Showing posts with label New Beginning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Beginning. Show all posts

Monday, February 23, 2015

Multiple Personalites

(I wrote this for a writing class that I decided today to drop)

A few classes ago we were asked to draw our inner critic.  For most of my classmates that inner critic was a mother, or some other family member. For others it was just a faceless demon: insecurity, fear, regret.

My inner critic is me, one of those selves we were supposed to explore in this week’s assignment. My inner critic is not my enemy, and I’ve been aware of her for as long as I’ve been writing. Yet, she is just one of dozens of different versions of myself.

There are selves defined by relationships to other people:  the daughter, the sister, the niece, the cousin, the friend, the colleague.

The professional selves: the librarian, the writer.

The personal versions: the emotional, the potential, the creative, the ideal, the critical.

The selves I haven’t met yet (and may never): the lover, the wife, the mother, the orphan, the widow.

The selves I fear: the criminal, the deviant, the victim, the jaded bitter lonely nightmare.

How can I tell for sure who I am when I change so easily depending on my surroundings, my circumstances, my audience, my mood, my sobriety? I get really confused and sometimes I can only tell what I am not, can only define myself by considering the opposites. I made a joke to a friend that I was making my way through life by process of elimination. But I can’t even rely on what I don’t want, because that changes day to day, minute by minute.

The parts of myself that I disapprove of often feel like my dominant traits. I cannot make them go away, or erase or deny them: the lazy slacker, the avoider, the procrastinator, the insecure, the inert.

Sometimes the only guide I have in making the right choice is a desire to preserve a personal or professional relationship, to maintain a specific image even when I resent its constraints. I seem to have no ability or willpower to stop myself from making self-destructive choices – when no one is looking. But as soon as I can see myself, or my behavior, through someone else’s eyes, I check myself. I think, I don’t want anyone to think this is the kind of person I am. I have a friend who would tell me that I worry too much about what other people think. But what I really worry about is what kind of person I would be if I didn’t care.

I do know that I don’t want to be mean or hurt someone’s feelings. I have a sense of justice, a preference for mercy, forgiveness, and letting go of resentment. I have my own version of morality, but I will lie before I hurt someone’s feelings, even if the discovery of the lie may ultimately be worse. I have an extreme aversion to conflict that in my professional life is often praised as tact, and political awareness, but in my personal life is sometimes criticized as passive and weak.

Some people bring out the best selves, some bring out the worst, and I don’t even know how I measure that.. by what value system am I defining my best or worst?
I don’t know who I really am. I don’t know if I ever will. I do know that my actions and personality are usually directly related to my audience. I have some friends and colleagues that bring out a strong, respectable side of myself. But my favorite people are the ones I can play with, show off the “worst” versions to make them laugh or gasp in shock, and … I think they are only okay with this version because they tell themselves it’s NOT who I am. Except that it is.

We contain all these versions inside ourselves, we encourage some, deny others. The zealot, the fanatic, the liar, the oracle… so many pieces, when I let my mind wander the pieces seem disparate, contradictory, but irrefutable. Still, this awareness has never stopped me from hoping there might be a single, dominant, real self buried in there somewhere.

Back to the inner critic. I rely on her voice to step outside whatever emotional self-indulgent spiral I slip into. She argues with me, encourages me. She is a voice of reason, a conscience, and provokes me into action and improvement. She calls me on my shit.

She wrote this essay.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

The Cottage

DISCLAIMER: This entry has nothing to do with reading, writing, reference or librarianship... it's just the only place I could think of where I could easily display these pictures. 

We have previously established that I am no longer unemployed. Consequently, I am also no longer living with my parents. I decided, when I moved into this new place, that I would paint the entire house.  It's a very small house, more like a cottage, but still I underestimated the amount of work it would take (I am not finished actually, but I'm as done as I'm going to be for awhile). I also did not anticipate that I would change my mind about the color, repaint half the house, change my mind again, have a complete freak-out breakdown, and then decide I was okay with the new color after all. Fortunately, there was no photographer present for the middle part, so the screaming and crying went undocumented. 

It goes without saying that I couldn't have done this without the help of some very good friends -- as well as my parents, and of course, my cousins who own the house. All photo credits go to my friend Cassie -- who also did more than her share of painting. 

This is the front door, and the alcove which is part of the living room.
This is the color green I thought was going to be Sage, but came out Neon Lime.

It's hard to tell from the picture, but believe me -- the greens are very different.



This is the dining area, and kitchen. And the heater in the floor.
The dining area now.
The Kitchen, before.
The Kitchen, after. I only have 3 spices in that spice rack -- salt, pepper and cumin.
Here we see Bella staring fixedly at the fridge, which she has learned to open.

The bedroom, before. I didn't think the bed would fit...
But it did.

Evidence that I did some work. This part was unpleasant. 


Evidence that I had help. Also, this is the office -- before.
The office after. Those are only a fraction of my books.
The Occupants.

 We are settling in, the dog and I. It's definitely been an adjustment. Bella is not a fan of the heater in the floor, nor the noises it makes. I am not a fan of her opening the fridge for a snack at 3 AM. Living downtown is great though -- and I see more of my friends now that I'm more conveniently located. I have met several of the neighbors, and even helped one catch a rooster which had escaped its pen. That was not an experience I expected to have in this (sort-of) urban setting. 

Anyway, there you go -- my new place. In the picture above, I am sitting on a futon. That's where the guests will stay -- though you may have to share it with Bella.


Sunday, September 25, 2011

Thirty

Yesterday was my 30th birthday. 

On this day last year, I set three goals for myself-- New Years resolution style. In no particular order:

1. Find a job

Done! And not the one for which I was initially hired. Through a series of bizarre and fortuitous events, I am not managing a rural library after all. Instead I have accepted a job behind the scenes of public librarianship, although still with the same library district. The specifics of my job description are still being worked out, but I will be helping to process new materials, doing some web work, training the community librarians when the need arises, and "maintaining the integrity of the database."

That last one cracks me up a little bit, although it's definitely an accurate description.  It means fixing sloppy or incomplete records to ensure continuity in the integrated library system -- the catalog. But doesn't "maintaining the integrity of the database" sound so elegant?

I cannot say how pleased I am with the recent turn of events. I feel like I can breathe again, and make some long term plans now that I know where I'm going to be for awhile. Staying in Prescott was not always my ambition, but I couldn't be happier with the way things have worked out. 

2. Get healthy

I started working on this one late in the year. I took a nutrition class with my father this summer on the benefits of a plant-based diet. Even if I am not able to stay vegan (and recently it's been hard), that class has forever changed my understanding of the importance of healthy eating. For the most part, I try to make good choices and I can already see what a difference it has made to my life. I haven't had a migraine in 4 months. I have energy and I feel good after eating, instead of tired and heavy.

And of course, Bella has had a big impact on my lifestyle. I don't get to sleep in anymore, because I have a puppy that needs a lot of exercise or else she destroys everything in sight. But it's been very rewarding seeing how the daily hikes have improved both of us. The changing season (and my new job) have restricted the amount of daylight and time we have for these walks, and I can tell I will have to make them a priority or else it's going to be hard to fit them in. On top of that, I dropped Zumba because I thought it wasn't going to fit in the schedule -- turned out I could have fit it in, but not until after I'd already dropped it. Oh well...

I still have a long way to go, but I'm really happy with my progress so far.

3. Finish the first draft of a manuscript. 

I didn't think I'd achieved this one and for a few days I've been consoling myself that 2 out of 3 isn't bad. My only regret about the new job is that I've had to drop all my classes. I was taking Creative Non-Fiction and Advanced Fiction writing. I wanted to make it work, but it was immediately clear that I wouldn't be able to write or do my new job well if I tried to do it all. Once I get settled in, I'll look into a night class. Maybe next Spring or Summer. 

Sometimes I think that I wasted the year since I moved back from England. But that's not really true. Yes I went to the movies almost every day, and I spent a lot of time doing nothing at all, but I also spent a lot of time with my family. 

And I started The Daily Theme. I don't think I realized what a special project it was, and how lucky I am that I got to share it with my mother. We started the project on September 1, 2010 with the plan that it would take about one year to get through 250 essay topics.  Periodically I worried that a year would pass and all I would have to show for it would be that website. We didn't make it to 250, but with 217 entries of approximately 500 words each, my mother and I wrote more than 217,000 words between us. (By the way, the complicated equation I used to get that result is: 217 X 500 X 2 ... in case you want to check my math). 

My point is, we now have a novel length manuscript. So, I'm gonna go ahead and scratch that off my list as well.

I have not made a list for this year, maybe because I'm feeling so good about where I am right now. Some people might freak out about turning 30, but I'm excited about it. By all accounts, there's a lot to look forward to in the coming decade. It would have been hard if I was still unemployed, but even the fact that I'm living with my parents doesn't bother me. 

But I should probably start thinking about getting my own place.