My Own Home
(Short Story)
My Own Home
By: Saran Rai
Just like the house I built, I too have become old and frail. Now, a question has begun to arise—do I even have the right to live in that house anymore?
My successors have started to say, "This house belongs to them." And indeed, they have made significant contributions to keeping the house beautiful—repairing, maintaining, and cleaning it diligently. Even if I don’t live there, they will continue to reside in the house.
If the house collapses, they would suffer more loss than I would. They would become homeless. Therefore, they believe, “The house must remain.” But there’s a dispute: whose house is it? Mine, because I built it, or theirs, because they live in it?
Like all living beings, my time to reside in the house—or on this Earth—is limited. A house belongs to the one who resides in it. While they live there, they call it "their home," but in the end, the house doesn’t belong to anyone.
And now, even though I built it, I’ve stopped calling the house "my own."
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