what was at once both a privilege and a 
burden and a blessing and a ‘golden cage’ for granted.
In a country like India, in which the status quo essentially results in the 
disabled being relegated to the fringes of society, I have always recognized my 
good fortune in having access to the resources critical for me to make good the 
major deficit of having a severe impairment. However, the same resources which 
freed me from the shackles imposed by my disability sometimes handicapped me in 
other ways.
When I was in school, I’d always be accompanied by a sighted helper who took me 
everywhere, took my notes for me, dropped me home after school and so on. Some 
of my classmates would sometimes speak with her rather than me when they wanted 
to find out how many marks I had scored in an exam, for instance.
When I was around 17 and in junior college, I felt socially isolated, having no 
group of friends from school or junior college with whom I met on a regular 
basis. I posted about this problem on a mailing list for blind people, Access 
India. I got uniformly lambasted, and in retrospect rightly, for always going 
everywhere in the company of a sighted helper even at that age. It was then 
that I first recognized the importance of breaking free of my chains which I 
had until then perceived as a privilege.
After examining from close quarters the superficial relationship that many 
children share with their parents, I have come to acquire a newfound 
appreciation for my family’s concern in my well being which, though sometimes 
misplaced and unfounded, is always rooted in a sense of being deeply invested 
in my welfare. I still remember the heated arguments that I would have with my 
family every time I would voice a desire to go for a conference to a different 
city or pursue an internship.
I found myself locked in a vicious cycle. Because of the patterns of dependence 
that I had gotten habituated to, I always had to be accompanied by a family 
member if I wanted to travel to a new city. This naturally meant that the cost 
to be incurred and resources and energy to be invested in the project, got 
doubled. When this was the investment that had to be made to so much as travel 
to a nearby city for a conference, naturally, few things seemed so important as 
to justify this investment.
One of my role models whose journey never ceases to inspire me is American 
Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor.  I suppose the key reason for this is 
the grace and equanimity with which she has dealt with her impairment, 
childhood diabetes and never allowed her impairment of childhood diabetes to 
limit the scope of her aspirations. In her book, My Beloved World, she movingly 
talks about the difficulty she faced in convincing her family about the 
importance of pursuing ambitions with which her family was unfamiliar  and then 
achieving them. While her grandmother eventually allowed her to go study at 
Princeton, she recalls, the former never fully grasped the significance of this 
opportunity in Sotomayor’s life, viewing it as just one of the many things her 
granddaughter wanted to do.
Around 2 years ago, when someone with whom I was close friends at the time was 
getting married and I expressed the wish to travel independently for the 
marriage, I got a series of worried messages from my father. “I wake up at 5 AM 
every morning,” he wrote in one anxious text, “overcome with anxiety  about how 
you will manage to travel and live alone in a new city.”
As is always my preferred approach, I tried to reason with him, to point out 
the concrete solutions to every problem I might face during the journey. My 
parents’ resistance, however, though doubtless based on unconditional love and 
concern, was, beyond a point, irrational. It was rooted in the simple thought: 
for someone who is blind, even one mistake might be one too many, forever 
negatively colouring the rest of your life. And irrational resistance can 
rarely be overcome through rational argument.
However, we argued, cried, fought and argued some more. And slowly but surely, 
the wheels began turning. I did travel for that wedding alone. I did go alone 
to give talks and the like.
Still, living alone in a new country seemed like a bridge too far. To be sure, 
my concern with a parent living with me in Oxford was not the visceral reaction 
you might expect from some people my age, I would like to think. (When I told 
one American acquaintance that we were contemplating the possibility of my 
mother living with me, she immediately replied “Yikes, that would have been so 
suffocating!”
No, I fully realized that this arrangement would, as a practical matter, make 
things easier. I would not have to worry about cooking my food, doing the 
laundry, keeping everything in an orderly fashion and so on. However, what 
outstripped all of these perceived advantages was a recognition of the fact 
that sometimes, doing what is hard and uncomfortable and seemingly 
insurmountable is the right thing to do.
And so, after much back and forth, it was decided that my mother would llive 
with me for six weeks and then I would be on my own. Now, when I reflect on the 
last year, I think it would be fair to say that I have certainly made progress. 
I can do all the things I was worried about on my own, though perhaps not as 
skillfully as I might like yet.
However, I still receive significant support from the Rhodes Trust for my 
nonacademic needs. In the coming year, my aim will be to make this human 
support unnecessary to the extent I can. Because I don’t see this period as 
just being about growing academically, attending interesting talks, writing 
challenging essays and meeting celebrities. It is also a period of pushing 
personal boundaries and finding new paths for self growth.
Recently, when I got selected to pursue a summer fellowship in London, our same 
old conversation recommenced in my house. Making these arrangements is just a 
matter of a few years, my father said. Thereafter, you will get married and 
always have the support you need.
 Never having dated someone in my life, in part because of the circumscribed 
life I have lived owing to the self-imposed limitations I have often placed on 
myself,  I vehemently resisted this idea. However, I did so in terms that would 
turn the very same argument on its head. Which girl, I asked him, would like to 
marry a partner who does not even possess the wherewithal to live alone in a 
city like London.
While I do not think finding a partner should be what motivates a person to 
strive for greater independence, this response did achieve its desired goal of 
making him recognize the sheer absurdity of that argument which is all I was 
hoping to achieve. What was until then an argument for dependence then became 
an argument for greater independence. “You have truly become a lawyer,” he 
sighed.


-----Original Message-----
From: AccessIndia <[email protected]> On Behalf Of 
Asudani, Rajesh
Sent: Wednesday, July 31, 2019 2:21 PM
To: AccessIndia: a list for discussing accessibility and issues concerning the 
disabled. <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [AI] Living independently in a faraway land

Please somebody post the contents of the piece as in office I am unable to open 
the said site and read.


सादर / With thanks & Regards
राजेश आसुदानी Rajesh Asudani
सहायक महाप्रबन्धक AGM
बाजार आसूचना ईकाई MIU
भारतीय रिजर्व बैंक Reserve Bank of India नागपुर Nagpur

0712 2806846

President
VIBEWA
Co-Moderator
VIB-India
President
DARE-Disability Advocacy, Research and Education A-pilll = Action coupled with 
Positivity, Interest, Love, Logic and laughter

-----Original Message-----
From: AccessIndia [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Shruti Pushkarna
Sent: 30 July 2019 14:48
To: AccessIndia: a list for discussing accessibility and issues concerning the 
disabled.; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AI] Living independently in a faraway land

Nice read, Rahul!

Shruti

On Tue, 30 Jul 2019 at 13:49, Rahul Bajaj <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Not my finest piece of writing, but might nonetheless be of some
> interest:
> https://isitjustmeorgroup.wordpress.noclick_com/2019/07/26/living-inde
> pendently-in-a-faraway-land/
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
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> ndia.org.in
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