âSaudadeâ: Coming of Age
One day I caught myself thinking: When is it acceptable to start using the phrase, âWhen I was youngâŠâ before you tell a story, when you stand at the transitional period of youth to adulthood. Youâre not the same youth you were years ago. But youâre not yet the adult you strive to be years from now.
The next day, someone said to me, âWhen you were littleâŠâ to refer to a version of me that I remember like it was yesterday. And I realized then how much life has passed me by.
The term, âthe good olâ daysâ is a nostalgic expression I often laugh at. We could be living in our âgood timesâ now, but wouldnât know until we reminisce on it years or decades from now. When I hear, âEnjoy your youthâ, I never truly understood the layered complexity of that statement, until I hit the brink of societyâs bridge.
Why donât we appreciate a moment until once itâs gone? Feeling the breeze of emptiness as it slips from our fingertips before we can truly capture the purity of it. A purity thatâs gone forever. Thatâs why living in the present, uncontrollably letting it unfold before our eyes, is crucial to our lifeâs purpose. It is important to process that the past in extinct, while the future does not even exist yet; Make the most of what you got now, before it becomes inexperience-able.
Sometimes, nostalgia is like a childhood friend coming back to town to say hello. But sometimes, itâs a wave of crazy mobs running towards you with their explosives, ready to retaliate before you can form a single sentence. Itâs like the waves crashing onto the shore, except it turns into a tsunami and floods the entire city. Appreciate lifeâs bad as you enjoy its good, because one day itâll be the butterfly in the wind thatâs too fast for you to catch.













