Life and Inspiration

Weird Or Just Different?

My sweet blogger friend, Kathy Combs, of The Giggling Trucker’s Wife chose this prompt for BlogFEST 2012 today: Your Favourite Halloween Memory.
How do I respond to this when Halloween is something totally alien to India?  It’s only in recent years, that Halloween has taken off in some metro cities, but to most of us it is still something weird that the Americans do! 😉

So, I don’t have a favourite Halloween memory, but this did give me a chance to reflect on something else.

Little Red

It’s amazing how somethings might seem perfectly normal to people of one culture,  might be absolutely weird to people of another culture. As an Indian I might find it really strange that children and grownups in America and parts of Europe  go around in spooky costumes for Halloween.  But I find it perfectly normal for children and adults to go around throwing colour on each other for Holi!

Hol! Ha!

Weird or just different? Derek Sivers shares a similar idea in a short TED Talk in Mysore, India.

Wouldn’t the world be a better place if we realized that being different is not weird? Being different just makes life so much more interesting!


 

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Corinne Rodrigues, a writer, coach, and blogger from Secunderabad, India, shares insights on life, creativity, and wellness through her blogs Everyday Gyaan and The Frangipani Creative.

32 Comments on “Weird Or Just Different?

  1. Exactly. What we are used to we dont see it as wierd. ANd it is exactly the differences, even the DIFFICULTIES that prevents life fro getting boring.

      1. It does seem a matter of conditioned responses Corrine. I believe we should relearn to celebrate the differences! This was a good reminder

  2. There is a very thin line dividing the two and often it is in the beholder’s eyes. It is only when we try to imitate something alien that we fall flat on our faces. Let us be ourselves — weird or different 🙂

  3. I had come to know about Halloween through books in my childhood and later through my cousins. I find it perfectly beautiful to do such things. As even in India we have so many festivals in every state and each has its own beauty and grandeur. What is Durga Puja in east is Navratri in west where they dance and sing the entire night!

    At the end of it, its all about enjoying oneself as you celebrate the differences !

    🙂

    1. Yes, Halloween was something we read about until we got to see it in movies and on TV. We must learn to enjoy our festivals without feeling the need to ape others or find them weird. 🙂

  4. How boring life would be if we were all the same! I love learning about different cultures and their traditions. Wonderful video, too, Corinne – adds the right touch to what your wrote here.
    Great post as always! 🙂

    1. How boring, indeed, Martha. I love learning about different cultures too – and try to be as open as I can to understanding the significance of their customs and traditions. We have a whole range of customs that are peculiar to certain regions and ethnic groups in India itself. It’s always a learning process. Glad you liked the video too – I just happened to ‘find’ it yesterday!

    1. I’m not sure it’s so cool when you’re walking down the street all dressed for work, Kathy! 🙂 The colour does come off – eventually! I’m sure if you find a community of Indians (my kind!) around your area, they’ll let you play Holi with them. The festival is around March/April. 🙂

  5. I’ve never been to India or even studied it so I had no idea that Halloween was foreign to you Corinne. Now I learned something new. I can see why you would think we’re a little weird. But as the video pointed out, we’re all just different.

    I enjoyed hearing what he shared and how they do things differently in other countries. Now that was just fascinating to me.

    ~Adrienne

    1. I was kidding that I found the American celebration of Halloween weird, Adrienne. I’ve grown up reading more books from the US and the UK than I did Indian books, so I am pretty familiar with Halloween. We are all different, but we must learn to appreciate our differences and learn about other cultures with openness. Thank you for stopping by, Adrienne. And hopefully, someday, you’ll stop by in India!

  6. I agree about different not being weird. But, I also find it silly that kids in our community celebrate Halloween by dressing spooky and going around houses to get candy. They understand nothing about it and just try to copy something alien to look hip or because they saw it in movies or something. That is so difficult for me to understand :).

  7. Great point! I guess it is all so relative really, when people fear anything different they label it as weird without trying to understand it, the history of it or the culture in which it originated…but really, everything is normal to someone somewhere, right? To me, different isn’t weird…but it is very interesting!:)

    1. So right, Colleen. Our fear of the different makes us label things as weird. We don’t try to go beyond to understand the history of practices – our own included. Different is definitely interesting and enlightening!

  8. You are astute as always, Corrine. I think it’s all a matter of being open-minded and willing to learn about each others’ culture. I only recently heard of Holi and I think celebrating the beautiful colors of the word is rather glorious and looks like fun!

    1. Yes, the more open we are to other cultures, the more we will grow, I believe, Adrienne. Holi is fun if you don’t mind going to work the next day in the ‘pink of health’ 😉

  9. I like ‘different’ 😉 I really don’t like adapting that custom of wearing costumes for Halloween…especially on great and holy feasts like All Saints and All Souls 🙂

  10. Imagine a world where everything was the same – life would be so dull. Different is nice. And Holi is so much fun – I miss that.

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