On top of that, this time of year makes me appreciate small comforts. Fluffy towels right out of the dryer, fresh bed sheets, the warm glow of a room lit by lamps, enjoying a lazy Sunday spent reading a book, freshly polished floors, a hot cup of tea in a heavy stoneware mug, a rack of clean dishes with a clean kitchen and hooded sweatshirts. Small things that add up to little pieces of happiness that can get you through the day. I often come off as someone with high expectations, but most of the time it's the little details that really matter to me. It's never the large gifts that make the most difference. It's the little every day things that matter, the things that I enjoy most. Time spent with this strange, unconventional little family that we've created in this hodge podge of a house, that has been a highlight of my year so far. I think that most of the time, we have to create our own happiness, so I'm glad that I can take so much joy in such small details of my life, however briefly they may last.
Monday, September 17, 2012
It's In The Small Things
There's something about the changeover from Summer to Autumn that I can't seem to get enough of. I've never enjoyed the heat of summer, even though I love the longer days and lazy pace that summer brings. I feel like everything moves slower in the summer out of necessity, because it's simply too hot to be quick about anything. Something about Autumn is motivating. It's a time to get back outdoors, when the weather is still lovely enough to enjoy without being too cold, and to enjoy the last bit of good weather before we begin bracing ourselves for the snow and gray skies of winter. September this year has brought warm days and cool nights, and just enough crispness in the air so far that we can begin to look forward to sweaters and hot cider. This time of year makes me notice and appreciate all of the little things that make life enjoyable. Cool nights mean it's no longer unbearable to bake treats at night, so the house has been filled with the smell of cookies, and soon it will be muffins and coffee cakes and comfort foods. Apples are back in season and they never seem to taste as crisp and delicious any other time of year. Cider and pumpkins will soon be filling stores. I've got plans to buy new candles for the house so that it will smell like cinnamon and apple all the time.
A Few Words About Words
I was sitting in my living room yesterday reading a book, and it got me thinking about how interesting the written word is. I mean, if you think about it, the invention of writing itself is a friggin' miracle. Somewhere between crawling out of the primordial ooze and present day, we as a collective species managed to figure out a written language, which then evolved into hundreds of written languages, simply because we thought that there were important things out there that needed to be said, and recorded, and remembered. We went from hieroglyphs to rudimentary written word to full fledged language all in the short time that man has walked this Earth. Now we're here reading things that were written hundreds of years ago, and forming religions based on books written centuries ago. So much of our culture is based on what people have written down ages before we were born. Countries are founded on written documents, laws are still made based on those documents, and there are those who have been lucky enough to have their literature endure the test of time. When you stop and think about it, it's pretty mind blowing.
When I was reading my book yesterday I sat there wondering how many other people have read this book, and how many people loved it, or hated it? How many people in this world have picked up the same volume I'm currently reading and said "Hey, this has changed my life"? I think that's one of the things that's so great about any sort of writing, that it lasts and that it can trigger the same emotion in one person as it does in someone else millions of miles away and that now these two people who may never meet still have some sort of unspoken connection to one another. I like to imagine that other people are like me and that they read about a place in a book and realize that they want to go to that place and experience it for themselves to see if it lives up to everything they've read in books. Sometimes, when I'm walking through a new city that I read about in a book, I wonder if someone else is in that city for the exact same reason, walking the same street and that in some strange way we are sharing the same moment without even realizing it. That's what makes it so awesome, that all over the world, people can have the same experience without having to be together.
Anyway, it was just something I was thinking about.
When I was reading my book yesterday I sat there wondering how many other people have read this book, and how many people loved it, or hated it? How many people in this world have picked up the same volume I'm currently reading and said "Hey, this has changed my life"? I think that's one of the things that's so great about any sort of writing, that it lasts and that it can trigger the same emotion in one person as it does in someone else millions of miles away and that now these two people who may never meet still have some sort of unspoken connection to one another. I like to imagine that other people are like me and that they read about a place in a book and realize that they want to go to that place and experience it for themselves to see if it lives up to everything they've read in books. Sometimes, when I'm walking through a new city that I read about in a book, I wonder if someone else is in that city for the exact same reason, walking the same street and that in some strange way we are sharing the same moment without even realizing it. That's what makes it so awesome, that all over the world, people can have the same experience without having to be together.
Anyway, it was just something I was thinking about.
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
Finding Words
There have been several times in the past few weeks that I've sat down and thought "I really want to write something" but before I can even log into my account, I find myself too weary to put my thoughts into coherent sentences and I stop before I can even begin. The depth of things that are going through my head and the things that I might want to talk about is so great that I can't figure out where to start. I don't want to make this blog all about a bunch of whining or talking about my thoughts that I think are deep and profound but I fear are little more than the musings of someone who has very little depth to them, and very little to say. I have trouble finding the words to express the things I'm thinking, or worse, feeling, and I can't seem to figure out how to put everything in order. I'm working on it. I'll let you know how it goes.
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Small, But Valuable
To steal a line from Nora Ephron, "I lead a small life. Valuable, but small." This seems to sum up my life pretty well. I don't do big important things, I don't make scientific discoveries. I have lived in the same ten mile radius pretty much my entire life. On the whole, my life is simple, and if were no longer to be around, it would not make the news, nor would it be a loss felt by a great many. That is not said in self pity, it is just a reality that I think most people live with but don't care to admit. It is not to say that my life does not have value. I've spent a huge portion of my life working toward the greater good. I have been a part of protests and union rallies, I have been a voice to speak out against injustice, I have donated large portions of my life and my time to volunteer work. I was raised in the belief that there is always a greater good, and that we all need to strive toward it. When injustice happens to one, we all need to fight against it until it no longer exists. That has been my entire life. It is why I am quick to jump to the defense of people who have been somehow wronged, even if it is not my battle to fight.
Now, as an adult I have dedicated my life to helping out in a field I know, so I've spent six years volunteering my time and money with the theatre department at my old high school. Not because I got anything out of it, because I've never been paid, and the tireless hours often go unnoticed, but because it was needed. They had almost no parents to volunteer, they had no help, and they had more than enough work to go around. So, I jumped in with both feet. Jason was right there next to me, working just as hard and being just as dedicated. We coached actors, we made costumes, we made and purchased props, we worked concessions, we worked every fundraiser, we chaperoned field trips, we organized transportation, we managed meals for the students. There were very few areas of that department that we did not touch and try to improve. When Jason took over as Booster President, the boosters went from doing nothing more than paying for scholarships each year to offering group sales, paying for free workshops, subsidizing the expenses of field trips, providing larger and more meaningful college scholarships, offering hardship scholarships so underprivileged kids could attend events they would not otherwise be able to afford, and creating a summer Shakespeare program to allow students an opportunity to expand their on-stage experience. We have had big dreams. We had plans of doing more, and growing more. Offering workshops for elementary and middle school students, college audition guidance, financially supporting programs in the elementary school, donating to other arts departments in the district, organizing larger and more exciting field trips. You name it, we wanted to do it. It never happened, and probably never will. Somehow my small, charitable life became the source of some sort of scandal. The good intentions and hours of dedication that Jason and I have had all along are now somehow under accusation of "creating drama". Our forward thinking is now a problem. We have been falsely accused, we have been disrespected, we have had our names dragged through the mud, our reputations have been damaged, our work has been taken for granted and we are now being barred entirely from making any more progress. I will never understand why hard work gets rewarded with jealousy and spite. And what's worse, we have lost the ability to know who can or cannot be trusted. People we have considered friends, or at least colleagues have turned on us due to rumor and conjecture that has no place in our lives. Each time I hear someone else say they are tired of this drama, I wonder why they believe that we are not tired of it ourselves. It's exhausting, and we never wanted any part of it. But we will not go quietly when injustice exists in our lives. It is not in our nature.
I think what makes me the most sad is that there has been nothing more rewarding over the past six years than working with the amazing group of young people we have been privileged to know. They have truly been the highlight of my life, and they will never know how much they have taught me about reality while I was teaching them how to pretend. I have opened my home to students in need, not because it was easy, but because it was right. Some people would say Jason and I are crazy to spend so much time focused on improving the lives of these teens, even outside of the confines of theatre, but there has been nothing in my life that has felt so right. When a student came to us in need of a home, we didn't think twice before offering ours. It is an act of love I will never regret. To think that because of a handful of small, petty people, I will lose the privilege of meeting more of these amazing young people makes me so sad. Especially when those small, petty people take those same young people for granted and cannot recognize how special and valuable each of them is. They will never know what a privilege they have. I would never dream of taking it for granted. It has made my life so much more rich, and so much more colorful. If I am to lose this opportunity, I will remain grateful that I had it for as long as I have. I will never apologize for the work we have done, regardless of how much "drama" others might accuse me of creating. I have no regrets. I have touched lives. There is nothing more valuable than that.
I have kept my life small. Those kids have given it value. They will probably never know, but I could never thank them enough.
Now, as an adult I have dedicated my life to helping out in a field I know, so I've spent six years volunteering my time and money with the theatre department at my old high school. Not because I got anything out of it, because I've never been paid, and the tireless hours often go unnoticed, but because it was needed. They had almost no parents to volunteer, they had no help, and they had more than enough work to go around. So, I jumped in with both feet. Jason was right there next to me, working just as hard and being just as dedicated. We coached actors, we made costumes, we made and purchased props, we worked concessions, we worked every fundraiser, we chaperoned field trips, we organized transportation, we managed meals for the students. There were very few areas of that department that we did not touch and try to improve. When Jason took over as Booster President, the boosters went from doing nothing more than paying for scholarships each year to offering group sales, paying for free workshops, subsidizing the expenses of field trips, providing larger and more meaningful college scholarships, offering hardship scholarships so underprivileged kids could attend events they would not otherwise be able to afford, and creating a summer Shakespeare program to allow students an opportunity to expand their on-stage experience. We have had big dreams. We had plans of doing more, and growing more. Offering workshops for elementary and middle school students, college audition guidance, financially supporting programs in the elementary school, donating to other arts departments in the district, organizing larger and more exciting field trips. You name it, we wanted to do it. It never happened, and probably never will. Somehow my small, charitable life became the source of some sort of scandal. The good intentions and hours of dedication that Jason and I have had all along are now somehow under accusation of "creating drama". Our forward thinking is now a problem. We have been falsely accused, we have been disrespected, we have had our names dragged through the mud, our reputations have been damaged, our work has been taken for granted and we are now being barred entirely from making any more progress. I will never understand why hard work gets rewarded with jealousy and spite. And what's worse, we have lost the ability to know who can or cannot be trusted. People we have considered friends, or at least colleagues have turned on us due to rumor and conjecture that has no place in our lives. Each time I hear someone else say they are tired of this drama, I wonder why they believe that we are not tired of it ourselves. It's exhausting, and we never wanted any part of it. But we will not go quietly when injustice exists in our lives. It is not in our nature.
I think what makes me the most sad is that there has been nothing more rewarding over the past six years than working with the amazing group of young people we have been privileged to know. They have truly been the highlight of my life, and they will never know how much they have taught me about reality while I was teaching them how to pretend. I have opened my home to students in need, not because it was easy, but because it was right. Some people would say Jason and I are crazy to spend so much time focused on improving the lives of these teens, even outside of the confines of theatre, but there has been nothing in my life that has felt so right. When a student came to us in need of a home, we didn't think twice before offering ours. It is an act of love I will never regret. To think that because of a handful of small, petty people, I will lose the privilege of meeting more of these amazing young people makes me so sad. Especially when those small, petty people take those same young people for granted and cannot recognize how special and valuable each of them is. They will never know what a privilege they have. I would never dream of taking it for granted. It has made my life so much more rich, and so much more colorful. If I am to lose this opportunity, I will remain grateful that I had it for as long as I have. I will never apologize for the work we have done, regardless of how much "drama" others might accuse me of creating. I have no regrets. I have touched lives. There is nothing more valuable than that.
I have kept my life small. Those kids have given it value. They will probably never know, but I could never thank them enough.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Some Things Come to an End
That's hard to swallow, especially for me. It's hard to reconcile it in my mind, that I wasted so much time, and so much of myself on someone who possibly never deserved it to begin with. I have struggled with this for years, seriously struggled, and I've even avoided the acceptance for a long time. I kept sitting around hoping things would change, or hoping for apologies that would never come, or effort that would never be made. I spent a lot of time angry, and a lot of time wanting some sort of end to it all, be it reconciliation or closure. The reality is that I will likely never get either. I'm in a situation where even if I remove myself, Jason will never be removed from this person, and every time I see them or they visit it's like ripping off a scab that had just started to heal over and the pain and frustration is raw and fresh again, like it's brand new. I have spent a long time trying to figure out what to do, or how to make things different, but I can't change the past and if the other person doesn't want to change the future, then there's nothing I can do but accept it. I've heard promises of change or of making an effort, but every promise is met with absolutely no action to back it up. I'm tired. I'm split open and and I'm angry, and I need the scab to actually heal over. I need to be done with it, because it's simply too much to keep doing this to myself. The only one who keeps getting hurt by this is me, and I need to put a stop to it before I have nothing left. So, I took the step and I cut the tie as best I could from myself and I'm hoping that from here I can start to move away from all of this. I can let the scab heal over. I can focus on those few others who I have opened up to and I can make better choices in the future as to who else I let into that very small circle. Sometimes the only thing to do with a damaged bridge is burn it.
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Say What?
So what I'm starting to realize lately is that I might, just possibly, be a crappy communicator. This is a bit disheartening since well....it was my minor in college. But, sometimes I find that I get annoyed with people, or I get pissed off about something and I don't really do a very good job of telling people why I'm bothered. Sometimes, I rather stupidly expect other people to figure out why I'm angry. Other times I think I've been perfectly clear just to discover, amid a giant argument, that I have not been clear at all. That's not good. So, maybe this year I need to add "communicate better" to that list of goals.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
New Year, New You?
All in all, I kind of expect 2012 to be about the same. I know that people think this is going to be a good year, a better year, a great year. I don't know what it will be, myself, but I expect it to have its ups and downs just like everything else. I do, however, think that there's a chance there will be more ups than downs. I'm not sure why, but it just feels that way at the moment. Time will tell, I suppose. As for goals, I've been thinking about that too and I find that I have a hard time setting goals because I get angry with myself for not meeting them. But I suppose it doesn't hurt to set a few.
1. Get the house in order
This covers a variety of things, from finally organizing and putting finishing touches on rooms we've barely paid attention to since we moved in, to building a deck off the back of the house, to getting the garage re-organized. In general, although I know that a house is never "done", I want it to feel more done than it does right now.
2. Get myself in order
I don't think I'll go into too much detail about this, but I'll just say that sometimes I'm a real mess and I need to take care of not being a real mess. Plus, I need to do some hard thinking about some things and come to some decisions about myself. Mostly, I need to get my head out of my ass.
3. Branch out
I often find that I stick with things that feel safe, easy, low risk. I don't go out and meet new people often. I don't tend to do anything that's not done as a "couple" where Jason and I both attend. I don't say yes to opportunities or offers a lot of the time, and I don't let myself make mistakes. Heck, I don't even really have any hobbies. So, I think this year I should try to branch out a bit and try some new things.
4. Let Go More, Live More
This ties into the whole "get my shit together" goal, but relates directly to me letting go of things more often instead of letting every little thing get to me like I have a habit of doing sometimes. I need to sort out what matters from what doesn't matter. I'm not going to lie, I'm not optimistic about this goal being reached.
5. Do more theater stuff with THAT
It's been great working with the kids at LHS for all of these years, but sometimes you want more than just hassles and headaches. Sometimes you want some control, and something to work toward that is bigger than yourself. Last summer doing Much Ado was fantastic. Time consuming, yes, but so rewarding. I want more of that. I want to make this into something real, and something sustainable so more people can do theater in the community.
So that's it. My big list of 5 items that seem rather daunting, when I really think about it, but they're goals right? It's ok if I don't make it? It's the journey, not the destination and all that stuff right?
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