Showing posts with label graduation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label graduation. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Waking Up

I took a nap for the summer.

I slept in the wake of funerals and baseball games and hot afternoons. I curled up in a nest of cool basement air, of inconsistency and laundry baskets and evenings on front porches in recliners.

I was in a coma of lust for life and other things, a trance of disproportion and an adventure that took me no where in particular, but home.

And home is where I hope to wake up.

A professor told me near the end of last semester that I was in a funk, and that a trip to DC would pull me out. It did something, but I think I ended up losing part of myself in the capitol's old thick air and its sidewalks, which seem to know more than those of Chicago or Denver. The city has been breathing. The people wake and sleep.

When I returned, I moved out of my apartment and into my vagabond summer, the strangest of my life. And though it had some of the best days I'll ever know, I look back on an October morning and laugh: wasted time and useless motions.

What did I read? What did I write? Where did I spend my weekday mornings? When did I run? Who did I love? Why did I cry?

All just to end up where I began, another midwestern girl in a small town with a wish to get out. But this time, things are changing: Maybe I'll go somewhere new.

In the summer slumber, I fell into some directional blindness. I saw nothing of where I was headed until I was there, in everything I did: where I lived, somewhere new nearly every week); when I worked, checking my schedule only the morning of; who I saw, making plans on my own whims and movement. All these things with no intentionality.

And now I feel invisible. Youngest person in the office and all us little women answer the phones: "Thank you for calling. This is Emily. How may I help you today?" followed by either, "Great, may I have your order number?" or "Alright, are you calling with one of our catalogs today?"

What am I doing? Still sleeping.

But the choice now is to be awake and wide-eyed and ready--for a campaign, for a crowd, for a move, a leap, a change. And I will be.

There is no excuse for the post-graduation summer to linger through October morning moons.

So I say, "Good morning Moon," and Mrs. Hill of Indiana puts me on hold to the sound of country music while I'm waiting for her credit card number, then I laugh, and continue, "Good morning Sun."

I'm waking up.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Montage with And Today


I've started a couple different posts over the last few weeks, but haven't finished any of them.
So rather than starting another that I likely won't finish, I'm posting all the scraps together.
Snippets of my brain all weaved in patchwork and sad melody. La dee da.

First, listen to a sad song while you read through the first few posts. The song in the link, Manchester Orchestra's "Sleeper 1972" has been a backdrop for the last two months of my life. It's beautiful and heartbreaking.

3/27/11
On Silence

We had a moment at chapel last week when they had us all quiet down and pray in silence.
But I didn't think it felt the way it should... the creaking of bleachers and rustling of paper.

I think if we really heard silence, we'd be terrified.
We are caught in the noise of our lives.
Wadsworth hums outside my window.
My laptop purrs on my bed.
My breathing tenses and flows.
My roommate closes, opens doors.
My mind jumps on drums and thoughts and clatters.
Words dance over highways in our brains and if you concentrate, sometimes you can feel them between your ears: which synapses are firing, which cortex is acting.
And they pop and fly and fuse and all at once we get going in a dozen directions and suddenly the peace we were trying to find in the quiet is a race inside us--to find conclusions and to really feel the contentment we try to believe in.
But I don't believe it at all.

4/11/11
Yessing

I'm sad about some things, and it's making it hard to write. I fall into these cycles of pushing everybody away for little spurts of time, and I'm approaching one. And the rough thing is that there are people I don't want to leave me, to get past me.
I worry that I say all the same things over and over and that these rambling thoughts start to all sound repetitious and shallow.
I think I repeat myself---I say the same things and live the same patterns and make the same choices and give in to the same fears.
I think I'm unprepared for happiness--that I'm afraid of it. I freak out about the future so I'll feel like I'm preparing, but really, I'm circling.
Commitment makes me shudder. Saying yes to anything means saying no to everything else. So I worry so much about missing anything that I hardly let myself ever really experience anything.
And life is about to become a bit bigger. City and family and choices and saying no, so I can say yes. I've been afraid of yessing anything for a long time, and sure, there have been exceptions, but for the most part I've stopped at cliff edges and backed away with apologies and insecurities: I bailed on China, I can't choose what September should be, or where my life will feel at home. I want the future to fall into my lap, fully stocked with adventure and love.

4/17/11
Choosing, further thoughts on 'Yessing'

Life, at its barest, demands little of us. But the breathing and moving and living of every day requires that we make decisions. We have to choose.
There's a flooding phenomenon in my generation for a dislike of decision-making. I'm certainly guilty of this; I've told friends recently that choosing what to do after graduating from university is like marrying something. Picking one avenue to pursue, and leaving the rest to fall to the wind. And I'm not talking about leaving paths for other days; Frost covered that business, and it isn't what I'm addressing here.
Decision making. Choosing.
It takes saying no: prioritizing, and letting go of the other options.
So settling into some role, some thing for the next year of my life is commitment, but it isn't marriage. It isn't exclusive and picking an opportunity doesn't mean saying no to all others; in fact, chances are, one will lead to another.
But I worry. I get scared. Jobs, connections, relationships, everything. Terrified.
It takes responsibility and courage just to live, to function and sleep and commit to being ourselves and doing the best we can.
Then there's risk. We have to ask ourselves what we want, and we have to answer--stand to make a choice.
I'm asking myself--and ask yourself--'What do I want?'
And how big and how much and where? And how much am I willing to say no to, to get those things? What am I willing to sacrifice to be able to grasp the things that are yet out of my reach? And why, to all of these inquiries?
How do I answer, and what do I say to the questions I have to ask?
Do I want places or people or opportunities or experiences---or all of them?
What am I willing to risk?


5/8/11
In Chaos

Today's soundtrack. Aqualung: "Broken Bones"
Another sad sort of song. Sing sing sing.

Simultaneously graduating and grieving, I've found, makes for uncomfortable handshakes and repetition of all the same things: No, I'm not quite sure when I'm leaving; Oh I haven't quite figured out what comes next; Yeah, it was a great time at CCU; I've been friends with your son for years and he's one of my favorites here; She's a wonderful woman; Yes, I'll miss them.

I miss you. I already do.

The thing is, I miss everybody when they're not there. I cry when listen through Transatlanticism. And I miss Dr. Woodruff every time I write or read a poem. I miss the relationships I had with all my crazy friends from high school and the early days of college. I miss Uncle Rich when the Bears play and when it snows. I miss the dynamics that used to characterize my life because at some point along the way I started with this grieving and I haven't stopped.

And now I'm grieving all the moments I won't have with my grandfather in the future. My children will never meet him, and he won't see his grandchildren marry. The sons- and daughters-in-law won't understand who he was.

That was why I loved Salinger's Holden the first time I read Catcher.

"Don't ever tell anybody anything. If you do, you start missing everybody."

I do; I do miss everybody all the time because I can't stop talking about the people in my life, and because I love hard. It's exhausting, wanting to be everywhere, to be everything to anyone who might need anything. And it's exhausting to fail.

I want to see heaven, and know what it's like, if my grandfather is sitting with his mother, catching up and playing cards. If Dr. Woodruff has been having lunch dates with T.S. Eliot or anybody like that up there.

I want more time. To finish, to smile, to breathe. I'm always in such a hurry, getting from one thing to the next and trying to do and solve and fix and save and salvage.


5/28/11
Saturdays: Plans

Plans fall apart on a Saturday night, so I finally post on my blog. [Clearly, this didn't actually happen.]
A lot has happened lately, and I thought that at the end of all of it, I'd sit back and feel some deep relief and profound change. An "I just grew up so much in the last two months I can't even believe it" kind of thing, you know?
But instead, yesterday, I was sitting at the pool with a friend and I thought to myself, I haven't really changed at all from last summer. I'm still lusting for the sun and burying myself in novels. I'm wishing I was younger and things felt easier, or that I could fast forward to a point in time where these things all begin to make sense.

I've been obsessing over plans for months now, yet I still don't feel like I've made much progress. I said a big "No" in a case that was incredibly difficult, and I've realized home isn't what it used to be, but it never is.


And today...

In rereading all these posts and pasting them together, I think the main reason I've had such trouble finishing them is that they're all just about me and getting inside my head. That's not what I set out to do here. It is not what I want.

The problem then, as a result, is that I don't know what I do want. Always the problem, really.

Relationships? I'm utterly lost these days. The major shut out I predicted in the scrap of "Yessing" absolutely came true. (That said, if I haven't responded to Facebook messages or texts or phone calls, I'll call this my reason; apologies.)

One thing I know: I want to get back to bigger things, the bigger things at work. The abstract and undefined.

So I'll try to do that more in the coming posts while I'm sorting things out here and getting my head back on straight. It seems that I'm finally managing that after a couple months of being pretty scattered.

I said goodbyes and found some peace... now just to find a place to live.

I appreciate your patience, and as always, thank you for reading.

Monday, March 7, 2011

It's Contagious

I wrote "Love Well" last week, and now I'm thinking about doing, aging, living.

I think this might be what realizing you're middle-aged feels like on the worst days.

They made a statue of us. (Click and listen.)

The kids I grew up with, my parochial school friends, my high school classmates, and my first college roommates and neighbors: we're mostly waiting to graduate in May.

Some of us, I think, have been looking back at the last four years, the last twenty-some years (yes, our whole lives), and wondering how different we could've been.

If we had made relationships work.
If we picked different schools.

If I kept playing basketball.
If I hadn't gone on the stage.

If someone else had picked me up from the airport.
If I hadn't gone to Sonic on a Saturday afternoon last Spring, and if I hadn't missed that last class with Elaine. If Tom had started the car. If grandmothers were always caught when they were falling.

They'll name a city after us and later say it's all our fault.

And if we weren't so jealous. If we cried in our laughter.
If we made different homes, were given different homes.

If I never wrote a poem.

If we couldn't dream about the things we didn't ever do.

How different things would be.

All those ifs...

They've got years of experience.

I fell in love with some music a couple times, and made men's faces the mask of those sounds. It was never really love.

And I made close friends--the best friends-- even the ones that weren't very good at it. And I wonder what it would be like if somebody in an office had thought that I'd fit better in a different room when I was 18 and in a new place.

What wouldn't have happened. The laughter, pictures, car rides, kisses, drinks, tears, poems: the adventure.

The life I wouldn't have had. I think there's a plan. I believe there's a plan, always.

I was meant to unlace my shoes and give Coach my uniform back.
I had to wear that flannel dress with rustled hair on the old LHS stage before the remodel and be kissed by John Proctor--his Elizabeth.

I made enough bad choices to get out of town--a spring break preview of life away from my life, then first to camp on a chance. (The girl had a fear of small boats. These things happen.)
And I learned what summer romance was. It was beautiful for a little while.

Then came Fall and there I went--to university Septembers and Colorado mornings. And it all came together.

And it's contagious.

A year isn't so really so long. You don't realize that when you're young, until somebody tells you. I had no idea until my mom said so at Christmas, but now I think I get it a little bit.
When you're twenty, a year is five percent of your life. When you're eighty, five percent is four years. That's almost as long as I've been out here. In sixty years, college will seem so small, like the years are starting to now.

So a year's not so long. And four of them like this--it sure was something.

We fit life into them.

We're living in a den of thieves, rummaging for answers in the pages.

We're looking for something bigger than the things we've done and the things we didn't do.

Where we are right now isn't just about what lives we've lived or what choices we didn't make, which are really choices we chose not to make.

We're looking for answers of who we've proven ourselves to be and what comes next.

If there will be statues of us.

If the relationships we missed come back around.

If we'll be in these places together later on, or ever.

If we'll remember the road trips and sleepovers and one-liners and movies and mistakes and summers and papers and answers.

If they'll know our names, our legacies. Because we all leave one.

If we'll know what love is outside a song.

If someday all the minutes we spent in each other's lives will begin to make sense. If we'll see why we were brought together in some peculiar combination of Star Wars and basketball and Midwesterners and locals and snowboards and Kahlua and brothers and Boulder and transfers and camouflage. We're a wily bunch. And we wonder if we'll ever understand how lucky we were together inside the plan.

All those ifs...

We're curious, and it's contagious.