Thursday, November 24, 2011
on growth: upward, outward, inward
This year I thought I would try out growing up, so I've been taking things a lot more seriously- which is, in truth, actually a whole lot more fun than it sounds.
What do I mean? I mean that I scoff less at people who I think are being ignorant, or needy, or mean, or otherwise imperfect because I know that sometimes I am also ignorant, needy, mean and otherwise imperfect.
I mean I don't get angry as much about the state of our country, or about the problems handed to my generation cultivated by the mistakes of past generations. Instead, I try to use the resources now available to me to come up with considerate and educated solutions, and I try to give the people in my life the hope, strength and tools they need to do it, too.
I do this because things may have been handed to us in this condition, but it's OUR world now- ours to change in a way that only we can. We may not be able to see the impact of the work we do in our lifetimes, but we can take steps in a positive direction anyway, if we want to.
We can care about it, ourselves and each other if we want to. Because there is something luminous about what sort of spirit lives in the hearts of those who left the world a better place than they found it. It's something beautiful and it makes everything worth it.
I work a lot more, and I mess around less. I used to hate the idea of putting effort toward something other than my own pursuit of pleasure. My idea of freedom was not what it is today. I work a lot. I take my job seriously, I'm proud of the work I do. I have a lot less time to do nothing (or at least have the option of doing nothing). But I am free to live a purpose-filled life, and I am free to do it in creative, unconventional and heart-warming ways. I work, and I get tired, but it's the Good Work, like I said I would do years before I understood what it meant, back when I only wanted to do it because I knew it was the ultimate source of pleasure.
A lot of things happen that aren't very fun when you grow up, like rent hikes, paperwork, budgets, moving furniture, sick kitties, pink eye, and car troubles. We get parking tickets and have to do responsible things like actually pay them, along with a bunch of other bills I used to ignore until they became a bigger problem than they needed to be.
They're not really a big deal, though. That's up to us, right? What's the big deal?
Alex and I aren't rich, or famous, or royalty but we live a life of great privilege, and I am thankful for being aware of that. We have our health, and jobs we love. We have families that we miss because they are so great and such an important part of our lives. We have old friends and new friends that we appreciate and two cats that we love to care for. We live in a beautiful place, and most of all, we have each other to share it with.
None of these things are without their sacrifices and stresses. All of these things take a lot of effort to have, and to keep. I'm thankful for finally having the common sense now that I'm older, to realize that self-pity is a waste of time. No one owes me a happy life- it's up to me to recognize the privileges I have, and to recognize that my choice to pursue a happy, appreciative life is a privilege in itself.
I still have to deal with just about the same amount of crappy stuff as I did years ago, it all just doesn't seem as huge and overwhelming anymore. Is that why it's called growing up? Maybe the more you mature, the smaller the problems appear.
Some day, what I've written in earnest here will seem naive to my future self. Things are good right now, so it's easy to feel like I figured out something important. But, I think I really did figure out something important- and I'm sure I will figure out something else equally important when I reflect on these good times years from now, when I might be either weaker or stronger than I am now, because when you grow up you don't shoot up infinitely into the sky, you break down and rebuild like an old New England square... you may not always be at your best, but you'll always have just a little bit more character.
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
Leaps of Faith
I haven't felt this overwhelmed in a while. To be honest, I haven't felt overwhelmed in this particular way, ever, in my life. Things are changing, but not like they changed before.
At this point in my life I think I'm finally able to see the consequences of the choices I am making. What I mean is, the difference is I finally realize that when you reach out toward something new, when you pursue your hopes and dreams, you transition from an environment full of blessings and faults, into yet another environment, with both of those things, every time and always.
I think there's a good chance I might get hired for my dream job. I try not to get my hopes up, but based on the facts it seems highly likely. At the very least, I'm faced with the possibility of it and now, I am thinking about it. As always, my future is just on the horizon and I am envisioning possible trajectories, which is a very human thing to do. As one of my best friends put it, things could be worse. Things could be stagnant.
What may happen if I get hired is unimaginable. I would have a full time job doing something I love in the only place that ever felt like home to me. What may happen if I do not get hired, is also unimaginable. I just know that no matter what, great things are on the horizon.
I love so many people, and I am so loved. I can't tell you how satisfying this is to me, but you probably know because you are loved, too. It feels really good to know this, and it seems like a really simple thing to understand, but its taken me my whole life to really know this.
How can you lose, then? What can you do, except be happy, be a better person and know your own beauty the way you know the beauty of those around you. Look at us broken, flawed things. Look how perfect we are. Sometimes I can't even stand it and I think my heart is going to burst and I mistake it for pain, and I'm threatened by it.
I am scared. I know how much I am going to miss my family, and most of all, how much I am going to miss Alex. My life without him, just doesn't shine as bright. I used to be afraid of relying on a person like that. But after all we've both gone through, we are brave and our hearts are strong, but more importantly our hearts are strong for each other. It's not that he makes me invincible, it's that he makes me aware of my own invincibility.
I'm scared because even though I am going to be doing something wonderful, in a wonderful place with wonderful people, I will have to let go of some other wonderful things. I won't get to have pedicures and dinner and yogurt with my mom and talk about how we're both growing up and moving into different phases in our lives. I won't get to have beer and play games with my brothers. I won't be a short plane ride away from my Boston family and I won't be able to spend the summer at Riverside with Alex and the Bishops.
Maybe I'm not so much scared as I mourn the loss of those possibilities. But I've made decisions like this before, and they have made me who I am, which is someone I don't regret becoming. I made the choice when I was 13 to stay in Fort Worth with my grandparents to go to Country Day School. I gave up the remainder of my childhood with my mother and watching my brothers grow up. But I don't even know who I would have become if I hadn't made that choice, and it was the right choice, because here I am and I love you, and I know that I am loved.
I have to let go. I have to be patient.
I was thinking earlier today as I was rushing around waiting tables to make sure my customers did not have to wait long, that patience is really the most valuable thing you could ever learn.
I was just thinking, everything around us tells us to hurry. We want to do things faster, have things sooner, and get from point A to point B as efficiently as possible. But who is it that decided that the efficient way was the best way? Most of the time, it isn't. When you want something done right, it is probably much more likely to happen when it is done with consideration, and not in a rush.
I know that most of my sadness is coming from knowing that I won't see Alex for a while. I miss him so much. Moving across the planet from him is the last thing my heart wants to do. Every day I wish I could hold him.
But I know that taking this job is the right thing to do, because loving someone means that you love yourself enough to know that you need to make decisions based on what will shape you into the best version of yourself, and just have faith that if you belong with someone, your paths will find each other. I will always be looking for him. And I know we will find each other, it just might not be soon. So I guess, it's more a matter of impatience than anything else. Impatience is what makes these tears fall down these cheeks.
At this point in my life I think I'm finally able to see the consequences of the choices I am making. What I mean is, the difference is I finally realize that when you reach out toward something new, when you pursue your hopes and dreams, you transition from an environment full of blessings and faults, into yet another environment, with both of those things, every time and always.
I think there's a good chance I might get hired for my dream job. I try not to get my hopes up, but based on the facts it seems highly likely. At the very least, I'm faced with the possibility of it and now, I am thinking about it. As always, my future is just on the horizon and I am envisioning possible trajectories, which is a very human thing to do. As one of my best friends put it, things could be worse. Things could be stagnant.
What may happen if I get hired is unimaginable. I would have a full time job doing something I love in the only place that ever felt like home to me. What may happen if I do not get hired, is also unimaginable. I just know that no matter what, great things are on the horizon.
I love so many people, and I am so loved. I can't tell you how satisfying this is to me, but you probably know because you are loved, too. It feels really good to know this, and it seems like a really simple thing to understand, but its taken me my whole life to really know this.
How can you lose, then? What can you do, except be happy, be a better person and know your own beauty the way you know the beauty of those around you. Look at us broken, flawed things. Look how perfect we are. Sometimes I can't even stand it and I think my heart is going to burst and I mistake it for pain, and I'm threatened by it.
I am scared. I know how much I am going to miss my family, and most of all, how much I am going to miss Alex. My life without him, just doesn't shine as bright. I used to be afraid of relying on a person like that. But after all we've both gone through, we are brave and our hearts are strong, but more importantly our hearts are strong for each other. It's not that he makes me invincible, it's that he makes me aware of my own invincibility.
I'm scared because even though I am going to be doing something wonderful, in a wonderful place with wonderful people, I will have to let go of some other wonderful things. I won't get to have pedicures and dinner and yogurt with my mom and talk about how we're both growing up and moving into different phases in our lives. I won't get to have beer and play games with my brothers. I won't be a short plane ride away from my Boston family and I won't be able to spend the summer at Riverside with Alex and the Bishops.
Maybe I'm not so much scared as I mourn the loss of those possibilities. But I've made decisions like this before, and they have made me who I am, which is someone I don't regret becoming. I made the choice when I was 13 to stay in Fort Worth with my grandparents to go to Country Day School. I gave up the remainder of my childhood with my mother and watching my brothers grow up. But I don't even know who I would have become if I hadn't made that choice, and it was the right choice, because here I am and I love you, and I know that I am loved.
I have to let go. I have to be patient.
I was thinking earlier today as I was rushing around waiting tables to make sure my customers did not have to wait long, that patience is really the most valuable thing you could ever learn.
I was just thinking, everything around us tells us to hurry. We want to do things faster, have things sooner, and get from point A to point B as efficiently as possible. But who is it that decided that the efficient way was the best way? Most of the time, it isn't. When you want something done right, it is probably much more likely to happen when it is done with consideration, and not in a rush.
I know that most of my sadness is coming from knowing that I won't see Alex for a while. I miss him so much. Moving across the planet from him is the last thing my heart wants to do. Every day I wish I could hold him.
But I know that taking this job is the right thing to do, because loving someone means that you love yourself enough to know that you need to make decisions based on what will shape you into the best version of yourself, and just have faith that if you belong with someone, your paths will find each other. I will always be looking for him. And I know we will find each other, it just might not be soon. So I guess, it's more a matter of impatience than anything else. Impatience is what makes these tears fall down these cheeks.
Friday, January 14, 2011
The Final Form of Love
Nothing that is worth doing can be achieved in our lifetime; therefore, we must be saved by hope. ...
Nothing we do, however virtuous, can be accomplished alone; therefore, we are saved by love.
No virtuous act is quite as virtuous from the standpoint of our friend or foe as it is from our standpoint.
Therefore, we must be saved by the final form of love, which is forgiveness.”
Reinhold Niebuhr
Nothing we do, however virtuous, can be accomplished alone; therefore, we are saved by love.
No virtuous act is quite as virtuous from the standpoint of our friend or foe as it is from our standpoint.
Therefore, we must be saved by the final form of love, which is forgiveness.”
Reinhold Niebuhr
Monday, January 3, 2011
The Union of Man and Nature
"It is nobler to imitate things in nature, which are in fact the real images, than to imitate in words, the words and deeds of man."
- Leonardo Da Vinci, c. 1506-1508
Born of Failure
“It hasn’t been some kind of fairy tale for me. All of my success has been born of failure. Your childhood dreams are always tales of glory; reality is a lot messier and more dramatic.”
- Sean Parker, Founder of Napster, Former President of Facebook, Vanity Fair, October 2010
"The creation of a business from the embryo of a concept is the genius of the entrepreneur."
- Eduardo Saverin, Co-Founder, Facebook
- Sean Parker, Founder of Napster, Former President of Facebook, Vanity Fair, October 2010
"The creation of a business from the embryo of a concept is the genius of the entrepreneur."
- Eduardo Saverin, Co-Founder, Facebook
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)