Monday, April 4, 2011

Mister Mister

I miss him and he is not even mine. It is strange, but having a friend in town - even one who may not have been the closest when we lived in the same city - seems to have been what I needed. There is this strange thing of two people out of their element (i.e. living abroad from everything they love) that brings someone together and cements a bond that might never really get there without sharing something so fundamentally scary but exhilarating.

I have also been inspired: this mr. m.r. has reminded me of everything I am still looking for. For that perfect job that I get excited about, that is sometimes hard, always challenging but in the end, the thing that I could not imagine not getting the chance to ever do again. He reminds me that I am a pretty special person - I have forgotten that. That I am pretty amazing. No one has really noticed in a while or perhaps no one has appreciated it, but it is hard to always feel on top of the world, when everything seems to be spinning you in the opposite direction.

I have had fun; I have been more reckless and carefree that I have in a very long time. And I have loved every minute of it. And perhaps that is why I am so sad that he is not here anymore. I feel a little loss without him, but I am also feeling like it is time for changes. Changes in where I am and changes in what I make of my life. It is never too late to decide that even if you like most everything about your life, you can still look for the rainbow over the cloud with the silver lining. So, onwards upwards ever striving for the very best.

Monday, March 28, 2011

A Surprise of the Best Kind

If you know me, you'll know that I am not one for surprises. I have talked ad nauseum about the all the planning I do and how I have an idea in my head at all times. And if plan A is not going to work out for me, then I move on to plan B or C or D or... I am not one for spontaneity or doing things on a whim. Don't get me wrong - I have my moments and I am not a total stick in the mud, but for the most, I like to stick to my plan. It gives me a route through my day or my week or even my life.

But some surprises are wonderful. Like being surprised by the unexpected visit of a good friend thanks to all the vagaries of life. A fuel depot catches fire, a flight gets canceled, and suddenly, friends call, looking for a place to crash. I like those kind of surprises. Not surprisingly, a little because I get to do a good deed, which I am all for, especially if it involves a friend. And I also get to see someone I missed so much and love so dearly. For all the emails and the sometimes phone calls, the facebook and the twitter and the foursquare, it is nice to just be in the same place at the same time, talking about things.

There are so many things that can't be said over the phone or via email. There are inflections of voice and looks and cadences that get lost when they are transmitted over the channel and across the pond. So, here's to life throwing surprises my way. Because sometimes the best surprise is learning that you are not entirely averse to surprises after all.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Things that Make you Go Hmmmmmm

I have been silent for a while. Not so much because I have not had anything to say or because I have not been thinking - as I tend to do - but because life has been slow and it has been easy to slip into old habits, like a comfy pajama.

I find that life lately has taken some interesting terms. I find myself flirting with relative strangers who are very distant from me, but yet near and dear in their own special way. I find myself getting excited about possibilities and chance that might be nothing more than a wisp of a figment of a dream. I find myself happy and enthused when people who should be less to me have happy events. And I find comfort in not yet regretting a moment that has passed, though I know that someday, I will look back and regret what might have been but never was.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Happy Birthday Beautiful!

This is a special post for a special friend. I have been thinking about her loads since I moved here, and missing her company for so many reasons. But today is her birth day, and there are so many thing I remember about the first birthday I ever celebrated with her.

The funny thing, is that at the time, we were not really friends so much as two people thrown together by circumstance. So, I remember going to a pub for a darts match with her brother, and learning that it was her birthday. So I felt compelled (wanting to make a good third impression) to get a little card to mark the occasion. I did, and was then told that I had managed to spell her name wrong, one of the things that she most hated. Great start to a good relationship.

But it seems to have been, because over the weeks and months from that point onwards, we grew to be friends. She taught me darts and we would meet to drink and talk. She was the person that I got along well with, even when the circumstances that brought us together and made me want to impress her were gone. Instead, I wanted to impress her and keep her as a friend. And I am glad I did.

Her second birthday I remember because I was actually able to be there for it, which was special and was something that had been a distinct impossibility. I remember months in advance, buying a lovely top I thought she might like, only to learn that not only had she almost bought the same thing, but making her cry because I had to give her more than a month before her birthday because I was not sure if I would be back in time. Or, more likely as I believed at the time, that I would be back at all.

It has been hard, seeing milestones past from afar and wishing more than anything that I was able to be there. So, in my way, I want to celebrate a lovely person that I have had the luck to become good friends with.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Time and Distance

This is a little something that I think about every once in a while - the fact that most of my life I have been playing a little game of see how long this one lasts with my friendships. Being a child who moved from place to place, and having grown into an adult (if you can cal it that) who likes to seek the next big thing and suffers from a slight case of wanderlust, it is sometimes amazing to me that I know people I can call friend in every place I have been and in every place I want to go. I sometimes think about the distance, especially when a friend needs me. And I think about the time I spend away from them. I also seem to spend much time thinking about all the times we had together as friends; all the things that cemented our bonds and made us the friends we are today. Sometimes the best - and worst - part of having so many friends who are so far away is that I think over all the happy times with them and my heart longs to be close to them again. To hear them in person, instead of holding a phone to my ear or trying to convey in black and white the things that require nuance and grace and fiber of being.

But all of this pales in comparison when I think about the fact that even through all this distance, there are people who try. People who go out of their way to come and visit and spend some time with me. People who are happy to treat my home as their own and people who will allow me the pleasure whenever I have the need to treat their home as mine. I sometimes feel a tinge of remorse and regret when I notice that yet one more person has suddenly been lost to the void; that I am no longer connected to their life. But yet, I look at all the connections I can still count on and I think how very lucky I am that to these people, time and distance is all just a relative concept.

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Get Outta My Way

I had a weird thought this morning - well, weird for me. And I wanted to share. While looking into the mirror, I had the sudden and unbidden thought "Why did anyone ever find me attractive?"

To say the least, I was a little shocked that I actually thought that. Yes, if you have read the blog, you know that I am sometimes down on myself. And yes, if you have read the blog, then you know I am not a blonde, blue-eyed perfect sized four, but neither of those things are the point of this. More importantly, I have never looked in a mirror and doubted what other people think (thought) of me. I knocked my own attractiveness in my mind or just felt generally like the person I see in the mirror is not the person I know myself to be, but I have never doubted that I am attractive to some people and I know I am cute, even if I am not the epitome of what culture dictates.

I have thought about my thought today. I have immediately negated it and wondered why it would even come to mind. I am a little upset, especially as I have been working out for the past month and I have been feeling even more kick-ass than usual. I can see clothes are fitting a little better - okay, I am still not fitting into my "skinny" clothes - but I can see that what I wear feels more like it is hugging my curves rather than strangling them into submission.I have been noticing that it does not take my breath away to run for more than a second and my heart is not running like a jack hammer in my chest when I take a flight of stairs. For all these reasons, should not I be feeling more positive?

Saturday, February 19, 2011

An Idea Sort of Girl


I have always realized that I am an idea girl; that my mind is always thinking about how something can be done better, quicker, differently. About why somethings work the way they do and then why other things seem to work differently. I think I ended up in research because I had all these ideas and wanted to get my own answers. And why I may have been a great researcher, but not such a great student - I love the ideas and answering them, which leads to more ideas, but I did not like the task of having to actually disseminate the results as much.

So, not surprisingly, I recently went out to an event and while I enjoyed my time at the venue, I immediately started thinking about all the suggestions I would make, as the current incarnation did not really live up to my expectations. Maybe my expectations were a bit higher than they should have been, but there were some positives. The presentation was perfect: in terms of setting, I do not think more could have been asked for. But in terms of all the little nuances (and some of the bigger ones) - well, more thought should have been put into it.

So, like a true idea girl, I spent most of my time making a mental list of all the things I would change if I had a chance and all the suggestions that I would make to perhaps attract more people and keep the ones who come. I am willing to give the place a second chance, if nothing more to fine tune my opinions. But I am also in the mood to make my ideas move from being more than free-floating thoughts. I am starting to be less of an idea girl and more of an action woman

Saturday, February 5, 2011

He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not

I am reminded of why I hate dating. Not because I have been on a date recently or even because I am pondering going on a date with anyone anytime soon. But because I have been reminded how much I suck at reading other people at times, especially if I am concerned about that individual (concerned is just another word for possibly interested). Not only do I suck at reading other people, but then I get all nervous about what the other person is thinking and whether I am somehow infringing on their time. I become overly concerned (in this case, the true sense of concerned) about how I interact with that person and suddenly, it is all downhill from there.

To me, dating is a mind field and there is not a way to detect the possible traps and pitfalls that may happen. You can try to side step them, after taking a good guess at what they are, but there is no guarantee. I have never been good at dates - am I being too forward, not forward enough? Does he know that twirling my hair and touching his leg is a sign that I like him? Am I even following the rules (and more importantly, what were the rules as I have forgotten completely?). I hate the wondering and the constant confusion. The thought that maybe making time for me is a good sign; walking me to my car, probably a good sign. Being evasive about spending more time than absolutely necessary (is there a certain amount of time that makes a date a date?), probably not the best of signs (or maybe, no sign at all other than a busy schedule).

As you may know, I think too much. I spent too much time analyzing my life and my thoughts and possibly the thoughts of others around me. And I try to guess, and when I could care less, I tend to be spot on. When I care, it changes things. Suddenly, I have a stake in how things work themselves out and so my interpretations may be a little biased. Hell, little; a lot. I want things to be favourable and yet, there is the part of me that always believes the negative of any situation and looks for the dark side of every cloud. So, dating is a constant internal war. I am up in the polls, I am down in the polls; I am not even in the running anymore.

So perhaps dating is a see-saw. Sometimes you're up, sometimes you're down. But in the end, dating is like being on a carnival ride. It is scary when you're waiting in line, the anticipation is a killer, but once things get started, it is a whole lot of fun. And when you step off and the ride is over, all you want to do is get another chance again.

Friday, February 4, 2011

Are You Satisfied?

It is one of those days where I start thinking about whether life is truly satisfying. That feeling of being happy and being content that seems to occur so infrequently makes me nervous and thus, I start to assess. Is this what satisfaction feels like? Is that what it means to be happy and feeling settled for even a brief moment in my life. I know it does not mean that I am ready to settle - no, not by any stretch of the imagination. If anything, I am that much closer to starting to spread my wings and venture ever onwards and upwards, but still, is this what satisfaction feels like?

I have been feeling happy about the small things and the big things. About how my life has been falling into place and I have made the effort to really go outside of my comfort zone and do things that could being so much more to me, now that I am here. I have invited others to join me on activities that I find intriguing and I have decided that come what may, I will still move forward with plans, whether anyone wants to join in with me or no. But is this satisfaction?

I have realized that I can feel excited about being out with friends. That I can enjoy their company as just a friend, that I can get excited about possibilities, and yet, at the same time, I can also be cautious and keep sane. No restless nights wondering. As much fun as that can be, and as much as some people who may never know it continue to touch my life in ways that they do now know and never may, I do not feel that need to keep myself guessing. Instead, I feel the need to just roll with my life as it is; to just be satisfied.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Alone Among the Masses


I know someone who recently commented that it is amazing that with all the friends that we collect these days, it sometimes the times where we feel most human that we realize how little friends we actually have. Maybe my friend did not say those exact words, but the gist was there. Basically, the idea that even though we are more connected in our lives - social networking sites, online dating, blogs, the whole shebang -we may be less connected to the people we know.

I can relate. It is not a fluke of my nature that when I was going through the most difficult time of my life, I suddenly pared down the "friends" on my social network, and made my daily happenings harder to access than the US Mint. In my life, I was experiencing a lot that I found hard to deal with and needed to feel protected. Hence, I drew my shell in - in a metaphorical sense - and in a literal sense, I restricted my online life and all the people who interacted with me in that manner.

My friend has reminded me of my resolutions - of how I am trying to reconnect with people I know and love. How hard it has been to feel that I belong over the past year, how many strides I have taken in the last month alone, and how far I still have to go. It reminds me that those little unexpected gestures can mean so much, even though we think that they are not noticed or that they have been disregarded. That sometimes what we see as nothing at all can mean the world to someone else.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Rise of a King, the Fall of a Queen

I have been thinking alot about gender roles. About how we are taught and trained to be a certain way. That there are certain acceptable ways to behave and that there are other actions that are not as acceptable. For example, I am noticing that perhaps it is not as appropriate for me to talk about drinking whisky or being a fan of "manly" drinks now that I am back in the states. Somehow, the drink of choice for me is really meant to be the drink of choice for someone older, richer, and perhaps with a bit more hair growing on that individual's face.

But there are also other things I have noticed. One thing is that I have a work mate who likes to hug me. If you know nothing else about me, it would be that I do not do well with physical contact. I am not one to be close to others, unless I really know and love them; and this person I do not know and love. Not only do I not know and love, but that person also holds a more senior position. So, it makes me uncomfortable for many, many reasons. And yet, even as uncomfortable as I seem, I know that it is more acceptable that perhaps a male superior hugging me, even if the intention was the same. So why should one person be allowed to hug me (and make me feel uncomfortable?) when the other can't? All because of gender, it seems.

There are other ways that gender seems to affect my life. Like taking the initiative and asking friends to do things with me. It seems a bit manly to make the plans, and sometimes, I want to embrace my gender role and sit back and have the plans made for me. Not because I think of myself as some retiring female without a thought in her head, but because sometimes, it feels like I am the one doing all the asking and planning and organizing and it feels as though I am the only one invested and perhaps, I should just be more open to letting things go.

In the end, it's all odd to me. That fact that I want to embrace some of the feminine things - heels and makeup and getting dressed up - and other times, I want to be allowed to express my individuality and pay for the meal or make the plans, so that they do not suck. I want the ability to embrace both the male and female and keep them guessing, but still always acknowledging that I am very much, one hundred percent, bonafide chick

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Evolution in a Glass

After the evening out on Friday, I started thinking about how my drinking habits have evolved from the simple girl I used to be, downing a beer on tap and/or tequila shots and calling it a good time. And I also started thinking about how my tastes have evolved along the same path that my life has progressed and that when I look back on my drinking evolution, there are moments that stand out and send me down a slightly altered path.

I have always had a penchant for the drink, but not because I am a raving alcoholic but because I was never told there was anything inherently bad or forbidden about booze. It was more about knowing what you liked, knowing how to be responsible, and knowing when to walk away so you did not make an absolute ass of yourself. And I think I have learned that pretty well from a young age, so that would almost be the start of the evolutionary chain for me.

From there, it was fitting in with the crowd when I could drink which normally meant beer on tap that was relatively cheap or on special. After all, grad students are notoriously underpaid but like (some may say need) to get out and drink. After a while, I started getting invites to attend free scotch tastings from Johnnie Walker and I thought, why not? Free fits in with my budget and scotch was something I grew up around but did not have strong feelings for one way or another. And every tasting I went to, I was introduced to new ways to drink scotch (manhattan, anyone?) and also the art of drinking scotch and learned to appreciate it. So, suddenly, I was a scotch drinker. I enjoyed it. I enjoyed the taste and the difference of being a scotch drinker. I liked going to bars and ordering something different and to be honest, it seemed to garner me a bot more attention from bartenders and strangers close by alike. A bit different than the other girls chugging down whatever brand of beer happened to be offered to them and was 'cool' at the moment.

Then I made the greatest leap into my foray into scotch and moved to England. It is like moving to the nieghbourhood where scotch was invented and mastered. I was in heaven and in England, I learned how to appreciate the single malts. If Johnnie Walker was my bottle, then the single malts were what the grown ups drank. And I felt like a grown up, so I owned it. I wanted to learn more about scotch. I associated with fellow scotch drinkers and they taught me things they had learned and introduced me to scotches I had not even fathomed. If the scotch shelf in any self-respecting bar in America had maybe four or five bottles, even the diviest place in England had at least ten. Again, it was heaven. And then we met our whisky guy, Phil. Someone who was a professional and trained myself as well as others on how to taste and what different areas did to different scotch and how to buy and generally, how to really love a good scotch. He even introduced us to blended scotches that were nothing to sneer at. These were not the training wheels of the scotch world; these were well thought out concoctions.

And now I have brought it back here and I am training others. I am introducing my boss to drams that I think he might like based on his preference, but may never have sought out. I am taking friends with me to more refined tastings to see that scotch is not a scary drink and that like a fine wine, each scotch (and every year) has something different to offer. Maybe, one day, when I am back in the UK, I can get my wine guy to really introduce me to wine and make me a convert. But for now, I will take mine straight up, with a splash of water on the side, or on the rocks.

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Copacabana


It has been an interesting night. I have been reminded of how much music can make us relive all the memories that make us who we are. I don't think that any of my
memories necessarily have a Barry Manilow soundtrack attached to them, yet at the same time, the words he sings are universal and can strike a cord and spark a memory.



Friday, January 28, 2011

Tonight, Tonight


It has been one of those rare nights where everything just seems to work and all the planning - or, sometimes, lack thereof - have made it worthwhile in the end. And I am sitting at home now, thinking that what I really need in Miami is more nights like this to remind me that despite all the things I dislike intensely about living here, there are shining moments that make it all worthwhile.

I am wondering if there is a secret formula as well. Is there some sort of magic number of new and old friends, places visited and activities partaken that make one night more particularly outstanding than another? I am truly not sure. Sometimes I have had glorious nights just me and a close friend and other nights, it has been me and 200 strangers and I feel the only variable has been my willingness to go out and have a good time. So, perhaps there is some truth that it is all in an attitude.

Nevertheless, I can remember countless times where I have stepped out of my house, excited about the night ahead and without the momentum to sustain that attitude and those thoughts, the night has taken a rather shocking turn for the worst. I have willed nights to be better; I have sat down and analyzed my thoughts, trying to turn them towards a better cast and ultimately, I have failed.

In the end, I think I am just more willing to try this year. I have made my resolutions and I am resolved to stick to them. I am more open to pursuing opportunities when and where they arise and sometimes, I stepping outside of my normal strictures and doing things I would not have dreamed of in the past. I am still sometimes appalled at my behaviour. Not because I find the things I do reprehensible, but because it is so far outside of the way I have programmed myself to act that I feel as though I am being naughty. And, yet, if others I call friends do not mind and it has positive results, who am I to argue?

Thursday, January 27, 2011

According to Plan


I have plans; plans that are pretty cunning and plans that I am sure are bound to work out because I have planned them and thus, they are wonderful. I have also experienced the fact that while my plans are wonderful and the epitome of awesomeness, they sometimes do not work out. Which is fine, as long as plan B is available for me to move my planning abilities to.

What happens when plans get disrupted and there is no way to pick up the thread? What happens when everything you wanted for yourself suddenly becomes the very thing that you are not allowed to have? What if somewhere in the planning, you realize that the plans you made were not the plans that you really wanted? What then? Do the amazing plans go down the drain or do you shift the plans a little further to the right to fit more in line with what you want for yourself?

I have had my plans change and I have changed my plans. I have gone from plan A through plan B and C and D. But in the end, I always have a plan. Because I am much too structured to feel comfortable not having a plan. And even when I am being spontaneous, I still have a plan. So, here is to a plan well-laid and a plan that works. And most importantly, here is to plan that make not always work but will always be there to guide me

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

I Got A Feeling

To a lovely lady:

You are one of those people that I consider integral to the life that I lead now. You have become a confident, a shoulder to lean on, an ear to listen to my troubles and my woes, a companion in laughter and a friend in my solitude. And for all these things, I call you friend. And for all these reasons, your life will be intertwined with mine for a long time. Before I knew you, I am not sure how I managed without you in my day to day actions. And now that I do, I can not imagine a time or a place where you won't be there, whether by my side or in my heart.

And so here I am, writing thoughts down as I have them because for all that you mean to me, I can not comfort you in your time of distress. I am not sure what are the best words to say, and I am trying to be there for you, but somehow my presence is not as much of a help as a hindrance. I know best to leave you alone, but I also know that right now, you need to be outside yourself. I feel helpless and lost and need guidance when I know you have none to give. Or none to spare. This time, I do not think the distinctions matter any.

Right now, I wish that it had been me. I wish that it had happened to me and I was the one going through this. The doubt, the self-recriminations, the blame, the guilt, the shame. The feelings of failure. All that I think I could have borne upon myself. But I can not bear to see you suffering what I wish were mine to bear. I know that this is a moment, I know that you have nothing to blame yourself for. That all the things we tell you are true and that in time, you will come to believe what we say. But I also know that now is not the time to believe or to hear or to let anything pierce the shell of your feelings.

So I write this to let you know. I write this to have you remember when this is past. I write this as a testament to the friendship and kinship I feel for you. I write this because sometimes we need to say things that we can not tell others. And I write this as a memory, a reminder of all the things I mean to say and hope I finally have the chance to, when everything is quiet and still in your heart.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

How I Feel

I thought it would be good to spend a little more time thinking about love. So many things today have reminded me of how loved I am and how much I love other people. Maybe it is all the pink and red and hearts that seem to be everywhere, or maybe I am sticking to my resolutions and in my own way, finding a happy place that seems more rosy and lovely, but I am in love with life. And I am in love with love. And while I still am a ways off from falling in love with the idea of being in love, I could see that state of bliss would have its uses.

It is rare for me to speak from the heart, as I am so used to just speaking from the head. I am used to thinking about and analyzing and wondering, instead of just feeling. Probably because in the past. I have found that just feeling leads to a whole lot of trouble and very little reward. Yet, today, right now, I just feel. Because I feel happy for what the first time in what seems like a very long time. I have picked myself up and decided to become a little more carefree with my life, and with it has this incredible sense of well-being, if not being well.

I am finding that I am not only happy, but I am also feel a bit more positive. I am feeling like my outlook on life is sky high, instead of down in the dumps. I am not sure why, I am not sure how, but for now, I am happy to ride the feel good train and experience that sense of self-satisfaction that reminds me what a lovely person I am; what a lovely person I have become and what a lovely person I have yet to be.

Monday, January 24, 2011

I Believe in a Thing Called Love


I feel like it is one of those days where I am hitting the high notes: the sun is shining, the weather is beautiful - not too warm, not too cool and the humidity is still high, but manageable. I am making plans: eating a little healthier in general, thinking about hitting the gym later and making plans for what else I need to do for the week.

And in all of this, I have been thinking about love. It does not help that at the moment I am also currently obsessing about one of the BBC period dramas that they do so well, with all its intrigues and love-crossed lovers and everything else. It has me not necessarily longing for a time when actions and words carried more weight and more subtlety than they do these days, but it definitely has me longing.

I guess this may also be a symptom of Valentine's day fast approaching (again. The yearly treat to make you reassess your relationship status, whatever it may be) but I have been thinking alot about love. I have been thinking about how much love I have for my friends and how loved I feel by the tiniest gesture because I know it comes from some place marvelous. I have been thinking about being in love and what that means to me and thinking about whether I still feel as though I am not the marriage type. Hell, that I am not the commitment type. I do not want to say that I am reexamining all the things I thought true about myself, but I am looking them over. Making sure that they are still valid and that I still want the same things I did years ago.

I have been thinking about how love can change, for both the good and the bad. About how some people grow stronger and more secure and others seem to fall apart and fall aside in their love. I am thinking about how love can linger, well past the actual feeling -t hat catch in your heart or the jump in your throat. But it lingers and stays, like an indelible tattoo emblazoned on your soul, on you mind, on your heart. Where ever it is that love truly lies. I have been thinking about the small and the big, but most of all I have been thinking about how grand it all is. And, that even after all this time, I still believe in love, even if sometimes it feels like it does not believe in me anymore.



Sunday, January 23, 2011

Androgyny


I seem to be having a moment. I have spoken before about how much of a guy's girl I am. Of how I tend to gravitate towards things that would be considered more masculine and how sometimes I just do not seem to see the point (or get pleasure) from the things that are considered feminine: romance movies and getting all gussied up and etc and etc and etc. Sure, I do enjoy those things once in a while. Who does not love sometimes going away from the norm and surprising people and surprising yourself.

But I am having a moment where I am embracing the gender trend. Maybe it is being influenced too much by the television that I watch (hello, Dr. Who fan) or maybe there is something fun about playing up curves in clothes that should not contain curves, but I am whole-heartedly embracing menswear. So I am looking forward to rocking up to work tomorrow and working the suit pants with braces (I would call them suspenders but that just makes me think of very girlie wear) with some lovely deco-style satin high heels and a nicely pressed button down.

It is these little things that make me feel happy on a day to day basis. The little things I do that make me feel like I embracing the things I love and maybe pushing the envelope a little. I feel that after thirty years on this earth, I should be able to know exactly what I am all about. But it seems like I am still trying to figure myself out a bit. From what catches my fancy style wise to the person I think I really am. And this year seems to have been all about pushing my boundaries - from trying out shorter hairstyles to lusting and buying things that seem so far beyond what I think I would want, but finding a way to work them into my closet. And eventually, my life.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

What Hurts the Most


I have often wondered what is the worst part of being in love. Whether it is the feeling of suddenly putting someone else's needs and wants over your own, which seems counter intuitive for survival, or whether it is the way that we suddenly abandon all the things that are routine for some a new, scary role: significant other.

Or is the worst part of being in love that moment where you realize that you are no longer in love? I am reminded of it because of a close friend of mine. While words can only convey so much, just the opening sentence has left me thinking of all the times I have been in love - the times where I have wanted and craved someone more than I thought possible and the moment where I realized that no matter how much I felt towards them, no matter how much I cared for them, the way things were going would never make us happy and we could never be more than a 'you and I' situation. And I walked away. Or, if I was lucky, I was walked away from.

Thinking about it, that does seem to be the worst part of love. The part where love is lost. And yes, I have known people who find it again. Who manage to works through all the possible situations that can dim and sometimes extinguish what we feel for another person, but most of the time, I think it just fades and dies. I think falling out of love is perhaps the most hurtful part of any relationship. Because it takes time. Because in the flash of memory, years later and continents away, a flash of a memory can make you fall in love all over again - with the idea of the person that you cared for - and then you have to work through falling out of love all over again.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Chicken or Egg?

I am weirdly having a situation whereby you think something (or rather, resolve to something) and it happens. But I am stuck here wondering which is it - chicken or the egg? Would the situation I am currently ruminating about have happened even if I had never decided I needed to be more proactive? Or is it because I actually was proactive about it that I am now in a little bit of a predicament?

So, one of the new year's resolutions was to have a little more fun and get out more often. So, I have been accepting invites and sometimes sending out some of my own by getting in touch with my friends that I do not see enough of by any estimation. It has been slow and sometimes, there are times that I really just want to stay in and read a good book or catch up on some television shows that I have been longing to see.

It is next weekend, though, that has me pulling my heart out and pondering how best to schedule 48 hours and making it last for more than 96 (yes, I am talking about doubling it). It seems that as soon as I decided to be bold and buy some tickets for my mom and I to spend the evening enjoying one of her activities (i.e. listening to Barry Manilow in concert), I had the option of attending a VIP Burlesque evening (and if you know nothing else about me, you'll know that the later is the kind of thing that I live for. Hello, chance to wear corsets and high heels!). If I thought two options were bad that weekend, I have since been invited to a free whisky tasting event, a birthday party for a close friend's daughter (nothing so fun as cake and kids, especially when you get to take some of the cake home and the kids get to be cute around you, until you are tired of it), and plans to meet up with a friend in West Palm. So, yeah, it looks like it might be a pretty busy weekend and I wanted to live a life that was a little more exciting, but hectic was not what I planned. Oh, well, c'est la vie!


Wednesday, January 19, 2011

For the First Time

I sometimes feels a bot at odds with the rest of the world whenever I trawl through my closet. Funnily enough, unlike everyone else, when I buy an item I have been coveting, I have a difficulty moving from the stage of wanting and lusting for something completely fabulous and moving into the wearing and making myself fabulous because of the procured item. So, inevitably, I will - perhaps years down the road - look at it and realize that perhaps I should actually try to incorporate it into my wardrobe instead of simply loving it from afar. Or, at least, from a position nowhere on me.

There is something a little exciting about putting on a new shoe or shirt or whatever else it may be, especially if it was a lust worthy item at one point. There is the satisfaction of knowing that you finally got what you really wanted. The thrill of a hunt completed and a final feasting at the table of fabulous, you might say. To me, there is also that small part of me that hopes other people see the new item and think it is as wonderful and note worthy as I did. But more importantly, I always hope that some new item finally being introduced into my wardrobe will be come something that becomes an essential part of it.

To me, there is not anything more disappointing than putting on a new pair of shoes and realizing that it is almost impossible to hobble more than a few steps in them or putting on a new item of clothing and spending most of the time wearing it constantly readjusting and tugging and twisting and generally, feeling uncomfortable. Basically, it is that deflated feeling of realizing that the item you wanted and longed for just does not become you. Whether it is because it does not fit (and having purchased some items of clothing years before finally wearing, that sometimes happens to me) or because it actually is not you anymore. It just does not reflect the person you know you are and you have become.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Oh No!

In walking over to the dining area with some of my work colleagues, I realized that I do not seem to possess that special type of girl relationship with any of my friends and I am feeling a bit left out. Not really jealous, as I at the same time as realizing that I did not seem to have perfected the knack of the female conversation, also realized that I would probably be dead bored in all of two seconds (which I was by all the nattering) and have to just walk away (which I also did).

So what is the art of the girl conversation you may ask? It seems to open with a positive compliment or two, normally focused on said outfit or how wonderfully thin said girl appears to look. So, then I guess opening with a hug and exclaiming how long it has been is no longer appropriate. Or clearly needs to be followed up with ego stroking. Which I am just not good at. I do not think it is because I find my friends repulsive trolls or something of the sort but more because I think all my friends are beautiful. So what is the point of complimenting them on something that should already be quite apparent (and is, to anyone with eyes to see)?

My second failure seems to be in the understanding that positive compliments require immediate and complete disavowal when girls are having a tête-à-tête. While my inclination is normally to undermine anything nice that someone has to say about me, I have learned to fight the impulse and actually just graciously accept the compliment. So why, in the course of any relationship, should I have to undervalue myself by denying that the clothes I wear are in fact, fabulous, and the curves I bring the table desirable? Even more so, why should I undervalue myself and then turn around and tell you how wonderful you are compared to me? That truly does seem to be the rule for girly interacting. The prescribed pattern: one person starts with a compliment which is turned down and the countered with a different compliment that ups the ante. What’s the point? Are we bonding over how hideous we think ourselves to be? And why? How does that even make sense? If you truly think you are that hideous/unlovable/troll-like, why would should you also believe that anyone would want to be friends with you?

I sometimes am just no good at the whole girl thing. In a different life, I might even have been a male as so many ways I think and approach the world just do not seem to jive with the ‘feminine’ way. But I do not consider myself some freak of nature; I just thank my lucky stars that my family thought it wise enough to teach me how to be a good person who thinks for herself, and most importantly, value herself, than playing into some culturally accepted form of brainwashing.

Monday, January 17, 2011

You've Got a Friend

It has been one of those days where I am always surprised by the people that I know. Most of the time, I know that there are people who love me and I can call friend, but it never really feels like that because so many of them are so far away and for the ones that are close by, our lives are in such divergent streams, it feels like they may as well be a million miles away for all the good it sometimes does me.

So a day like today is rare. Where I can sit down with three of my good friends (it could have been four but a last minute plan means less people may be able to make it a part of theirs) and just have a good laugh, talking about the mundane. Pets and life and snow and whatever else crossed our minds. And chocolate (so, yes, definitely some very good friends indeed). I have forgotten how nice it is to just be out with people, experiencing something new and finding something wonderful in Miami (of course, north Miami since everything further south seems to just feel a bit tainted). I have missed that and I need to ensure that more opportunities like that find themselves to me (or, if it is not about the opportunity finding me, but me creating it, then I need to be more proactive).

The other thing that has amazed me recently about my friends is how appreciative they are of the little things. I have been brought to tears by messages that my friends sent me within the past few weeks, just checking in but also letting me know that things I do mean so much to them and why. It touches my heart to know that the people who matter to me are also the people I matter to, because there is nothing more true than friends are hard to find. And, perhaps I should add, all the more precious when you realize that you have them.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Vogue


Yesterday's post (and happenings) has me thinking about what my fashion edict is. I do not think that most days I dress like a rock star/fetish queen but the boots I bought yesterday (see 01/15/2011 blog) states otherwise. I do not lie when I saw I wanted these boots as soon as I saw them. I did not think they would not be practical. I did not think I would never wear them. And when I saw them, I thought they clearly echoed the sentiment of the person I am.

When I think about my closest though, I do not really think it is riddled with lace and leather and lots of jackets with studs and zippers. I do not eve think of myself as a particularly tough person. Yet, when ever I peruse fashion journals or style guides, the styles that always speak to me are a little bit rock, and a whole lot of roll. Which seems strange as I look back through pictures of myself. If anything, my day to day style seems more preppy and less hipster; More traditional, less pushing the boundaries.

So why do the boots exemplify who I am? I have been thinking about it as I try to plan how to pull the boots into my wardrobe. Clearly, these won't be the type of shoes that I lug into work in. Instead, these are the shoes I might pull on with a more traditional skirt and tights to make it a little more glam. I am even thinking it would be great to wear with the CK cocktail dress that I have hanging up in my wardrobe, just waiting for a night out and a suitable occasion. I am thinking they would be fun under jeans, as a sort of quiet rebellion or maybe being all our rocker with a lace top (yes, I do own some though I seem to wear them more dainty than rock), velvet shorts, tights and boots.

In the end, my feeling is that I am less of a fashion follower and more of a chameleon. There are certain styles I adore and most of these styles have a little bit of edge and darkness to them (hence, my love of all things goth) but at the same time, I know when to wear certain things and what is professional and what is for fun. So the boots will stay buried in the closet - albeit in the front - and I will wear my button downs and my trousers, but with every foray into my closet, remembering the rebel yell that dwells within my heart.

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Do You Really Want To?


I am generally not impractical. Except for when it comes to certain things (or, in my case, certain thing). I tend to crave shoes. And right now, I am craving a pair of dangerously high, dangerously skinny, dangerously heavy boots from Pour La Victorie. Every since I saw them in the discount chain near me, I have wanted them but at $250 dollars, it felt a little rich for a moment of insanity for pretty, pretty shoes that I could admire.

But, having watched the price drop lower and lower on clearance, they are now at a price point where all I want to do is scoop them up and take them home to be adored (and possibly even worked into the wardrobe; though right now, all I can think is jeans which takes away from the awesomeness of the shoes). So, what is it about shoes - and about these boots in particular - that make me a little insane in the membrane???

For one thing, I think that these boots speak to the person I would like to believe I am when I am out and about. Fun loving, tough, sexy but strong. And I feel like perhaps owning these shoes and wearing these shoes would let others realize the person that I know myself to be. But the other thing that makes me go Gaga for these shoes (and yes, that is Gaga in the right sense!) would be that these shoes are wonderful. They are statement. And they are the epitome of fabulousness - the kind of shoes you would see on some starlet at some party, being all gorgeous. And I feel that that is so me!

Friday, January 14, 2011

Graphic Arts


This may be a good thing, it may be a bad thing, but I find that these days, I am even more of a geek than I have ever been. Beyond getting the random sci-fi references and spending most Saturday nights glued to a television screen - devouring the latest version of a British import of fabulousness (whether it is time lords or prehistoric anomalies, I am your girl!) - I am now drawn to all things comic. Not fall down, slapstick comic. Rather, graphic novels or what we used to call back in the day simple "comic books".

I have always been a fan of comic books - having grown up with two older brothers, especially one who was a big fan of the adventures comics, I know most of the back story (up to about the early nineties) for most of the heroes of the DC and Marvel Universe. But these days, almost every new idea seems to come from graphic novels. I seemed to fall into it when I found out that one of my favourite authors also had a graphic series. So, boom, I was off to the library and ordering copies of the Sandman series. Next, it was following my television series of all time - Buffy, of course - into the realm of the comic world in order to see what the new season held.

From there, it was a short jump into other interesting story lines that grabbed my attention and would have, whether the format had been comic or otherwise. Bone, Fables, reinterpretation of the classics - you name it, I am reading it. I also have family members who are introducing me even further into the world. Someone like me who likes to read, who would sometimes choose to veg with a good book rather than be out and about with the real world. And so I am learning about the Living Dead (also a television series now) and AtomicRobo (part of a rather wonderful christmas present that tied together my love of books, the comic arts and all things Fortean). So, hello geek girl. Welcome to the world of "oh, wow! We thought she was cool"

Thursday, January 13, 2011

The Gift


I find myself in a good mood today; probably because I have the day off tomorrow and I am at the start of a long weekend with lots of possibilities before me. As stressful as the last week has been, I am glad to have the time off. I feel as though I completely wound down as soon as I stepped away from the office and it helps that I put the music on loud and my foot down hard on the accelerator on my way home. Nothing says weekend like a little speed and a lot of singing along to good songs.

Short but sweet tonight. More tomorrow.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

The Sad but True Story...

I have this sinking feeling that I am unhappy. You would think it would be one of the things I would either be able to know for sure or not, but I actually do not. Yet I seem to have all the hallmarks of heading towards a long patch of unhappy. So, you may ask, what are some of the warning signs I have been noticing? Let me give you a breakdown:
1) I am more anxious than I normally feel. Normally, I can control the level of anxiousness and talk myself our of feeling worked up. But it is getting harder. I am operating on a level where by even the slightest thing has me convinced that I am on my way out the door - whether it is my career or my friendships or whatever is important to me. And feeling that level of anxiety is normally a good sign that my mood is moving from euthymic to downwards spiral.

2) I find it hard to sleep. I am not just talking about a lack of sleep (which, based on the evidence, would actually push me into a more positive mood) but just having a sleep schedule that does not have any order to it. So, somedays (normally the weekends), I will sleep late, wake up, take a stretch, and then fall asleep some more. Weekdays - it is more of a struggle to fall asleep at a decent time and staying asleep some type of miracle. For some strange reasons, even despite the interrupted sleep, I still wake before the alarm, feeling burned out but yet wide awake - and normally - perplexed (weird dreams and all).

There are many more signs, I am sure, that I could prattle on and on about; perhaps the kind of thing I will get into at a later date but all in all, there are signs. On the plus side, most of my resolutions are designed to get me out of my headspace, which is normally what contributes to the lowered mood. Recognizing the fact that there are little sign posts on the way and what it might mean is another way I feel like I am actually getting a grasp on my life and the way I feel, instead of suddenly being surprised when I am in the middle of a full blown despair. After all, knowing is half the battle.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Fake Plastic Trees


I am having a random day whereby my thoughts are not flowing at all and does not seem to follow from any of the other topics I have touched on in the last two weeks or so. Yes, I still have people on the brain but not as much as I possibly should have (or at least, as much as I used to). I have made a dent on the new year's resolutions, even booking some activities for further down the road but still nothing to chirp about every time I accomplish one little thing. And the job is going well; I like it, I love my colleagues, I wish I could be making a little more money but then again, who does not.

Nope, the only thing on my mind is the connections that you make and the connections that you break. I am thinking about the exes that are still "friends" in the virtual world but are not actually people I could imagine taking the time to meet should I ever be in the same place as that person. So why stay connected? Why remain in that person's life when that person has made it clear - through non-communication or other methods - that you are not in theirs.

But oddly enough, the connections I have made are important to me, even that ones that have been dropped or the ones that are tenuous at best. Staying connected is a good way of reminding me why they are not still in the inner circle. Staying connected is my quick and easy way of reminding myself (better than a pinch to the wrist) of what I need in my life and what I can do without. Connections, even the bad ones, are all about the world you live; about the world you choose to make for yourself.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Nine to Five


It is one of those days where the only thing on my mind is work: I came in early, sat through lunch at my desk - working on the latest problem, and now I am at home, taking a little break before I sit down to review some work I brought home and thinking about how early I want to get up and get in.

I have also had a nice chat with a fellow colleague about that feeling that you have become complacent in a job; about wanting the chance to seek out something that makes you happy and also makes you not want to keep seeking the ever elusive "next". About the skills we have and about how hard it sometimes is to just sit down and do the things we know we should, because we are somewhere safe and good. How sometimes being fired can be your best friend, because at least it forces you to find what it is you want.

And somewhere between these two extremes, I realized something. I love my job. It is hard and often thankless. It can get weary and sometimes, I want nothing more than to make a snide remark or just let someone know how I really feel. And most days, I can not. So I hold it in, vent to colleagues and bosses (the latter more rarely) and I suck it up. But for all that, I get a certain satisfaction from knowing that I am doing well. That I am still doing something I love - working in research - but at the same time, I am not tied to writing reports and running stats and all the things I loved but really could not see myself doing for the long haul. But just because I love what I do, I have realized it still does not mean that I should become complacent and just let the things I want - that ever onwards upwards better part of me - bask in this level of ennui.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Living Out Loud


It has been a quiet weekend; one of those weekends where all I want to do is just kick back and catch up on all the things that I have been putting off. For me, this weekend has been about relaxing at home, reading books that I am excited about (this time, it is revisiting some favorites), and enjoying some of the offerings on television. It truly has been a lazy weekend and I figure I can always make my weekend more exciting next week, when I am off for an extended break.

But this lazy weekend also has me thinking: am I staying true to my resolutions? I did say I would live my life, get out more often and enjoy all the activities and excitement out there. The thing is, I do not feel like I am somehow failing in my resolutions (not quite yet). I am a homebody at heart and have my moments where I want to be social and see other people but for the most part, this counts as a perfect weekend. I have not felt stressed by making plans and keeping plans; dealing with the craziness of Miami traffic, and all the myriad other things that causes my blood to boil on an almost daily basis.

But having spent this weekend at home, I am now happy to seek out some plans for next weekend. With a little planning and some friends who are free and willing to make a fun time of it. So perhaps this is the balance I have been looking for. A way to keep my resolutions, but not stray so far away from the things that also center me to the person that I am, the person that I have strived very hard to become. So, I am looking forward to planning some fun times next weekend and for the coming year. My social calender needs a little jolt and the only person who can supply the needed juice is myself. So, here is to jump starting my social life this new year; I will let you know how it goes.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

KarmaChamelion

I have been thinking much too much recently, but some thing struck me recently. I probably need to provide a little backdrop, so here goes: It is a new year and I have decided that to stick to the resolutions that I have for myself this year, I have to make changes. Some changes are small - I am trying to eat better and while still not having made it to the gym (I blame it on the early mornings I have been putting in at work), I feel good about myself. I have made an effort to look more professional every day that I am work, which means more button downs and heels at work. And looking more professional to me also means making sure my make-up is in order, which recently has meant actually using foundation that I have invested in, instead of dialing it in with a light tinted moisturizer and some lip gloss.

And the small changes seem to make a big impression. Big enough that a couple of persons have asked me what is different about me. Because there seems to be something (according to friends and colleagues) but something that they can not seem to put their finger on. So, I have been riding this wave of being in a new year, of making it a great year, and sort of trying to work through all the feelings and thoughts I have been having about loved friends and friends I love (not the same thing). And I post to facebook an innocent little status about how amazing I am. The funny thing??? Some friends I have not heard from in ages, friends who seem to not communicate as much, came out of the woodwork and applauded (which on Fb is "liking") my current state of mind.


The thing is, it has made me consider that perhaps there is some truth to just believing that you are beautiful/smart/wonderful/wanted/etc/etc and the rest of the world seeing you that way. The people who know me, even if slightly, seem to respond well when I am most confident. When I am feeling down on life and down on myself?? Friends seem to be few and far between. At least, when I am being public about what I am feeling and thinking. So perhaps I need another resolution. One to project the lovely lovable person I am at all times; to believe that I am amazing and to make sure that those around me know it, because then maybe all the things that I am wanting and looking for in life just require an attitude adjustment.