The Alchemy of my mornings.
At 36, life did not send a formal appraisal note. Instead, it unfolded slowly beneath the weight of routine and responsibilities, with reshuffled priorities and a questioned sense of purpose, eventually leaving me standing at an unsettling crossroads. The kind HR professionals would recognize as more than just a midlife phase. It felt like one of those appraisal cycles where everything on paper looks perfectly stable. Role unchanged, designation untouched, but deep inside, the “employee of the year” energy had silently resigned without even serving notice.
That was the moment I began to walk,
not as a symbol of change, but simply as movement, one step at a time, in the
real world.
One hour every morning through the
narrow, winding streets of Muttrah, a place where time seems to pause just long
enough for you to notice what you usually ignore.
At 6:30 a.m., the city is not
asleep. It has already lived a full chapter.
The first people I encounter are the
civic workers. Brooms in hand, backs slightly bent, eyes lowered to shield
themselves from the already harsh morning sun. They have already started their
day before most alarms have even rung. No applause follows them. No “good
morning.” Not even the courtesy of an eye contact, sometimes. Yet, like
invisible custodians of the dawn, they continue their work with a silent
dignity that asks for nothing (but deserves everything).
And there I am. Walking past them in
cushioned shoes, wireless earbuds humming my favorite playlist, sipping on the
luxury of my “me time.”
Meanwhile, these men (it has been
always only MEN so far ) have probably completed half a lifetime before my
first cup of coffee.
It is hard not to notice the
contrast.
A few steps ahead, I see groups of
migrant workers standing along the pavements in faded uniforms, waiting quietly
for buses that will carry them to another demanding day. There is a stillness in
the way they stand, as if life has trained them to occupy as little space as
possible. Soon, buses will arrive to take them to construction sites,
mountains, roads, to places where the sun is unforgiving and their work even
more so.
They don’t complain. Yet, if you
pause long enough to truly look at them, every face carries a story.
A sister’s wedding waiting to be
funded.
A younger brother’s education depending on remittances.
An ailing mother whose medicines cannot wait.
An absent or irresponsible father whose silence has become a burden.
A wife back home, holding together a fragile world with hope and prayer.
Children who measure love through video calls and missed birthdays.
No one asks them how their day will
be.
No one waits to hear how their yesterday went.
They simply board their buses, not
just to work, but to endure, to provide, to survive.
And then a few meters on, almost
poetically, the scene shifts.
From a tiny alley, so narrow you
would never imagine life could fit inside it, emerges a mother holding her
child’s hand. These are streets where homes appear as if they have grown out of
necessity rather than design. Modest, worn, but undeniably alive.
I see a few mothers step out of
their homes (it has been ONLY the Mother’s so far). She adjusts the child’s uniform,
carries the school bag. Sometimes she even walks faster than her own fatigue
would allow, because school buses don’t wait, and neither does life.
A few yards further, I pass an
elderly security guard outside a warehouse. His eyes fight sleep, not out of choice
but out of duty. He may not have slept all night. Yet there he is, guarding
someone else’s property while his own body begs for rest.
It is in these moments that my own
worries, those “ten thousand things” that seemed so overwhelming when I woke up
begin to shrink.
Not disappear, of course. Life is
not that generous .
But they shrink.
Perspective has a strange way of
doing that. It quietly resizes problems without needing a motivational podcast,
a LinkedIn quote from a CEO who wakes up at 4 a.m., or a ₹4,999 “Transform Your
Life” webinar.
Back home in India, I grew up with
certain assumptions about struggle. But living in Muscat, in a foreign land,
you begin to see a different texture of resilience. You realize that hardship
does not always shout. Sometimes, it quietly shows up at 6:30 a.m., picks up a
broom, boards a bus, or walks a child to school.
Friends have warned me about these
walks.
“Those areas are isolated.”
“Don’t go alone so early.”
“Be careful.”
I understand their concern. But over
time, I have come to believe something deeply human.
The faces I encounter every morning
are not faces of danger. They are faces of purpose. Faces moved by something
far stronger than fear. It is responsibility, love, sacrifice, and above all,
survival.
And honestly, I feel much safer
among them than I do in spaces where appearances are deceptive. Where polished
masks often conceal hollow intentions.
There is a quote I often think about during these
walks:
“Sometimes the nicest people you meet smoke and drink, and sometimes the
most evil people go to church/mosque/temple on Sundays.”
And perhaps that is why Martin Luther King Jr.’s timeless words feel
even more relevant to me now:
“I have a dream that my
four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be
judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.”
Life has a funny way of challenging
our assumptions. The more I walk through these streets, the more I understand to
be less judgemental.
Kindness does not wear a particular
uniform.
Integrity does not arrive with
social status or polished appearance.
And goodness often walks quietly
among ordinary people, unnoticed by the world rushing past them.
These morning walks have become more
than just a fitness routine. They have turned into a classroom without walls. Every
passerby is a teacher.
It reminds me deeply of my favourite
book, The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho. There is a beautiful idea in that book that
nothing in life is random. Every person you meet, every path you cross, every
detour you take, it all carries a lesson. But only if YOU are willing to see
it.
In my case, Muttrah has become my
desert, and these walks have become my journey. I may not be chasing a hidden
treasure, but I am discovering something equally valuable: perspective.
And above that it is “Gratitude”.
There is a strange humility that
creeps in when you realize how much you have been given without asking.
A body that can walk; A mind that
can reflect.
Parents who shaped you; A family
that supports you.
Children who give your life meaning.
“Gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues, but the
parent of all others”- Marcus Tullius Cicero.
So now, every morning, as I step
into those narrow streets, I carry less judgment and more awareness.
Less complaint and more curiosity.
Less entitlement and more gratitude.
And occasionally, a smile. Because
maybe someone has not received one yet today.
You just have to notice.

Beautiful and very deep observation..
ReplyDelete"Sometimes it’s in those solitary walks that the quiet resilience of others teaches us how to see life differently."
Keep it up, saranya..God bless you
Thank you Vidhya for your kind wishes <3
DeleteSuperb narration and introspection. Keep writing not because one day you would become a great writer one day but because your writing has the power to shower humane values. Well done
ReplyDeleteThank you so much Sir
Delete