Teenagers Are Often Libeled for Loving
By Trang Vu Hong via UN Online Volunteering
About Trang Vu Hong
I was studying Italian culture in Perugia, Italy when the junior
Eurovision - the most renowned pan - European song contest - took place. Vincenzo Cantiello, a
talented flamboyant Italian boy who performed his own love-filled song, “Tu
primo grande amore„ (You are my great first love), came out as the winner. Below is the English translation of what he sang daringly, passionately
and triumphantly:
It's all
changed now that you're there
You are
so important in my dreams...
It's so
special about being with you
Almost
don't believe it and I don't know why ...
You know,
I can't wait ...
I love
you, I have to say ...
I cannot
live without
your eyes
in my eyes
When your
heart beats strong
Pounding
along with my ...
You, the
first great love
I will
never let you go
You, the
smile of my stroking
You which
illuminate for me
The night
...
You are
my very first love
I will
never let you go,
Because
there is something that tells me
That
never again will be so ...
If I had
closed my eyes, I would not have imagined that the exceptionally expressive
performance and powerful voice came indeed from a teenage boy. The
bravura performance was warmly welcomed and admiringly applauded across the
continent. I talked to Italian peers and middle-aged women who had children of
the same age as the victorious singer. The overall complimentary reaction
to such a teenager suffused with fervent love in this country ran counter to
what I experienced more than 10 years ago at secondary school. I was
named and shamed just because I had a crush on a schoolmate.
I was a
class monitor and an exemplary student in my 7th grade. Proactive participation
in extra-curricular activities enabled me to meet numerous brainy and bouncy
boys in my school, among whom I had a soft heart for a smart and and
sympathetic 9th grader. After some conversations in group meetings,
we had incredible impressions of each other.
Be that as it may, we bore in mind
that our top-most priority was to earn stellar grades and thrive in various
competitions. Our feelings for each other were accommodated by no more
than lingering eye contacts, warm smiles, gentle words and longer strolls together
after school. We never even held each others hands as it would be viewed as “too
early” for teenagers. I was never distracted from school work, and neither was
he. We were both go-getters and high-fliers during our school years.
As he
often waited for me so that we could walk home together, gossips started
circulating among my classmates and someday it reached my form teacher, who then
immediately informed my parents, as if I were doing something inappropriate and
immoral. She lectured me that school years must be romance-free and that I was
not allowed to "love" at such a young age. "The more you love,
the less you will learn. You have to put your study before your
sentiments. It is more important to be achievers than become “adults” at this
age."
My mother,
upon knowing that, was beside herself with rage. Much to her disbelief and
dismay, her demure, docile and diligent daughter “disgracefully” doted on a
boy. I was then not allowed to see him, and he was told not to approach me in
private. She then discouraged me from partaking in after-school
activities, so that I could not come up with any excuse to talk to him. From
time to time, I spotted her following me on my way to school and back home,
though it was only a 10-minute walk.
I was not
the only girl to be caught being “in love” by my teacher. Whomever found visibly
into somebody would be criticized and their parents would be called to “teach” them
again at home. A classmate of mine wrote a love letter to a schoolmate one year
her senior. Unfortunately, the letter was seized by the teacher, who considered
it too sentimental for a 13-year-old girl and read it in front of all parents
in a parent-teacher meeting. The girl, chided for acting dangerously beyond her
age, was in tears for weeks out of shame and sorrow.
In
hindsight, like many other female classmates, I was humiliated and hurt even
though I did not do anything wrong at all. Acutely aware that both my teacher
and my mother meant no harm and that they had my interests in their heart, I
am not embittered about having been reproved and reproached, but after all, it is
still a scar in my heart. Due to my limerence, and not yet love, I was forced
to keep a great friend at arm’s length and have since become more reticent and
even afraid of falling in love.
While many Vietnamese people strongly commend
the fictional teen love of Romeo and Juliet, they condemn squarely the
real-life puppy love, a pure and natural sentiment. Even the coldest person in
the world with an invincible immune system and the most rational reason will
still be susceptible to the virus of love. Up to now, as an adult, I have not
figured out how we
can stop our heart from pounding and our mind from wandering when a romance touches
us? How could we shield ourselves against the most beautiful feeling of any
human being?
And if an
adult cannot, how can we teach a teenager to suppress something deep down in
his/ her heart?
About Trang Vu Hong
Trang Vu Hong graduated from Diplomatic
Academy of Vietnam in 2013 with a BA degree in International Relations and
Translation. Immensely interested in foreign languages, international affairs
and knowledge dissemination, Trang has been involved in many international cultural
projects in Vietnam as translator and interpreter.
After obtaining an advanced
diploma in Italian language and culture from University of Perugia in 2015, she
is currently doing her MA on Erasmus Mundus scholarship in European Studies in
France, Germany and Sweden while still participating actively in UN
volunteering social projects.
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