The Boy Who Shouts

Every night, a boy shouts in our neighbourhood.

He must be nine or ten years old.

I have only seen him twice, always on difficult days.

I know he lives with a mental disorder. Beyond that, I know almost nothing about him.

The rest is just noise.

People close their windows.

Some complain.

Others pretend they don’t hear him.

I don’t.

Perhaps because I have spent more than a decade living with a person with depression, I recognise something in his voice.

Not the disorder.

The loneliness.

I’m sorry, dear readers.

Today is not a day for laughter.

Today, I would rather ask you to stay with me for a moment.

Why him?

Why me?

Why does the brain sometimes become the most difficult place to live?

I don’t expect you to understand that boy.

Honestly, I don’t think you can.

Neither can I.

But perhaps we can do something simpler.

We can stop judging him.

Sometimes silence is kinder than explanation.

Our neighbourhood treats him like a problem that should remain indoors.

His parents rarely let him outside.

Perhaps they are protecting him.

Perhaps they are protecting the rest of us.

I don’t know.

What I do know is that every night his voice escapes before he does.

When he shouts, I don’t hear anger.

I hear an announcement.

“Hey, world.”

“I am here too.”

“I belong here too.”

Sometimes I wonder who his voice is really calling.

The neighbours?

The government?

Politicians?

Or all of us?

Perhaps he is asking a very ordinary question.

“If this world belongs to everyone…”

“…where is my small place in it?”

Source: Medium

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