May 24, 2012

Time to be Thankful

"If the only prayer you said in your whole life was, 'thank you,' that would suffice."

- Meister Eckhart

A few things I'm thankful for...


Visiting Kyle in Europe long before we knew for sure that we'd be married some day...not only because it was an amazing trip that I think brought us even closer but also because I really got to know someone else in my life, too...

My sister, whom I had previously taken somewhat for granted and realized I didn't really know before very well at all, became one of my very best friends on that trip. Sisters, friends, and now neighbors...I don't think I could ask for any more.


Except for a second sister, maybe. This raven-haired lady of our family is simply the most hilarious storyteller, and my cheeks literally hurt after being around her. I don't know what I'd do without these two.
Or this guy...

I think most people would agree that my brother is a pretty awesome guy. Most of the time anyway. He reminds me that most things aren't worth getting upset about, and I have to admit he's right.
Speaking of awesome guys...


I love this man so much. Not only because of who he is but because of who he has made the rest of us. Let's just say that my sisters and I have found out that the whole girls-marrying-men-like-their-dads thing is eerily true. We've also learned something else...


There is no avoiding turning into your mother. And I, for one, wouldn't have it any other way. There's no explaining what it means to me to have my mom living a five-minute drive away. She taught me what it means to be a strong woman and an amazing mother.
Which leads me to my next thought...


I am so grateful to have such loving parents-in-law. They have this huuuuge family that I am constantly excited to be a part of, and almost all of them live within a three-mile radius! I mean, think about it, that could really go one way or the other, and I couldn't be any happier that it's a positive thing. I get to have dinner with almost the whole family every weekend, and I'm so excited for our future children to experience that.
We also have another kind of family for our children to enjoy...


We feel so lucky to have such wonderful groups of friends who love to make the most of everything, leap at opportunities, and focus on the things that are most important in life. We're also thankful for all the friends who aren't pictured, but I'm sure most of you know I'm terrible and never take pictures and must rely on my friends and wedding photographer for visuals. Some other people who aren't pictured include all of our extended families, including our grandparents who are stand-up people if I've ever met any.

If you couldn't tell yet, my life pretty much revolves around people. Most people's lives do, I suppose. I love that we have wonderful friends and a great big family. I'm still so ecstatic for Kyle that his dream job became a reality this year.

Mostly I'm excited for all the wonderful things to come. There have already been several new additions made to both of our families since that photo was taken a little over a year ago, and I can't wait for even more.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Enough about me.
What are you thankful for this year?

May 6, 2012

Do or Do Not... Because You're Damned Either Way

"Applause felt like approval, and it became a drug that soothed the pain, but only temporarily."

- Anita Baker

I have a problem. A totally and completely first-world problem. I want everyone to like me. No, not "like like" me, just plain old like me. I get uncomfortable and upset thinking that someone may not like me. I wonder what I must have done or could have done differently. How self-centered is it for me to care that much? About as self-centered as asking how self-centered I am? Figured.

This post is to be continued because I keep falling asleep trying to write it.

_______________________________________________

And I'm back. But now I'm wishing I had gotten all my thoughts down when I first sat down to write this post. Granted, I was way too exhausted to focus on it. Basically, I was feeling frustrated by the fact that my life basically revolves around people and relationships, which I used to think everyone's did. However, the more I learn about personality types and the more people I get to know as time goes on, the more I realize that my type of person, in particular, is very focused on people. Therefore, what other people think of me is very important to me. That's the part that's frustrating, not the fact that my life is about people.

A good lesson I've tried to teach myself, but to no avail, is that not everyone will like you, and you don't necessarily want everyone to like you anyway. I had an amazing teacher in high school who said that you want some people to dislike you because the list of people who dislike you says as much, if not more, about your character as the list of people who like you. I absolutely agree with that. My issue is that I always try to like everyone and connect with each person I meet in some way. So I always end up seeing the positive things in a person. This results in my putting a lot of stock in everyone's opinion of me. It is not often that I think, "Oh well, that person's opinion doesn't matter anyway."

Something that I've learned is that there are people who will dislike you if you are rude or don't talk to them, naturally, and yet there are also people who will dislike you if you seem too nice or are too friendly to them. I used to work at a hotel a few years ago, and I befriended one of my supervisors over the course of a few months. One day, she admitted to me that she had seen me talking with our manager the day of my interview and tried to convince him not to hire me. She thought I was being nice to the point that she was certain I must be fake. First of all, how sad is it that we live in a society where we have to question people's intentions that much? Second of all, there really is no pleasing everyone.

In a way, it's freeing to realize that. It relieves a lot of pressure to know that, no matter what you say or do, there will always be some people who like and/or love you and some people who hate or are indifferent toward you. So you can't let the fear of what others think paralyze you. Although that's much easier said than done, I think.

I really want to be a counselor because I am so incredibly interested in everyone's story but, even more so, also feel that it is so important for people to feel listened to and understood. I don't mean to sound overly accepting to the point that I can't tell right from wrong, but I honestly think most of life is so subjective that there's really no harm in being there to affirm the people around us most of the time.

More on that later. I'm falling asleep again.

Hmm, maybe that's a hint that this topic is too boring for anyone to read this post. Oh well. Tough noogies.

April 10, 2012

Angst is Not Exclusive to Teenagers

"And in that moment, I swear we were infinite."

- The Perks of Being a Wallflower

Be warned: this post is ridiculously long. I don't know why or how it got off course at some point, but it did. If you know me, however, you expect that anyway.

Interestingly enough, I have never been a wallflower. And yet I relate to that book so much. I also, just like every other angst-filled pre-pubescent, fell in love with The Catcher in the Rye and, being female and all, fell deeply in love with Holden Caulfield as well. When I picked up that book in the Bookmobile by my house in the summer before seventh grade, I had no idea what I was in for. It was funny that I even checked it out because it has a boring white cover and no synopsis on the back.

This is going to sound strange, but I just started to cry a little bit because typing out that sentence, while simultaneously listening to Your Hand in Mine (Goodbye) by Explosions in the Sky, just brought me to this realization... (Explosions in the Sky has a funny way of helping me come to realizations and relive the very moments I wanted to talk about when I started this post. Thank you, Pandora. You're so timely.) I just realized that I love the boring white covers in life. I used to be attracted by flashy things that seemed so exciting but ended up having no substance; finally, after many experiences pointed this out to me, I learned that the seemingly boring white covers often contain the greatest stories. And I don't want a Facebook-sized synopsis of a person. I want to actually put in the work to get to know them. I want to know things about them that people have to put real time into the person to learn rather than having the same knowledge base as anyone else who reads their Twitter or Facebook or, say, blog.

The people I would never expect certain things from always have a way of surprising me. I love surprises. And I love a challenge. Boring white covers present both almost every time. Of course, I don't literally mean people who look boring and/or white. All I'm getting at is that I like to get to know people and discover the things that make them who they are rather than losing interest before even flipping open to the first page. I see most people as mysteries, not necessarily to be solved but to at least investigate to find out more.

Sometimes I wish I had realized all of that sooner. That I had appreciated people I probably looked right past at times. That I had reveled in the unpredictability of people. Of life. I should have allowed myself to be proven wrong more often.

I think I've always been a deep feeler and a person who lives within the moment for the most part, though my mind may have a habit of taking me elsewhere with worry or self-consciousness. I think I pick up on a lot of the things that go unsaid. And I live most of my life wondering if I'm making it all up or if I really did read the other person correctly. Were they really thinking what I thought they were? Did they really want to say what I think they did? When they looked my way, were we actually exchanging the same thoughts? Am I really picking up on what they're thinking? Or is it just what the movie in my head has decided is going on?

It's hard to say. It could so easily go either way. My brother tells me that I read into things too much. I told him I just read things, period. I'm not trying to say I'm psychic, and I'm certainly not trying to say I'm always right. I guess what I'm saying is that I think I have something useful, but it may just as well be all in my head. I may be dead wrong.

That's the problem with intangible talents. There's no proof. I don't look people in the face and say, "Are you feeling ____ and thinking _____ right now?" And even if I did, there's no telling whether they'd be honest. I mean, I think language, as much as I freaking love it, complicates things. There are so many primal, instinctual, involuntary messages that we send each other a thousand times a day. And we dismiss them. We only point to written and spoken words to prove our points and use as evidence of one thing or another. We almost completely neglect body language, exchanges of glances, slight changes in facial expression, the change of the energy in the room. And when we don't dismiss them, people tell us we're over-analyzing or reading into things too much.

It's so funny, too, because we can control and manipulate our words, but our faces and bodies often give us away. They're our quickest, purest form of communication, and yet we rely on the words that have been filtered by our minds to deliver the majority of our messages. This is why I find it hard to believe almost any account of any interaction between two people. There is so much subtext in every interaction and so much back story that plays into whatever may have gone on, that it's difficult to make definitive judgment calls about almost anything. Sometimes I find this infuriating, but mostly I think it's comforting. It's nice to focus on the big picture and mostly see the details as symptoms of it.

I think one of my all-time favorite quotes and one thing that I subconsciously live my life by every day is from Maya Angelou who said, "I've learned that people will forget what you did, people will forget what you said, but people will never forget how you made them feel." This is true for me, at least. I don't dwell on people's past actions. Even people who have hurt me at one time or another (regardless of whether or not I ever rehash what they said or did). I always, after I have spouted off at the mouth even, in the quiet of my own room, come to the realization that even people who have hurt me are not horrible, mean people. We all make mistakes, and I certainly hope people would go easy on me for mine, so I had better do the same for others. I don't always succeed at it, but that is honestly what I think and try to do.

I think my main thing is that I want people to feel understood. I think that's all any of us really wants. So any chance I get to be someone who helps another person feel just a little less alone is a chance I never pass up. I want people to feel okay. I want them to know that they are enough. As broken and flawed as we all are, we are also beautiful in so many ways. Just like this terribly disjointed post with its incomplete thoughts, there's something there, hopefully, to be enjoyed. To relate to.

Gosh, all I really want right now is to stand up in the back of a truck driving along PCH on a summer night, blast some soul-wrenching music, and stay up talking all night with a friend or two on the beach. That sounds so good to me. To be transported, even for a moment, back to a time when I felt infinite, too. I know how horribly emo I sound right now, but, damn it, that's what I want at the moment. I want that smell of bonfire and sea salt that gives hope of what's to come. I want to sneak in my house and lay on my bed in my bathing suit with the windows open and a warm breeze flowing through my room. I want to over-analyze life and write something poetic like I used to when I was 16, 17, 18.

I remember a time when I posted something I had written online, and my older sister commented that I shouldn't stop writing or thinking the way that I did because she had stopped. When did I stop? Why?

I so badly wanted this post to be meaningful to someone else. I wanted someone to relate and feel like they were back in one of those endless summers where they related to feeling like a wallflower and wanting to catch somebody in the rye. I hate how cliche it is to like those books and characters and coming-of-age stories. But I just can't get enough of it. Growing up was so fun. I wish it didn't have to feel like I'm supposed to be finished with that part of life because I don't think we're ever finished growing up. I think we're just supposed to grow. As much as we can for as long as we can.

I miss being interesting to other people. You know when you're a teenager, and you want to soak up everything there is to know about a new friend or love interest? And everything they do seems amazing, and you can't get enough? I miss connecting with people in that way. I don't think being in a relationship or being married means that you can't keep forming friendships with other people. I think the world often looks at you like you should feel satisfied, content, complete. I'm not finished. I'm happy and grateful, but I know there's more to come. I hope there's more to come.

This isn't nearly everything I was trying to say. But I guess it will have to do for now. Every time I write a post, I feel like the most self-centered person in the world. But, in reality, my intention is to connect with other people through just being honest about what I'm thinking and feeling and experiencing. I know it doesn't always come out as well as I know it could, but I can't help the fact that Holden made me fall in love with the stream of consciousness. And my consciousness isn't always the most amazing thing to be a part of. But I know there's more to come. I hope there's more to come.

Edit: This is where I would usually apologize for writing such an angsty, novel-length blog post that totally defeats the purpose of writing a blog post since blog posts should be a fraction of the size of this particular post. But not this time. No way. I'm not apologizing. You didn't have to read all of this. Thanks if you did, but it's mostly for you. I write for myself, sure, but mostly I hope someone gets something out of it. That's what I always hope for when I read someone else's blog post. I want to find some connection to them, and then I want to let them know, "You are not alone!" But maybe that's just selfish to do for someone else what I think I would want rather than thinking about what they might want instead. We once debated in a philosophy class for hours trying to figure out what in the world could ever truly be a selfless act. It was really depressing and made me feel like nice things didn't matter because I was probably just doing nice things out of selfishness or to make other people like me. But I refuse to believe that we can't be kind for the sake of it. Otherwise that would just always leave me feeling like nothing I did was genuine. And, for someone who wants to be that more than anything, it would seem inconsistent to do things that weren't genuine. So screw that. I'll do what I feel like, even if someone thinks my doing something nice is for any reason other than helping someone out or making someone happy or whatever the hell reason I have. Man, I am so annoying. I swear I'm not always thinking about this stuff. It just comes out once every month or two in the form of word vomit. Some people are at their worst with alcohol and drugs. I'm at my most ridiculous when I mix 2am, instrumental music, and blogging.

March 13, 2012

Balance is an Elusive Lady

“Be not angry that you cannot make others as you wish them to be, since you cannot make yourself as you wish to be.”

- Thomas à Kempis

My life has been more chaotic and stressful (gosh, I already hate myself for saying that because my life is so lame and ridiculous in comparison to the struggles of so many other people) in the last couple of months than I can ever remember it being. It's not that I've never felt stressed out before. High school and college were pretty stressful, relatively speaking anyway. It's amazing how much more stress we can take on with each passing year. Anyway, this is the first time where I haven't seen much of an end in sight. Typically, you get stressed out because something is pending, and you're just anticipating it and working through the difficult stuff to come out on the other side. I keep seeing the light at the end of the tunnel, but it is consistently just out of my grasp.

I feel like I've been a real jack of all trades but master of none this past year or so. I feel like a jester with spinning plates; and, for every one plate that I learn to add to the ones I'm spinning, another one goes flying off in another direction to crash. Just when I have my bills under control or my work load to a manageable amount, I fail to RSVP to a party or return a phone call to a friend. As soon as I feel successful in a new venture, my husband or a friend feels like I'm selfish and have been ignoring them. I'm not saying they're wrong. I don't mean to be or do either of those things. Ever.

I really do try. And I know what Yoda says about that, but, gosh dang it, sometimes try is all we have. I take on too much, and things inevitably slip my mind, no matter how important they are to me or how many times I wrote myself a note to make sure I wouldn't forget. I get tired, I say things I don't mean, I don't say things I mean to, I let the stress from work and commuting and doing mundane tasks really get to me...and it's not okay. Something's gotta give.

I constantly feel like I'm picking up the pieces of all the broken plates, broken relationships, broken promises (a.k.a. good intentions), and it's exhausting. Maybe it's me. Maybe I'm easily stressed out. Maybe I need to change the way I operate. I am completely open to that. Sometimes, though, I think. STOP. STOP thinking that everything that goes wrong means there's something wrong with you. In almost any given situation, there are going to be a million reasons why both parties involved are at fault or not. There is always room for improvement, always something you could've done differently, better. When is it enough? When are you enough? When are we okay?

You can't please everyone. And when your being pleased with yourself revolves around everyone in the world being pleased with you, you're just fighting a losing battle. How do we stop doing that? How do I stop doing that? Where does my responsibility end? How do I know what things are and are not the direct result of my actions or lack thereof?

Balance is my goal. The most elusive goal in life. It's so frustrating to know there must be an objective answer about black, white, and everything in between when I can only see things subjectively. Well, I just wasted twenty minutes of work time. Although maybe it wasn't a waste after all. Who's to say really? (My employer, I guess.)

January 29, 2012

Big Dreams: Part II

Interesting that I happened to stumble upon a post I had written about big dreams and then realized that it was written exactly a year ago today. This year has obviously flown by because I could've sworn I had written that only a few months ago.

In that particular post, I mentioned that I had always wanted to be an actress when I was younger. That really hits home right now because, one year from then, I am now enrolled in two acting classes and have gone to some auditions this month as well.