Showing posts with label self-reflection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label self-reflection. Show all posts

March 28, 2011

No One Said It Would Be Easy

About two months ago, when I felt myself emerging out of the funk that had been the six months before, I had all sorts of plans laid out before me.  I had goals about my health, fitness and nutrition, about writing and being more creative, about dedicating time every day to checking in with myself, about appreciating my loved ones more.  I had come up with practices and habits that would help to make me into the version of me I wanted to be.  And I was excited about it.

It's the feeling you get when you first begin any new project.  Things are shiny and new and interesting and you're curious about how it will all turn out.  You make the necessary time to dedicate to this project before all else and you make it work.  For maybe a week.  And then life happens.  And all of a sudden, there's no more time, no more excitement.  Things get back-burnered or put off altogether, and soon you're right back where you started.

And in my case, this is when you start feeling totally disappointed in yourself.  I always seem to take it harder when it's myself letting me down, mostly because I know the choices that went into whatever decision led to the letting-down and I can't ignore the fact that it was mostly just laziness (which is the saddest excuse for anything in the history of the world, by the way).

But this time I'm trying to remind myself that there's something to be said for the fact that this was never supposed to be easy, and it's definitely not supposed to happen overnight.  When you're overhauling your entire life and working to change the very reasons behind your bad habits, set-backs are expected.  When the new habits you're trying to pick up are the exact opposite of everything you're used to doing, you're not going to be comfortable with them right off the bat and you have to leave yourself some wiggle room, cut yourself some slack.  I'm trying to remind myself that this is a process, that it's a bit like trying on clothes -- I'm looking for the right fit, and not everything I pull off the rack the first time around is going to look the way I want it to.  So I just have to put it back and pick something else up (or buy it anyway and get it altered, but enough with this analogy).

So it's okay that I worked out only 2 days during the week when I meant to work out 5 days.  Especially when I rarely ever worked out before that.  And it's okay that I stopped journaling every single day, or haven't been able to cut out all that many calories from my diet.  It's okay that I haven't accomplished every single one of my goals yet.  Yet.  The important thing is to not give up, to not throw in the towel and consider it a lost cause.  Because there are no lost causes (now there's a cliche for you, and you're welcome).  So I'm going to do my best to re-inspire and re-motivate myself this week, and to try and pick up where I left off.

What re-motivates you when you find yourself lagging behind?  Music?  Are there certain songs that just completely invigorate you?  Talking it out with someone?  Having impromptu dance parties in inappropriate places?  Would love to hear any suggestions!

March 10, 2011

Letter To My Younger Self

I've been wondering lately about the things in my life I would have done differently if I had the chance.  There aren't that many since I'm a pretty  firm believer that everything happens for a reason, but there are still things I would have liked to tell myself, bits of comfort I would have liked to both offer and receive.  But since time travel is -- as far as I can tell -- impossible, here you go.  The letter I wish I could send to my younger self.

Dear 12-year old me,

Ugh.  Well, here you are, 12 years old and hating just about everything right this second, huh?  You've been dreading this year for a while now, I know.  Mostly because you've been terrified of the changes that you saw coming and the uncertainty it was introducing into your once-stable childhood.  That's why I thought this would be the right time to send this letter.  So here goes!

First, I need you to know that I love you.  And so, by default, somewhere deep down you love yourself too.  I know things seem difficult in your life right now and it's hard to see the good in yourself sometimes, but I promise you that there will come a day in the not-so-distant future where you'll be able to look at yourself honestly in the mirror and say those three magical words.  So again, I love you.  (Go ahead, close the bedroom door and yell it.  No one will here you.  I'll wait....Done?  Okay, moving on.)

Now that that's out of the way, there are a few things I wanted to tell you, things I think you should know and things that will make life so much easier and enjoyable for you over the next several years.  Please bear with me (and no rolling your eyes).

I guess I'll start by saying that you need to stop telling mom that you hate her for sending you away to boarding school.  Cut her some slack.  She did this for your own good and you're going to realize that.  So tell her the truth instead.  Tell her you love her, and tell her you're homesick and you miss her more than anything.  She'll cry, you'll cry, and soon you'll move on.  I promise you that you'll move on, so stop hurting yourself the way you are thinking that no one knows.  I know.  And it needs to stop because you have way too much to live for.  That boarding school is one of the best things that has ever happened to you, and in a few months (yes, only months) you'll hit your stride and the next six years of your life will fly by before you even know it.  And you'll regret wasting your time now on tears.

Speaking of the next six years, here's some advice: Cherish those friendships you're making, because they really are going to last you a lifetime.  Call home and talk to your sisters often, because they are and will always be little pieces of you that you'll ache for sometimes.  Also, when shit gets hard, and it will in a couple of years, don't be afraid to get help.  Fast.  Talk things out, be honest, and accept that things will be alright -- especially when you rid your life of toxic people.  Those friendships I told you to cherish?  You'll know which ones they are by the people you run to in the middle of what feels like worst year of your life so far.  And after that storm passes comes some pretty amazing times (uh, just don't let your infatuation with that one boy define your life for so long.  He's cute, yeah, but come on....he's not that cute).  And don't worry so much about your family -- they'll be fine, no matter where they are in the world.

Then your life will simply open up as you head to college.  It's wonderful, it's crazy, it's life-defining and will make you into the person you want to be.  You travel...can you imagine?  You get to see parts of the world you've only ever dreamed of.  You study wonderful, interesting things, you make even more life-long friends, you create memories that will make you smile years after they've happened.  You learn to live in your life instead of somewhere in your fantasy future -- that's so, so important.  And you fall in love.  With that loves comes a lot of new situations for you, a lot of choices you'll have to make, a lot of firsts.  I know you think you know your own mind right now, but I want you to know that, when you choose to follow your heart instead, don't be so afraid.  It may be a roundabout way of getting to where you're going, but you'll manage.

Here's a little suggestion though: when considering your next steps after college, don't be so scared of leaving academia for a while.  Because if you let that fear make this decision for you, you may regret it for years to come.  Follow your heart, follow your mind, don't be afraid to stray from The Path that you've set before you -- detours are where the real value of life is found.  So wander a little bit, and just see where you end up.  You have Big Dreams, and you should dedicate your life to following them.

So here's one last, gentle request: please be kinder to yourself.  You can't be perfect because perfection just doesn't exist.  What you can be is honest and true and good.  So brush and floss twice a day, exercise as much as you can, eat well, live green, study and keep in touch with friends and colleagues, spend quality time with your loved ones and don't let them pick up after you.  Get out of that job you hate as fast as you can, write often and laugh a lot.

Can't wait to see where we end up,
Soon-to-be-27-year-old-me

March 4, 2011

Break My Heart for What Breaks Yours

My worldview in the past several months has admittedly been a little more narrow than normal.  I've been so concerned about my own health and peace of mind that the concerns of others -- even those I love -- have necessarily taken a backseat.  I know I tended to think of it like hoarding my resources.  I've often said that I already felt stretched so thin and so unsure that I could pull myself through a particular situation that there really was just no room for me to worry about others.  I had this fear that if I did, I would simply break apart and scatter.

I'm embarrassed by that now, because we're often told that it's that very sort of mentality that plagues humanity overall...a selfishness and self-centeredness that we can't seem to escape.  And there it is, right in front of me, parading as reason when all it is is an excuse.

But no matter what I've said, I've haven't truly been able to get away from the worry and love and concern and feeling.  I've tried.  Believe me, I've tried, because feelings for me -- the sadness or hurt or fear or worry -- are often debilitating.  But when it's family or friends or the world we live in at large, it's actually much harder not to care than it is to care, isn't it?  The money troubles of our parents or siblings, the political and societal unrest in our country and others, the broken hearts of our best friends.  Hell, the the fact that we don't think we care enough.  All these little worries.  And that's not even touching upon all that's worth celebrating.

So it's often a little confusing when I come across people whose moods are overall just...lukewarm.  I've always been a pretty expressive person, passionate about things big and small (and meaningful and stupid), given to quick opinions that I later have to retract.  I try to show my interest in the interests of others by being excitable and humorous.  I quickly throw myself wholeheartedly into either a sympathetic or devil's advocate position and have no qualms about switching sides if necessary after testing the waters.  I find that life is so much more fun and worthwhile when those around me know that their feelings touch mine.

I don't always succeed in living this way, but I try to.

I'm sorry, I know this post is a little convoluted.  But I guess that's sort where my mind is right now...fuzzy and a little unsure of why the world works they way it does, why people can show an interest in human rights causes thousands of miles away but not in the interests of those they interact with daily.  Why has "Whatever," and "I don't care," become such standard answers to almost every question? How does that serve anyone, yourself included?

So I guess it just comes down to me realizing that I'd much rather be freaking out over how the hell I'm supposed to care about the thoughts and feelings of every single person on earth and still keep myself from going out of my mind, than to protect myself so completely that I become numb to all of the little things in life.  I'd much rather people think and know that I care  and that I'm interested than the other way around.

I want to live my life by actually being an active participant in it.  Wouldn't you?

February 3, 2011

On Snowballs and Allowing Things to Change

The last week has been a really interesting one.  It's been full of introspection, allowing myself to try new things and doubt things I thought were practically set in stone.  I've given myself permission to make mistakes and be wrong and actually admit it.  I've spent more time paying attention to Nate and our relationship than I think I have in a while, and it's made me feel simultaneously really great and really guilty.  I've let myself feel that guilt and deal with it rather than deny it or make excuses for myself or push those thoughts to a corner of my mind altogether where I wouldn't have to acknowledge it until it was too late.

I've begun letting myself Dream Big again.  And that's huge for me.

One of my biggest accomplishments lately has been in recognizing my own need for control, my fear of failure, and my tendency to snowball every little thing in my life until it becomes the end all, be all.  It's gotten to the point where, when I make even minor changes in my life, my best friends will say, "Okay now, don't snowball!"  I remember once during my freshman year in college when I was studying for finals for a class that, in the big scheme of things, really meant nothing to me and my future, my mother called.  I was stressed out about not having enough time to study and all of a sudden was hysterically crying to her that, if I didn't study, I would fail the exam, I would fail out of college, I would never get a degree, I would have to move home and work at McDonalds for the rest of my life, I would never get married, never have kids, and when I was old and decrepit, alone and homeless, I would die at the end of my miserable life.  At that point my mom couldn't help herself and she laughed -- I mean, wouldn't you?  I think that's when I shouted something like, "It's not funny, Mom!"

No one ever said I wasn't dramatic.

But that's sort of an indication of where my mind typically goes when I'm faced with possibly making the wrong choices, or when things don't go "according to plan" and I feel like I'm losing control of a situation (or my life).  But this past week has been an eye-opening experience for me as I let myself make some plans, change my mind, and be flexible all around.  Some pretty big decisions are being made and they completely fly in the face of whatever notions I've built in my head over the last year about what my life is supposed to be.  It's...liberating.  

I'm finding that it gets easier and easier to accept that moving one or two bricks will not make the whole house come tumbling down. 

January 19, 2011

Quarterlife Crisis, is that you? Still???

In around May of 2009, I entered what I later realized was the start of a very long quarterlife crisis.  I graduated from law school, figured out that I didn't want to become a lawyer, and lost sight of everything from there on out.   I started working in a job that had nothing to do with my major, let alone my law degree or even my interests.  I searched and searched for...I don't even know what.  Something that would click for me, you know?  Something that would make me feel the way I felt before entering the "real world," when I knew all the possibilities were still ahead of me and I was going to go out and, if not change the world than at least put my stamp on it.

I thought that I would get over myself by now.  I thought I would settle into my non-exciting life and feel...content.  I thought I would grow up, realize that those things I was hoping to find (like adventure, fulfillment, new experiences) were for 22 year olds still trying to decide whether they should take Art History 101 or Biochemistry 390.

Well, here I am in January 2011 and that still hasn't happened.  I'm still not exactly sure who I am or what I want or where I want or need to go.  I'm still not sure what kind of life I want to lead, where I want to lead it, or what I want to do while I'm living it.  It hasn't been easy these last few months, and I've found myself wondering what happened to me -- where did the girl I was, the girl I still hope I am at my core, go?

In the middle of all of this, I began stumbling upon blogs and websites by other women in their 20's who have been in or are going through similar situations, maybe not quarterlife crises, but feelings of being a little lost, a little unsure about their futures.  I can't tell you how wonderful and comforting it's been to find out that I'm not alone, I'm not crazy, and I'm not simply refusing to grow up.  One of these websites was Stratejoy (go check it out if any of this sounds even remotely familiar to you) which in hours began giving me inspiration and...hope.

And hope is pretty frickin' invaluable if you ask me.

One of the first things I read on the Stratejoy blog was a post about mind maps.  I'd never heard of a mind map before, but I immediately liked the sound of it.  Something in those words appealed to my organized nature, my desire to know myself a little better.  So, in the hopes of jump starting what I anticipate will be a lengthy journey toward rediscovering that girl I feel I lost touch with (read: myself), I decided to do a few things, the first of which was to create my very own mind map. 

So without further ado, here it is [as it stands today]:

October 5, 2010

Hardly Strictly a typical weekend

(A typical fraction of the crowd at the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival.  Photo found here.)

I've been trying to do different things lately to break up the sort of...habitualness of my life.  I think this feeling I've been going through lately of being stuck in places I'm not really satisfied with has stemmed from the fact that my life has fallen into a rut of sorts.  In the past, I've thought about ways to get out of the rut but I've never actually attempted to, instead just waiting it out until I began feeling content again.  

Not this time.  

I'm tired of complaining about things and not making any moves to change them (who wants to be that kind of person, anyway?).  That isn't who I am or who I'm used to being and it's a habit I really need to break.  So after a heated discussion with Nate (helpful and obvious hint: do not attempt to bombard your significant other with your own stress when he/she is stressed out beyond belief all on their own.  A fight will most likely ensue and no one will win.) and a chat with the best friend (another helpful and obvious hint: best friends make everything better.  Everything.), I've started to slowly but surely climb my way out of my rut.  This effort has taken the form of hanging out with my friends more, making an attempt to be more independent when planning my weekends, and doing things that are sort of out of the ordinary for me.

It's been interesting to find out that what's now out of the ordinary for my life was once pretty normal, and that I apparently used to know myself a lot better than I currently do.  It's kind of backwards, don't you think?  To be sure of yourself and happy and confident, then to grow unsure of yourself and less content and less confident as you get older?  Aren't we supposed to know our own minds more as the years go on and we mature?  Aren't we supposed to be become more settled and less restless?

Maybe all of these expectations and "supposed to's" are what's been getting me into trouble in the first place.

Anyhow, in trying to diversify what I do during my free time, I decided to head out to the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival this weekend in Golden Gate Park with Nate and a bunch of our friends.  Despite the 700,000 people that attended (no, that number is not a typo, there really were about seven hundred thousand people there) -- and you know me, I'm not the biggest fan of crowds and body odor -- I can't tell you how much fun it was to relax, listen to music (most of which I'd never heard before) and just feel like I was experiencing something new for a change.

I seem to constantly be in search of a new experience.

August 10, 2010

Less Emo, More Vagabond

I don't know a single person more confusing than myself.  Probably because I know myself the best, even though it often feels like I understand myself the least.  There's so much about me that seems like blaring contradictions, and so much that I would change if I could (but that I'm okay with being like at the moment).

I'm sorry, I know this is all very vague.

It started from a conversation I had with N. earlier tonight about emotion and my relationship with that facet of my character.  Growing up, I always thought I was incredibly attuned to peoples emotions and troubles; I was often the sympathetic ear they'd turn to, the counselor who would have that one piece of advice that made the puzzle piece fit, you know?  But at the same time, I was aware that when things got real, I got emotionally stunted.  This was never more clear to me than when my grandfather went into the hospital for the first time.  My sisters, my mother and I were all sitting in our living room crying, of course, when my mom reached over to comfort me and I instinctively shifted away from her.  I didn't want to be touched, I didn't want to be comforted (and I knew I was definitely not in the position to comfort anyone else).  I just wanted to be left alone with my fear and worry, left alone to sort through my emotions and come to grips with them before I could be with people again.

While some things have changed (i.e. I no longer think I'm the sympathetic ear or the go-to counselor), that need to be alone with myself when my emotions get the better of me remains the same.  It takes a lot for me to open up in any serious way.  Sure I'll reveal things about myself and let really personal information roll off my tongue like it's no big deal, but that's because for some reason -- to me -- whatever I've said really is no big deal.  But I tend to do all of my crying jags in the shower, with the music blaring so no one can hear.  And as N. said to me tonight, I sometimes take on a very traditional/typical male response to certain things in our relationship.  In fact, N.'s often the first one to say things like, "You know, when you say things like that it sort of hurts my feelings."  And I cringe at the words because all I want to do is roll my eyes toward the sky and say, "Ohmygod, are you serious?"  It's not because I don't understand that something I've done may have upset or hurt him.  It's because the way I tend to react to these sorts of things is by holding it in close to me, dealing with it, and then never mentioning it again.  I guess I see no need to talk things to death (which may seem odd, considering I have a blog in which I talk everything to death), or to reveal that much of myself that often.

This discussion between N. and I continued into a larger conversation about our differences and, specifically, if and how those differences will affect our future.  It's been weighing on my mind lately because I've been struggling with (and trying to ignore, perhaps) this side of my nature more and more often recently, but I finally got up the nerve to ask him some really big questions.  "Do you ever just want things to change?  Not necessarily because things can be better than the way they are, but just...because.  Don't you ever ask yourself what could become of your future if you just changed directions?  What if you lived in another city, had another job, didn't have a girlfriend?  Don't you ever wonder?  Don't you ever want more?"

And he said that he really didn't.  That he was satisfied with his life the way it was.  That the "more" I'm talking about didn't necessarily mean "better," so why jeopardize the life he has now?

But he also said that it's something he worries about because he sees those questions in me all the time.  This, again, is one of those confusing characteristics about myself that I'm finally acknowledging.  Growing up, I resisted change in every shape and form, mostly because the changes that I saw happening in my life were never of my choosing and I just couldn't bring myself to see past the immediate consequences to the eventual outcome.  Change was the enemy to a girl whose only hope and dream was to be stable.  Then something happened and I learned to cope with the change.  And as soon as I was old enough to start affecting the changes in my own life, I did so at every turn.  Now, instead of the girl who craves stability, you have a girl who's satisfied for a while, and then feels the need to uproot and replant herself somewhere else.

How does this play out in a relationship where one party is happy to stay rooted?  How do you reconcile these two conflicting needs?  What does it mean when even the girl is scared that she'll never be satisfied and will always need to replant?  Does it mean she just hasn't found her place yet?  Or does it mean something else entirely?

June 29, 2010

Not Another Empty Promise

I find myself writing posts like this fairly often: posts which list the things I want to start doing or the goals I've thought up for myself.  I write them almost once a month (if not more) but, unfortunately as has been my experience, I rarely seem to follow-through with these grand plans of mine.  As many of you may know by now, this is unlike me.  I generally don't not finish things and, in fact, I'm almost obnoxious in my stubbornness to see things through (case in point: law school).  But for some reason, when it comes to positive changes in my life that will benefit me most of all, I just can't finish.

To be clear, I don't think not wanting to do has ever been my problem.  I think, instead, my problem has generally been a slow decrease in motivation, in inspiration.  I don't often feel inspired (or remain that way for very long), and that's been a struggle I've had for a while now to the point where, when I try to do something or see something through (especially if that something is a creative project), it's felt forced.  And that's the last thing you want to feel when you're trying to create something organic and natural and beautiful.

But things have been a little different in the last couple of weeks, and I've felt inspired in a number of areas of my life.  Lately, people around me have been doing, have been living and having, and it's been wonderful to see and share in.  So wonderful, in fact, that I've realized I want it for myself, you know?  I want to do and live and have, and I want my inspiration, my happiness and satisfaction to be contagious to others as well.  And, most of all, I want these feelings to produce something fulfilling and sustainable.

Now, not all of these things (if any) are novel ideas for me.  As I've said, I write posts like this one a lot.  So instead of saying "here are the things I'm inspired to do," let me just say that these are some of the areas of my life that I'd like to continue to improve upon in a more active (much less passive) sort of way:

Taking control of my health and habits by recommitting to going to the gym (like blogging, my exercise habits were something that also suffered when work hit the fan), by paying more attention to the food I'm eating and, perhaps, beginning to make changes in my diet as well, and by living a more active, outdoor lifestyle (since being outside and away from cities has been one of the biggest stress relievers I've found in the last year or two). 

Seeking out opportunities for both graduate school (see yesterday's post), and other areas of my life that I've recently felt I've been neglecting.  For example, I've officially enrolled in a few community college night classes for the fall just...because (cultural anthropology and archaeology, in case you were wondering).  I've also begun researching the possibility of doing some of the things I highlighted a while ago when I wrote about the road less traveled.  I'm not sure how to work much of that into my current situation, but there's no harm in trying!  And finally, I found a job I'd actually like to apply for!  While this may not really sound like cause of celebration, this is a huge step for me, and it's finally one in the right direction. 

Recommitting to getting out of debt.  You may have noticed that I haven't recently written about blogging through my debt, and the reason is because it's been a real struggle lately to not get into debt (and, if I'm honest, I wasn't on the winning side of that struggle and am now several hundred dollars more in debt than I was a few months ago).

Paying more attention to the under-utilized creative half of my brain.  I'm not sure what this will entail yet because I've been wanting to do so many things lately (write, paint, redesign my blog, take a photography class, redecorate our house, bake), but I also feel like trying to do it all at once will be overwhelming and, in the end, unsuccessful.  So I'm taking a page out of N.'s book and focusing on only one of those things for a while before moving on.  I haven't yet decided what that one thing will be, but I plan on thinking it over and writing more about it in the next day or two.  To help me out with this last point in particular, I've decided to take part in a Creative Challenge, issued by Ashley over at Writing To Reach You.  If you're at all interested in reading about the Challenge or (hopefully!) taking part in it for the month of July, please head over to her blog and check out the details (ball gets rolling this week, so hurry!).  I'll post more about this soon!

What I'm hoping will come out of all of this is, funnily enough, not another blog post.  I don't want to find myself writing the same promises to myself in three months.  Instead, I want to be able to update you all on the progress I've made, on the things I've done, and on the new plans I have.  That, in and of itself, is the challenge I issue to myself: do something great, and follow-through!

January 13, 2010

a slave for you

i've been thinking a lot tonight about the way we, as humans and as habit-forming people, are ruled by our bodies.  it's actually something that crosses my mind quite often, simply because of the fact that my boyfriend is completely at the mercy of his body and, because we live and do most things together, that impacts my life almost on a daily basis.

for example, N. must eat breakfast in the morning.  he must.  he cannot under any circumstances miss the first meal of the day or it is a miserable experience being around him.  and i'm not talking about him getting your average, three-year-old type of uncomfortable.  it becomes nearly impossible for him to function and think about other things.  put simply: he's a grouch.  he also has to have exactly 8 hours of sleep.  eight.  no less, no more.  if he doesn't hit that exact amount, he'll more than likely wake up with a headache.

he is a slave to his body.

i, on the other hand, am almost -- almost -- at the exact opposite end of the spectrum.  i can skip breakfast any day of the week and not bat an eye-lash.  i can sleep anywhere from 4 to 14 hours in a day and still function relatively well.  i'll even go so far as to say that instead of my body training me, i'm usually the one exacting ridiculous (and not always healthy) things from it.

when i was in high school, there were many times when i'd use my body to train my brain to do, or not do, something.  i mean, it's fairly easy to punish your skin in order to condition your mind (again, i did say that these weren't my healthier habits), and i definitely did that.  i don't have the physical scars to prove it, thank God, but even now that i'm older and recognize how incredibly dangerous, unhealthy, and...deeper into my psyche the need to do those things is, there are times when my body still hesitates before doing something, or braces for what it thinks will come as a repercussion.  it's a strange thing.  almost like instead of being a slave to my body, my body is a victim to me, you know?

and there's always the usual bad habits and addictions: diet coke, lots and lots of carbs, not exercising, not eating at least 3 meals a day, etc.

i'm currently trying to steer away from what seems to be my predisposition to do what's easy and not healthy, and begin forming new and healthy habits for the new year and for my life.  it's not always easy to truly remain rid of the desire to fall back on what you know and what's worked and what's made you feel better in the short-term, so this will most likely be a struggle i continue to write about as i go along.

are you one of those people who tend to have certain rituals during the day that your body just requires you go through?  like, N.?  or are you more like me, a recovering bad-habit haver who's used the body as a tool rather than a temple?

December 31, 2009

out with the old, in with the new

it's strange to think about where i was in my life when this decade began (both literally, because i was at an nsync concert for new years even 2000, and figuratively, for every other reason).  things are so different now.  first of all, i was still in high school, with no idea where i'd even go to college, let alone that i'd end up in law school.  the thought of living for a few months in ireland or new zealand were dreams i had but never thought i'd actually get to do.  i probably had some vague expectation that i'd be married (or at least engaged), and have children by  now.  and i pretty much thought my life would be a straight shot from here to retirement.

i was, of course, wrong.

but the decade has been a busy one.  i graduated from high school, left hawaii, moved to washington, studied abroad in ireland and new zealand, met N. and fell in love for the first time, graduated from college, traveled around asia, moved to the bay area, began and ended law school, and had a mini-quarter life crisis.

let no one say i've been lazy.

and i have a lot to show for it, obviously.  i've had a good -- albeit, sometimes very tough -- decade, which seems to mirror 2009 as well.  this was the year to end probably the second hardest (if not hardest) three years of my life.  and on the heels of that came an equally difficult life re-evaluation.  but, as i sit at home in hawaii with my family around me and so much to be grateful for, i realize that the rewards of the decade and the year have been worth it.

so i'm going to close the first decade of the twenty-first century on an up note.  i am here, i am healthy, and i am happy.  the possibilities for my life abound and the foundation i have to lean on for support is stronger than i deserve.  i have a wonderful family, beautiful friends, and hope for my future.

what the world would be like if everyone were as lucky.

so here's hoping that you find yourself in a similar state this new year's eve.  thank you all for continuing to read about me and my life, and for your comments (which mean the world to me) and your support (which has been invaluable).  if, however, you find yourself reflecting back on years that have been more trying than you often thought you could bear, i truly hope 2010 brings you much-needed change, relaxation, and whatever else you may need.


happy new year's, friends!

November 2, 2009

my music makes my sister want to die

i grew up listening to hawaiian and local music which, while it doesn't have the same sound, has the same overall feel of country music.  they both have the same sort of family values, don't be disrespectful to women and your elders, i'll take my country over your city any day of the week, style.  so naturally, i also grew up listening to country music, thanks to my mother who was going through her CMT phase when i was going through my i-refuse-to-go-to-pre-school phase.  the first songs i remembered learning by heart include garth brooks's "friends in low places," and various songs by kapena, the ka'au crater boys, and robi kahakalau (who still has one of the prettiest voices i've ever heard).  to this day, i'm still a huge fan.

but when i went away to boarding school, my music preferences expanded to make room for teenage rebellion, angst, heartache, and ambition.  of course i went through my obligatory hip-hop schooling, during which i was introduced to the likes of 2pac, biggie, and yes, mark morrison ("return of the mack," anyone?  you know you listened to it too...).  but i found my level ground when i was in the 8th grade, and i began listening to o'ahu's alternative music stations.  there, i met my thirteen year old heart's soulmates.  bush.  live.  green day.  no doubt.  foo fighters.  everclear.  oasis. (i particularly remember falling asleep to "don't look back in anger").  blur.  i could go on and on and on...

and this genre has remained my go-to pretty steadily throughout the years, with the additions of singer-songwriter, folk, some punk along the way, classic rock, 90's rock, and what i like to call chick rock.

and then one day my older sister, A. (who's a fan of reggae, country and mainstream hip-hop), told me i couldn't choose a radio station in her car because all i listened to was, and i quote, "depressing music that makes you want to die."


...?...


i'm sorry, what?  my music makes you want to die?  i admit it, okay, i like emo, but that doesn't mean i'm the type to sit in a dark room, write poetry and cry all night long.  i just like music that makes you calm and contemplative, and yes, maybe a shade melancholy.  it's better than being obsessed with music that makes you horny and/or violent.  but ever since she told me that, i can't help but take a closer look at my music choices every time i purchase a CD, or make a pandora playlist, or put a song on repeat for the third of fourth time.  not that i think anything would be wrong with me even if i did like depressing music, but i think i just like music that makes you feel something at least.  again, other than horny or violent.

anyhow, this all came up because i'm working on creating a fall/winter playlist at the moment, and i just finished going through the first batch of songs to weedle them down.  yes, they are slow.  yes, they tend to evoke a less than uppity mood when listened too.  but just because they don't make you want to get up and dance around half naked like britney spears doesn't mean they're sad songs!  they just have a very fall-y feel to me, that's all.

none of my pink, kelly clarkson, marie digby, taylor swift or lady gaga songs fit the profile.


(click to see it larger)

October 27, 2009

happiness and adventure

i'm not a very creative personality.  i'm not artsy, or musically-inclined.  i don't write poetry or dye my hair crazy colors.  i don't play instruments, or garden, or even know how to put make-up on very well.  my wardrobe tends to be made up of solids and denim, and my more obvious areas of interest are very stable, secure, subdued interests in general.

the only thing i seem to really have that's somewhat "off" about my otherwise hum-drum personality is this strong current of wanderlust i've got running through me.

but it didn't always used to be like this.

i used to write, a lot.  i wrote poetry and short stories and observations for every day of the week.  i played instruments, too.  piano, ukulele, clarinet, violin, flute.  and there was a definite phase in my life where i dyed my hair colors my mother would cringe at.  i even wore prints and patterns!

and i just don't know what happened to that girl.  because she seems so far from who i am now.  i talk about her, and it's like describing a curious relation that i remember wanting to be like once upon a time.  the me i am right now idealizes her to some extent, because she was carefree and ambitious in ways that i'm not anymore.  yes, she wanted security, but she embraced the not having it just yet.  she understood that it would all come one day, and she enjoyed the time she had to be a little wild because she knew somehow that those years were numbered.

did i just grow up?  is that what we all do?  do we all put away our childish things and have that be that?  relegate them to a few pages in our photo albums to talk about at class reunions and with people who just can't believe you got that piercing, or that tattoo?  i think i've been trying to do that.  maybe because that's what i felt you did when you became an adult, when you graduated from college.  or maybe because i genuinely wanted to put away my childish things. 

but i don't anymore.  because what's so bad with being a little childish?  with maintaining that sense of wonder and fun?  i'm at a point in my life where i feel like i went from one extreme to another, and now all i'm left with is this life devoid of all creativity and fulfillment.  and it's taken me this long to realize that i can't live like that.  it wasn't just being an attorney that i didn't want, it was the fact that i felt like being an attorney left me no room to be any of the other things i wanted.  on the other hand though, when i imagine just picking up and leaving the country to roam the world and earn money as i go, i get so anxious i want to throw up, so that's obviously not what i want either.

it's the balance of the two that i'm looking to strike.

so yes, i still want a real job.  i need that security and stability.  and money.  but i'd also like that job to allow me to do a certain number of things i feel i need in my life.  because i think i need that creative outlet, that sense of adventure.

is that too much to ask from life?  happiness and adventure?

i hope not.

October 13, 2009

am i falling behind, or just insane?

i think it's because i've finally reached that age where friends of mine are settling down, but i've recently begun to feel like i'm falling behind in my own personal rat race.  it just seems to me that a lot of people my age are finding and beginning their careers, are planning weddings and getting married, are considering children (if they don't have them already, friends of mine in hawaii!), and probably most astounding of all, are buying homes.

i thought our economy was in the toilet?!

and it's not that i'm not happy for them.  i think it's more that i envy them their...security?  confidence?  direction?  because i'm no where near any of that.  i'm not even in the same ballpark, arena, city, state or country.  i might as well be off planet.  most of it's by choice (perhaps everything but the home-buying), yes, i take full responsibility for that.  but is something wrong with me for not wanting those things yet?

in my head i know that's a stupid question.  of course nothing's wrong with me.  if anything, i should consider myself smart for knowing that i'm not ready for marriage or children yet, right?  then maybe it's just the small town syndrome that's ingrained in me or something, because where i grew up i might as well be a spinster if i'm not [married and/or] having kids by the age of 25.  my mother had had three children by the time she was my age.  my sister was planning her second pregnancy.  when i log on to facebook, i see that so many of the people i went to high school with have kids already (not just one, plural).  and to some extent, it's not just me being crazy; my own mother has reminded me that i'd better not wait too long before i start my baby machine, my older sister keeps reminding me that i'm not getting any younger, and nor are her children, so i'd better hurry up and give them cousins, and even my grandfather has asked me why N. and i haven't gotten married yet.

because i'm not ready!  i'm sitting here, not having a single clue as to where my life is going, and you want me to get married, have kids, and take on a mortgage?  i don't even have a job!

and then there's the part of me that keeps thinking: are you really going to start a MA/PhD right now?  or not even now, in 2 years?  won't you be a little old for that?  won't you be like, 33 by the time you graduate, if you're lucky?  are you supposed to wait until that's over before you get married and have kids (i.e. grow up)?  and if you're honest with yourself, aren't you just spinning your wheels, trying a bunch of things out hoping that you hit the right one somewhere along the way?  do you think you have the luxury (read: money) to do that?  who are you, rockerfeller?

yes, i realize i sound insane.  i realize people do what i'm doing all the time, and people get married while they're in school, and people wait to have kids until a little later in life.  i guess this just sort of goes against my breeding or something.  i always thought i'd be a relatively young mother, that i'd be about 26 when i got married, and about 28 when i had my first kid, that i'd have a career by then and be sort of like super woman, doing it all spectacularly and making it look easy.  but i'm realizing now that, while the dream is nice, the component parts aren't what i want yet.  and i think it's just a little hard to let go of that dream and face this sort of crazy uncertainty that my life's become.

ulgh.  for the record, i totally didn't mean to bum anyone out.

October 5, 2009

the road less traveled

if measured against the lives of many others i knew growing up in my small town, my life would be considered anything but ordinary.  anything but run of the mill and typical.  anything but expected.  that's how i've always wanted to live my life.  i've always wanted to do great things, adventurous things, meaningful things.  things that seem so far away from the girl i was growing up.

so it's no surprise that, when faced with this huge gaping hole in my future plans, i've come back around to that truth: i want to do great, adventurous, meaningful things.  i have some ideas about where to go with this.  nothing set in stone and even less rationally thought out.  but a starting point none-the-less.

i want to go back to school.  i know it's hard to believe since i just came out of three of the worst academic years of my life but, if nothing else, law school helped me to finally realize where i think i've been headed all along.  in light of that, i've been looking at pursuing an advanced degree in either anthropology or ethnic studies.  if i go the anthropology route i'll have to take the GRE's and eventually apply for the PhD program separately.  if i go the ethnic studies route, i won't have to take the GRE's and can go straight into an MA/PhD combined program.  in either case, i'm hoping to apply for admission in the fall of 2011.

both of these programs are as close an area of study as i'm going to find to my undergraduate major (which in a weird way combined them and is really what i'm qualified for), and both will allow me to continue learning about and researching indigenous cultures.  isn't that what i've been working toward all this time?  isn't that what i tried to transform my law school study into?  isn't that what i think of when i think of "what i would have done if i'd never gone to law school"?  yes, to all of the above.  now, do i know where having a PhD will lead me?  no.  it could be teaching, it could be working for a private organization, a museum, a library, or an ngo.  i don't know.

but i do know that i want to do it.  i just need a little time before getting started.

you see, i'm one of those people who never took time off.  i always felt that, if i did, i'd never go back to school.  so i'm hoping to take somewhat of a "gap year" now.  and i have some ideas on how to fill my time:
  • [first and foremost] work for a little while so that i can save some money to do it all.
  • a girl i know (who i've often sadly thought is living the life i've always wanted) did a summer program in which she was hired to be a group leader for a tour company that took a handful of high school students on international cultural adventure trips.  her particular trip was to australia, new zealand and fiji.  this sounds like something i'd love to do, and i've looked up the company and the application process.  i'll be applying to be a group leader next summer.
  • when i was a little girl, i was so sure i was going to be an archaeologist one day.  it was all i thought about: digging through the dirt for old artifacts, bones and lost cities.  i obviously haven't gone that route, but that doesn't mean i can't find out what could have been.  there are a bunch of different programs through which people can volunteer to work for a couple of weeks on an archaeological dig in places like israel, turkey, jordan, italy, greece, scotland, etc.  there's usually a fee for volunteering, so i'll need to save some money first, but this is also on the list.
  • i want to teach english abroad.  in particular, i've been looking at programs which place you in the northern territories in australia.
and when i'm in school again there are a few things i'd like to do as well.  i'll have to see what kind of schedule the particular program i'm applying for has and if they'd allow me to do them, but here they are just in case:
  • apply for an internship with the UN's permanent forum on indigenous issues, based in new york city.
  • apply for an internship with the unrepresented nations and peoples organization, based at the hague.
  • possibly study abroad in new zealand, australia, and hawaii.  if it seems like new zealand and australia are mentioned a lot, it's because i have a particular interest in researching indigenous issues there (which i am hoping to work into a dissertation topic i've got swimming around in my head).
and in between/during/after all this, i'd like to find some time (like now) to volunteer or intern in other areas i'm interested in:
  • with amnesty international
  • with oxfam
  • with americorps
  • with a tribal organization
  • with a publishing house
  • with a magazine
this all may seem really rash to you, but it's honestly not.  being the anally organized person i am, i have a huge binder with print outs and brochures and informational packets on programs and organizations, i've emailed both the academic programs i'm considering applying for as well as the diversity office for graduate student admissions (even though it's 2 years away), and N. and i have already begun discussing it all.  i'm preparing.  i'm even thinking of making spreadsheets.

i feel very rory gilmore-ish right now.

but in all seriousness, what it came down to was this:
  1. i wasn't happy with the path my life was on.  
  2. so i wrote a list of the things i want to do. 
  3. this is me starting to do them.
simple as that.

September 9, 2009

The Bucket List

i've been thinking a lot lately about the things i want to do versus the things i should do. whether or not those two things are mutually exclusive? i'm still figuring out. but it got me thinking of a bucket list. i wrote one for my psychology class right before graduating from high school, and stored it in my culminating psychology project which was supposed to be a look back at my life from the end of my life. (it was a very creative project). unfortunately, the project was found, but sometime in the last seven or eight years, i took the bucket list out and it has not been seen since. hence, i've written another. and i think it's useful to write another every so many years, keeping on the list the desires that still remain true, and replacing the ones that don't with new desires as you grow older.

i've tried to remember as much of the old list as possible, and have included those items in my new and improved bucket list to make sure that the record is as accurate as possible. i've crossed out the ones that i've already accomplished.

i guess it's this whole, "what do i do now?" thing that's got me realizing that these things are really important, you know? i think too often we forget about what we've also wanted to do in the face of what we feel we need to do. but the thing is, all we really need to do is lead a fulfilling life. i think you'll see where i'm going with this in my next few posts.

do you have a bucket list?

100 Things To Do Before I Die
  1. graduate from college
  2. travel to ireland
  3. get married
  4. fall in love
  5. get out of hawaii
  6. return to hawaii "for good"
  7. do an "around the world" trip
  8. sky dive at the bay of islands, NZ
  9. bungee jump
  10. cage dive with great white sharks
  11. go zip-lining
  12. work for the U.N.
  13. see U2 live
  14. get my PhD
  15. stand next to the eiffel tower when it's lit up at night
  16. go to the old city, jerusalem
  17. see the northern lights
  18. pet a tiger
  19. write a novel
  20. get published
  21. go to cape cod and martha's vineyard
  22. meet someone famous
  23. wake up in positano, italy
  24. study abroad
  25. learn to snowboard
  26. work for a magazine
  27. white water rafting
  28. play in the snow
  29. open a bookstore/cafe
  30. go on an archaeological dig
  31. live in a foreign country
  32. work on a ranch
  33. give birth to a child
  34. adopt a child
  35. go to the greek island
  36. go diving on the great barrier reef
  37. own a home in hawaii
  38. work at a wildlife reserve
  39. lose 40lbs
  40. get a tattoo
  41. swim in the dead sea
  42. raft the grand canyon
  43. go to crater lake, OR
  44. sky jump from the sky tower, NZ
  45. take a black and white picture of the great wall of china
  46. swim on a beach in tahiti
  47. camp at yosemite national park
  48. see the great pyramids of giza
  49. go to NYC
  50. ride a horse
  51. work at a publishing house
  52. write my dissertation on indigenous issues
  53. run with the bulls in spain
  54. go to the vatican
  55. go rock climbing
  56. learn to salsa dance
  57. learn to surf
  58. run another 10k
  59. climb a redwood tree
  60. get out of debt
  61. work abroad for an ngo that fights for human rights
  62. learn hula
  63. have a home library
  64. go to alaska
  65. ring in the new year in NZ (it's the first place to experience it!)
  66. own a room with a view (preferably of the ocean)
  67. restore a fixer-upper
  68. drink beer at oktoberfest in munich
  69. go ghost hunting
  70. own a horribly expensive, but utterly fabulous, pair of shoes
  71. spend an entire day reading for fun
  72. find a job that i love
  73. grow a garden
  74. go hot-air ballooning
  75. trace my genealogy
  76. learn to love and accept myself just as i am
  77. go to a renaissance fair
  78. sleep under the stars
  79. write a "postsecret" letter in a bottle
  80. crowd surf at a rock concert
  81. visit machu picchu
  82. paint a self portrait
  83. bury a time capsule
  84. see the ruins of a lost civilization
  85. wear lingerie and feel sexy doing it
  86. raft +5 rapids
  87. go scuba diving
  88. spend a few guiltless days doing nothing on a beach
  89. take a girlfriend trip out of the country
  90. hire a personal shopper/stylist for a day
  91. get to know a foreign city like the back of my hand
  92. visit a place i've read about in a novel
  93. dance in a thunderstorm
  94. watch a sunrise and sunset
  95. read the Bible
  96. participate in la tomatina in spain
  97. learn the skill of photography
  98. follow my dreams each and every time
  99. ensure that everyone i love knows i love them
  100. live a life of little regret

September 1, 2009

INTJ: the strategist

K. had me take a personality test yesterday and i thought i'd post the results since they were sort of interesting. now, obviously there are flaws with the way you conduct a personality test and the results are therefore skewed, but whatever. it's still fun!

OVERVIEW

Independent, original, analytical, and determined. Have an exceptional ability to turn theories into solid plans of action. Highly value knowledge, competence, and structure. Driven to derive meaning from their visions. Long-range thinkers. Have very high standards for their performance, and the performance of others. Natural leaders, but will follow if they trust existing leaders.

As an INTJ, your primary mode of living is focused internally, where you take things in primarily via your intuition. Your secondary mode is external, where you deal with things rationally and logically.

INTJs live in the world of ideas and strategic planning. They value intelligence, knowledge, and competence, and typically have high standards in these regards, which they continuously strive to fulfill. To a somewhat lesser extent, they have similar expectations of others.

With Introverted Intuition dominating their personality, INTJs focus their energy on observing the world, and generating ideas and possibilities. Their mind constantly gathers information and makes associations about it. They are tremendously insightful and usually are very quick to understand new ideas. However, their primary interest is not understanding a concept, but rather applying that concept in a useful way. Unlike the INTP, they do not follow an idea as far as they possibly can, seeking only to understand it fully. INTJs are driven to come to conclusions about ideas. Their need for closure and organization usually requires that they take some action.

INTJ's tremendous value and need for systems and organization, combined with their natural insightfulness, makes them excellent scientists. An INTJ scientist gives a gift to society by putting their ideas into a useful form for others to follow. It is not easy for the INTJ to express their internal images, insights, and abstractions. The internal form of the INTJ's thoughts and concepts is highly individualized, and is not readily translatable into a form that others will understand. However, the INTJ is driven to translate their ideas into a plan or system that is usually readily explainable, rather than to do a direct translation of their thoughts. They usually don't see the value of a direct transaction, and will also have difficulty expressing their ideas, which are non-linear. However, their extreme respect of knowledge and intelligence will motivate them to explain themselves to another person who they feel is deserving of the effort.

INTJs are natural leaders, although they usually choose to remain in the background until they see a real need to take over the lead. When they are in leadership roles, they are quite effective, because they are able to objectively see the reality of a situation, and are adaptable enough to change things which aren't working well. They are the supreme strategists - always scanning available ideas and concepts and weighing them against their current strategy, to plan for every conceivable contingency.

INTJs spend a lot of time inside their own minds, and may have little interest in the other people's thoughts or feelings. Unless their Feeling side is developed, they may have problems giving other people the level of intimacy that is needed. Unless their Sensing side is developed, they may have a tendency to ignore details which are necessary for implementing their ideas.

The INTJ's interest in dealing with the world is to make decisions, express judgments, and put everything that they encounter into an understandable and rational system. Consequently, they are quick to express judgments. Often they have very evolved intuitions, and are convinced that they are right about things. Unless they complement their intuitive understanding with a well-developed ability to express their insights, they may find themselves frequently misunderstood. In these cases, INTJs tend to blame misunderstandings on the limitations of the other party, rather than on their own difficulty in expressing themselves. This tendency may cause the INTJ to dismiss others input too quickly, and to become generally arrogant and elitist.

INTJs are ambitious, self-confident, deliberate, long-range thinkers. Many INTJs end up in engineering or scientific pursuits, although some find enough challenge within the business world in areas which involve organizing and strategic planning. They dislike messiness and inefficiency, and anything that is muddled or unclear. They value clarity and efficiency, and will put enormous amounts of energy and time into consolidating their insights into structured patterns.

Other people may have a difficult time understanding an INTJ. They may see them as aloof and reserved. Indeed, the INTJ is not overly demonstrative of their affections, and is likely to not give as much praise or positive support as others may need or desire. That doesn't mean that he or she doesn't truly have affection or regard for others, they simply do not typically feel the need to express it. Others may falsely perceive the INTJ as being rigid and set in their ways. Nothing could be further from the truth, because the INTJ is committed to always finding the objective best strategy to implement their ideas. The INTJ is usually quite open to hearing an alternative way of doing something.

When under a great deal of stress, the INTJ may become obsessed with mindless repetitive, Sensate activities, such as over-drinking. They may also tend to become absorbed with minutia and details that they would not normally consider important to their overall goal.

INTJs need to remember to express themselves sufficiently, so as to avoid difficulties with people misunderstandings. In the absence of properly developing their communication abilities, they may become abrupt and short with people, and isolationists.

INTJs have a tremendous amount of ability to accomplish great things. They have insight into the Big Picture, and are driven to synthesize their concepts into solid plans of action. Their reasoning skills gives them the means to accomplish that. INTJs are most always highly competent people, and will not have a problem meeting their career or education goals. They have the capability to make great strides in these arenas. On a personal level, the INTJ who practices tolerances and puts effort into effectively communicating their insights to others has everything in his or her power to lead a rich and rewarding life.


RELATIONSHIPS

INTJs believe in constant growth in relationships, and strive for independence for themselves and their mates. They are constantly embarking on "fix-up" projects to improve the overall quality of their lives and relationships. They take their commitments seriously, but are open to redefining their vows, if they see something which may prove to be an improvement over the existing understanding. INTJs are not likely to be "touchy-feely" and overly affirming with their mates or children, and may at times be somewhat insensitive to their emotional needs. However, INTJs are in general extremely capable and intelligent individuals who strive to always be their best, and be moving in a positive direction. If they apply these basic goals to their personal relationships, they are likely to enjoy happy and healthy interaction with their families and friends.

INTJ Strengths
  • Not threatened by conflict or criticism
  • Usually self-confident
  • Takes their relationships and commitments seriously
  • Generally extremely intelligent and capable
  • Able to leave a relationship which should be ended, although they may dwell on it in their minds for awhile afterwards
  • Interested in "optimizing" their relationships
  • Good listeners
INTJ Weaknesses
  • Not naturally in tune with others feelings; may be insensitive at times
  • May tend to respond to conflict with logic and reason, rather than the desired emotional support
  • Not naturally good at expressing feelings and affections
  • Tendency to believe that they're always right
  • Tendency to be unwilling or unable to accept blame
  • Their constant quest to improve everything may be taxing on relationships
  • Tends to hold back part of themselves

INTJs as Lovers

INTJs live much of their lives inside their own heads. They constantly scan their environment for new ideas and theories which they can turn into plans and structures. Sometimes, what they see and understand intuitively within themselves is more pure and "perfect" than the reality of a close personal relationship. INTJs may have a problem reconciling their reality with their fantasy.

INTJs are not naturally in tune with their own feelings, or with what other people are feeling. They also have a tendency to believe that they are always right. While their self-confidence and esteem is attractive, their lack of sensitivity to others can be a problem if it causes them to inadvertently hurt their partner's feelings. If this is a problem for an INTJ, they should remember to sometimes let their mate be the one who is right, and to try to be aware of the emotional effect that your words have upon them. In conflict situations, INTJs need to remember to be supportive to their mate's emotional needs, rather than treating the conflict as if it is an interesting idea to analyze.

Sexually, the INTJ enjoys thinking about intimacy, and about ways to perfect it. In positive relationships, their creativity and intensity shine through in this arena. In more negative relationships, they might enjoy thinking about sex more than actually doing it. They're likely to approach intimacy from a theoretical, creative perspective, rather than as an opportunity to express love and affection. The INTJ who has learned the importance of these kinds of expressions to the health of their relationship, however, is likely to be more verbally affectionate.

INTJs are able to leave relationships when they're over, and get on with their lives. They believe that this is the right thing to do. They may have more difficulty accomplishing the task than they like to exhibit to other people.

INTJs are highly intense, intelligent people who bring a lot of depth and insight into most major areas of their life. In terms of relationships, their greatest potential pitfall is the tendency to think about things rather than doing them, and their difficulty reconciling reality with their inner visions. INTJs are likely to be in positive, healthy relationships, because they're likely to leave relationships which aren't working for them (unless other circumstances prohibit that).

Although two well-developed individuals of any type can enjoy a healthy relationship, the INTJ's natural partner is the ENFP, or the +. INTJ's dominant function of Introverted Intuition is best matched with a partner whose personality is dominated by Extraverted Intuition.

INTJs as Parents

As parents, INTJ's main goal is to raise their children to be intelligent, autonomous and independent. They want their kids to think for themselves and make their own decisions, and so are likely to give them room to grow, and to challenge their decisions and thoughts at key points in their lives.

The INTJ is not naturally likely to be an overly supportive or loving parental figure. Since their own need for expressions of love and affirmation is relatively low, they may have difficulty seeing that need in their children who have Feeling preferences. If they do see this sensitivity, they may not recognize or value the importance of feeding it. In such situations, there will be a distance between the INTJ and the child. This is a problem area for the INTJ, who should consciously remember to be aware of others' emotional needs.

INTJs as Friends

INTJs are usually difficult to get to know well, and difficult to get close to. Those who are close to the INTJ will highly value them for their ideas and knowledge. Although INTJs are generally very serious-minded people, they also have been known to enjoy letting loose and having fun, if others pull them into it. They also can be really good at telling jokes, and exhibiting a sarcastic wit with a poker face.

The INTJ is not likely to choose to spend time with people who they feel don't have anything to offer the INTJ. They especially like to spend time with other Intuitive Thinkers, and also usually enjoy the company of Intuitive Feelers. These personality types love to theorize and speculate about ideas, and so can usually relate well to the INTJ, who loves to analyze ideas.

Many INTJs believe that they are always right. In some INTJs, this belief is quite obvious, while in others it is more subtle. Some people may have a difficult time accepting what they see as a "superior attitude" or "snobbery". Not to imply that INTJs are snobbish, just that some people with strong Feeling preferences may perceive them that way. And some individuals simply have no interest in the theoretical pursuits which the INTJ enjoys.

July 27, 2009

on the eve of battle

you know those moments when your hair looks perfect, you don't feel overweight, you've got a great outfit on, you're about to be promoted at work, the love of your life has just proposed to you, you found the world's most comfortable pair of shoes on sale, and life is just generally one big tub of happy?

this is most definitely not one of those times.

actually, this is almost the exact opposite. because tomorrow morning i will start the three day nightmare that is the california bar exam. and if you just scroll down and read a few of my other posts you'll quickly realize that, for me, this exam is simply an exercise in humility. i don't want to be a lawyer. so why am i taking it? because this is just the type of person i am. i was too afraid to leave law school when i realized that i didn't want to practice (and i honestly enjoyed parts of it too much to stop). i was too invested and had gone through too much to give up when i could see the finish line right ahead of me. i was too wrapped up in what i thought was the only version of My Life Plan that i would ever have to pause before taking out a hefty bar loan and applying to for the test. and now i'm just...in too deep.

so i'll sit for the bar tomorrow and let whatever happens happen. because i'm not prepared, and i don't care that i'm not prepared. at least, not for me. does that make sense? what i mean is that, in regards to how i feel about most likely failing the bar, i'm okay. i've come to terms with it. i'm already looking to plan out the next stage of my life (because, let's face it, i'm a planner), find a job (side bar: it was quite an eye-opener when i realized yesterday that none of the jobs i envisioned myself having in the future required bar certification), live my life.

but i've been flip-flopping on my emotional stability lately because, while i'm okay with my own failure (in this case), i can't stand to have to tell my parents. i'm the type of person, as sad as it may seem (and believe me, it's sad), whose self-worth has almost always been wrapped up in my academic/professional achievement. it's crazy and completely unfounded, but a part of me feels that if i don't become this wealthy, successful lawyer, then i've failed my parents. they wanted me to be something, you know? and if i'm not this, then what am i?

so this is where my head has been at lately.

and then yesterday happened. getting back to those perfect moments i mentioned earlier, let me just say that, while my moment was definitely not perfect perfect, it was pretty incredible. there i was, sitting in the car with N. listening to NPR, thinking about failure and about "how can it be failure when it's not even something i want?" or "what am i going to do if/when i'm not a lawyer? how am i going to make a living?" and about disappointment and how my parents want so much for me and i worry that it's not what i want for me, or that my j.d. doesn't seem like much anymore (i think i actually thought having only a mere j.d. was a failure as well, so deep was i into my self-deprecating snowball) etc. etc. etc. just generally having a silent nervous breakdown there on the 580. and then i hear it.

it'll sound ridiculous when i say it, but i don't care. at that exact moment when the bar was indeed getting the better of me, NPR began to play j.k. rowling's harvard commencement address, entitled, "the fringe benefits of failure, and the importance of imagination."

while the entire speech is fantastic (which is why i'm posting the video in its entirety), it was the section on failure that forced me out of my whirlwind of insanity and gently requested that i stop, take a deep breath, and think. and while i'm still sitting to take a bar i don't want or need to pass tomorrow, the panic has receded, the breakdowns have come fewer and far in between, and i'm in a place where i can say: whatever happens...let it just happen quickly.

J.K. Rowling Speaks at Harvard Commencement from Harvard Magazine on Vimeo.


Text as delivered follows.
Copyright of JK Rowling, June 2008

President Faust, members of the Harvard Corporation and the Board of Overseers, members of the faculty, proud parents, and, above all, graduates.

The first thing I would like to say is ‘thank you.’ Not only has Harvard given me an extraordinary honour, but the weeks of fear and nausea I have endured at the thought of giving this commencement address have made me lose weight. A win-win situation! Now all I have to do is take deep breaths, squint at the red banners and convince myself that I am at the world’s largest Gryffindor reunion.

Delivering a commencement address is a great responsibility; or so I thought until I cast my mind back to my own graduation. The commencement speaker that day was the distinguished British philosopher Baroness Mary Warnock. Reflecting on her speech has helped me enormously in writing this one, because it turns out that I can’t remember a single word she said. This liberating discovery enables me to proceed without any fear that I might inadvertently influence you to abandon promising careers in business, the law or politics for the giddy delights of becoming a gay wizard.

You see? If all you remember in years to come is the ‘gay wizard’ joke, I’ve come out ahead of Baroness Mary Warnock. Achievable goals: the first step to self improvement.

Actually, I have wracked my mind and heart for what I ought to say to you today. I have asked myself what I wish I had known at my own graduation, and what important lessons I have learned in the 21 years that have expired between that day and this.

I have come up with two answers. On this wonderful day when we are gathered together to celebrate your academic success, I have decided to talk to you about the benefits of failure. And as you stand on the threshold of what is sometimes called ‘real life’, I want to extol the crucial importance of imagination.

These may seem quixotic or paradoxical choices, but please bear with me.

Looking back at the 21-year-old that I was at graduation, is a slightly uncomfortable experience for the 42-year-old that she has become. Half my lifetime ago, I was striking an uneasy balance between the ambition I had for myself, and what those closest to me expected of me.

I was convinced that the only thing I wanted to do, ever, was to write novels. However, my parents, both of whom came from impoverished backgrounds and neither of whom had been to college, took the view that my overactive imagination was an amusing personal quirk that would never pay a mortgage, or secure a pension. I know that the irony strikes with the force of a cartoon anvil, now.

So they hoped that I would take a vocational degree; I wanted to study English Literature. A compromise was reached that in retrospect satisfied nobody, and I went up to study Modern Languages. Hardly had my parents’ car rounded the corner at the end of the road than I ditched German and scuttled off down the Classics corridor.

I cannot remember telling my parents that I was studying Classics; they might well have found out for the first time on graduation day. Of all the subjects on this planet, I think they would have been hard put to name one less useful than Greek mythology when it came to securing the keys to an executive bathroom.

I would like to make it clear, in parenthesis, that I do not blame my parents for their point of view. There is an expiry date on blaming your parents for steering you in the wrong direction; the moment you are old enough to take the wheel, responsibility lies with you. What is more, I cannot criticise my parents for hoping that I would never experience poverty. They had been poor themselves, and I have since been poor, and I quite agree with them that it is not an ennobling experience. Poverty entails fear, and stress, and sometimes depression; it means a thousand petty humiliations and hardships. Climbing out of poverty by your own efforts, that is indeed something on which to pride yourself, but poverty itself is romanticised only by fools.

What I feared most for myself at your age was not poverty, but failure.

At your age, in spite of a distinct lack of motivation at university, where I had spent far too long in the coffee bar writing stories, and far too little time at lectures, I had a knack for passing examinations, and that, for years, had been the measure of success in my life and that of my peers.

I am not dull enough to suppose that because you are young, gifted and well-educated, you have never known hardship or heartbreak. Talent and intelligence never yet inoculated anyone against the caprice of the Fates, and I do not for a moment suppose that everyone here has enjoyed an existence of unruffled privilege and contentment.

However, the fact that you are graduating from Harvard suggests that you are not very well-acquainted with failure. You might be driven by a fear of failure quite as much as a desire for success. Indeed, your conception of failure might not be too far from the average person’s idea of success, so high have you already flown.

Ultimately, we all have to decide for ourselves what constitutes failure, but the world is quite eager to give you a set of criteria if you let it. So I think it fair to say that by any conventional measure, a mere seven years after my graduation day, I had failed on an epic scale. An exceptionally short-lived marriage had imploded, and I was jobless, a lone parent, and as poor as it is possible to be in modern Britain, without being homeless. The fears that my parents had had for me, and that I had had for myself, had both come to pass, and by every usual standard, I was the biggest failure I knew.

Now, I am not going to stand here and tell you that failure is fun. That period of my life was a dark one, and I had no idea that there was going to be what the press has since represented as a kind of fairy tale resolution. I had no idea then how far the tunnel extended, and for a long time, any light at the end of it was a hope rather than a reality.

So why do I talk about the benefits of failure? Simply because failure meant a stripping away of the inessential. I stopped pretending to myself that I was anything other than what I was, and began to direct all my energy into finishing the only work that mattered to me. Had I really succeeded at anything else, I might never have found the determination to succeed in the one arena I believed I truly belonged. I was set free, because my greatest fear had been realised, and I was still alive, and I still had a daughter whom I adored, and I had an old typewriter and a big idea. And so rock bottom became the solid foundation on which I rebuilt my life.

You might never fail on the scale I did, but some failure in life is inevitable. It is impossible to live without failing at something, unless you live so cautiously that you might as well not have lived at all – in which case, you fail by default.

Failure gave me an inner security that I had never attained by passing examinations. Failure taught me things about myself that I could have learned no other way. I discovered that I had a strong will, and more discipline than I had suspected; I also found out that I had friends whose value was truly above the price of rubies.

The knowledge that you have emerged wiser and stronger from setbacks means that you are, ever after, secure in your ability to survive. You will never truly know yourself, or the strength of your relationships, until both have been tested by adversity. Such knowledge is a true gift, for all that it is painfully won, and it has been worth more than any qualification I ever earned.

So given a Time Turner, I would tell my 21-year-old self that personal happiness lies in knowing that life is not a check-list of acquisition or achievement. Your qualifications, your CV, are not your life, though you will meet many people of my age and older who confuse the two. Life is difficult, and complicated, and beyond anyone’s total control, and the humility to know that will enable you to survive its vicissitudes.

Now you might think that I chose my second theme, the importance of imagination, because of the part it played in rebuilding my life, but that is not wholly so. Though I personally will defend the value of bedtime stories to my last gasp, I have learned to value imagination in a much broader sense. Imagination is not only the uniquely human capacity to envision that which is not, and therefore the fount of all invention and innovation. In its arguably most transformative and revelatory capacity, it is the power that enables us to empathise with humans whose experiences we have never shared.

One of the greatest formative experiences of my life preceded Harry Potter, though it informed much of what I subsequently wrote in those books. This revelation came in the form of one of my earliest day jobs. Though I was sloping off to write stories during my lunch hours, I paid the rent in my early 20s by working at the African research department at Amnesty International’s headquarters in London.

There in my little office I read hastily scribbled letters smuggled out of totalitarian regimes by men and women who were risking imprisonment to inform the outside world of what was happening to them. I saw photographs of those who had disappeared without trace, sent to Amnesty by their desperate families and friends. I read the testimony of torture victims and saw pictures of their injuries. I opened handwritten, eye-witness accounts of summary trials and executions, of kidnappings and rapes.

Many of my co-workers were ex-political prisoners, people who had been displaced from their homes, or fled into exile, because they had the temerity to speak against their governments. Visitors to our offices included those who had come to give information, or to try and find out what had happened to those they had left behind.

I shall never forget the African torture victim, a young man no older than I was at the time, who had become mentally ill after all he had endured in his homeland. He trembled uncontrollably as he spoke into a video camera about the brutality inflicted upon him. He was a foot taller than I was, and seemed as fragile as a child. I was given the job of escorting him back to the Underground Station afterwards, and this man whose life had been shattered by cruelty took my hand with exquisite courtesy, and wished me future happiness.

And as long as I live I shall remember walking along an empty corridor and suddenly hearing, from behind a closed door, a scream of pain and horror such as I have never heard since. The door opened, and the researcher poked out her head and told me to run and make a hot drink for the young man sitting with her. She had just had to give him the news that in retaliation for his own outspokenness against his country’s regime, his mother had been seized and executed.

Every day of my working week in my early 20s I was reminded how incredibly fortunate I was, to live in a country with a democratically elected government, where legal representation and a public trial were the rights of everyone.

Every day, I saw more evidence about the evils humankind will inflict on their fellow humans, to gain or maintain power. I began to have nightmares, literal nightmares, about some of the things I saw, heard, and read.

And yet I also learned more about human goodness at Amnesty International than I had ever known before.

Amnesty mobilises thousands of people who have never been tortured or imprisoned for their beliefs to act on behalf of those who have. The power of human empathy, leading to collective action, saves lives, and frees prisoners. Ordinary people, whose personal well-being and security are assured, join together in huge numbers to save people they do not know, and will never meet. My small participation in that process was one of the most humbling and inspiring experiences of my life.

Unlike any other creature on this planet, humans can learn and understand, without having experienced. They can think themselves into other people’s places.

Of course, this is a power, like my brand of fictional magic, that is morally neutral. One might use such an ability to manipulate, or control, just as much as to understand or sympathise.

And many prefer not to exercise their imaginations at all. They choose to remain comfortably within the bounds of their own experience, never troubling to wonder how it would feel to have been born other than they are. They can refuse to hear screams or to peer inside cages; they can close their minds and hearts to any suffering that does not touch them personally; they can refuse to know.

I might be tempted to envy people who can live that way, except that I do not think they have any fewer nightmares than I do. Choosing to live in narrow spaces leads to a form of mental agoraphobia, and that brings its own terrors. I think the wilfully unimaginative see more monsters. They are often more afraid.

What is more, those who choose not to empathise enable real monsters. For without ever committing an act of outright evil ourselves, we collude with it, through our own apathy.

One of the many things I learned at the end of that Classics corridor down which I ventured at the age of 18, in search of something I could not then define, was this, written by the Greek author Plutarch: What we achieve inwardly will change outer reality.

That is an astonishing statement and yet proven a thousand times every day of our lives. It expresses, in part, our inescapable connection with the outside world, the fact that we touch other people’s lives simply by existing.

But how much more are you, Harvard graduates of 2008, likely to touch other people’s lives? Your intelligence, your capacity for hard work, the education you have earned and received, give you unique status, and unique responsibilities. Even your nationality sets you apart. The great majority of you belong to the world’s only remaining superpower. The way you vote, the way you live, the way you protest, the pressure you bring to bear on your government, has an impact way beyond your borders. That is your privilege, and your burden.

If you choose to use your status and influence to raise your voice on behalf of those who have no voice; if you choose to identify not only with the powerful, but with the powerless; if you retain the ability to imagine yourself into the lives of those who do not have your advantages, then it will not only be your proud families who celebrate your existence, but thousands and millions of people whose reality you have helped change. We do not need magic to change the world, we carry all the power we need inside ourselves already: we have the power to imagine better.

I am nearly finished. I have one last hope for you, which is something that I already had at 21. The friends with whom I sat on graduation day have been my friends for life. They are my children’s godparents, the people to whom I’ve been able to turn in times of trouble, people who have been kind enough not to sue me when I took their names for Death Eaters. At our graduation we were bound by enormous affection, by our shared experience of a time that could never come again, and, of course, by the knowledge that we held certain photographic evidence that would be exceptionally valuable if any of us ran for Prime Minister.

So today, I wish you nothing better than similar friendships. And tomorrow, I hope that even if you remember not a single word of mine, you remember those of Seneca, another of those old Romans I met when I fled down the Classics corridor, in retreat from career ladders, in search of ancient wisdom:
As is a tale, so is life: not how long it is, but how good it is, is what matters.
I wish you all very good lives.
Thank you very much.