When I said no to a trip..


I’ve always been the kind of person who says yes to travel.Yes to new places.Yes to old ones with new memories.Yes to a packed bag and an open road.

There’s something about discovering new cultures,  new dishes, and getting lost in unknown streets that excites me. I’m the one who’s ready before anyone else—shoes on, playlist queued, heart already halfway there.But at home, it was always a different story.I’d argue with my parents.“It’s been years since we had a proper vacation.”They’d respond with the same sentence every time: “Career first. You can travel later.”

Time flew, and we did not go to any new palce, I went on a few local outings with friends—but not fat as never got a permissioTypical middle-class problems, right?

But this year, something changed. I had finally made some progress in my career journey. People around me seemed a little more hopeful. For the first time in a long while, I felt like I was moving forward.

I was not doing anything from last 2 months as result of my exam was not declared back, So I was anxious regarding results and waiting for it..

One day a relative called to say that they were heading to Chamoli—where my parents currently lived for work and asked me to join them.I doubt I’ll be allowed, I said. Papa won’t say yes.”

But I talked to papa,To my surprise, he said yes.
“You should go,” he said. “Get a break from this monotonous life.”Wait—what?
Was this real?My brother and I exchanged glances. Papa, agreeing to a trip? Without a lecture?

We started planning right away. Just a 4–5 day trip, nothing major.
But in the middle of all the excitement, while talking about what to pack, something inside me paused.

I remembered.The last time I went to Chamoli, I had stood silently under the hills and whispered a promise to myself.I won’t come back here until I achieve something. Until I make my parents proud. Until life feels whole again.

And suddenly, the trip didn’t feel right.I told my family I didn’t want to go.

They were shocked“What? You’re saying no? To a trip?!”

I nodded. “I don’t know why, but I’m not in the mood to go anywhere right now. I just want to stay.”

Papa didn’t buy it. “You’re going. No more drama.”
He told me to pack my bags.So now I was stuck—between a trip and a promise.
Between what I wanted to do, and what I had once sworn I wouldn’t do.

I’ve always been someone who honors her promises—even the ones no one else remembers.

So I tried again.

I spoke to Papa the next morning. Tried explaining the same thing—again.

This time, my grandmother joined me.She helped him understand what I couldn’t say out loud.After a while, he gave in.“As you wish,” he said. “I just want you to be happy.”So they left. All of them—bags in hand, hearts full of road-trip anticipation—without me.

I stayed back.A little sad, a little relieved.
But proud.I had kept the promise. The one I made to myself.
And in doing so, I felt something shift inside me again—this time, not in fear, but in strength.

Someday, I’ll go back to Chamoli.When the timing is right.When I’ve earned that return.

Because keeping promises isn’t just about honoring words spoken to others—it’s about being loyal to the quiet decisions we make when no one’s watching.And in a world where it’s easier to break your own heart than disappoint someone else, staying true to yourself is a kind of bravery too.Even if the promise seems small.Even if no one else understands it.


 

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