Post 79: Nothing to Be Ashamed Of

Everyone has embarassing moments.

I know, insight of the century, right?

But it seems like we always pretend to have everything figured out, like we’ve never accidentally used the wrong soap in the dishwasher and created a bubble disaster all over the dorm communal kitchen. Oh, that was just me? Uh, move along then.
That’s my point though, we don’t own up to our embarrassments if we can help it. We cringe so hard at the memory of doing that ridiculously cheesy thing for an ex who, let’s be real, did not really earn that level of effort. We try not to think about painfully awkward things we’ve done or said; you know, the ones that pop into your head when you’re trying to fall asleep at night. We attempt to forget about those regrettable moments; there’s literally hundreds of songs about it, usually involving copious alcohol consumption (spoiler, it doesn’t work).

I think we should try leaning in to our past even if it’s embarassing. While embarassment is socially and mentally useful, we don’t have to let those mixed feelings of silliness and shame define us, or worse, keep us from doing good things in the present. Part of our story is who we used to be, and I think we can learn a lot from our former selves.

Maybe you used to be an obsessive fangirl for ~that one band~, but now you hide all their memorabilia in a box under your bed and skip those songs when they come up on shuffle. Why hide that part of your past? Just own it! It’s part of your origin story now. I, for one, am kind of jealous of the fanatics. I’ve never been that level of passionate about anything. I know a little about a lot, but I’ve never had the motivation to know everything about a single topic. I’ve never lost my shit over a season finale. I’ve never stayed up all night for an iPhone release. I’ve never memorized a set list or been overjoyed about “my team” winning a championship game. Not to imply in any way that I am somehow better than the people who have done those things, that stuff takes a lot of time, energy, and dedication. I have a few dozen causal interests but not enough dedication to call myself a fangirl of anything.
Now, there are totally still things I’ve done that I look back on with chagrin; but I don’t see the point of trying to hide them. They are ghosts, not skeletons I’ve stuffed in a closet. I have been angsty and melodramatic online. I have been wrong. I have lost arguments. I have changed my mind, and changed it again. I’ve tried out wildly different styles and personas. I stood by them at the time, so what if they aren’t “me” anymore? I have an aggressively cheerful intro video posted on a college ‘Class Of’ Facebook page somewhere. Am I going to troll back through my social media footprint to find and delete it? Nope. Because it’s a representation of who I was at the time, or more accurately, who I wanted to be. And there’s something very Zen about acknowledging what I think of as previous editions of myself, they were part of my journey to my current identity, and I am thankful for them. I am reinventing myself all the time, and that’s perfectly okay. There’s a passage from Self Reliance that I always come back to, that I think represents this idea perfectly:

“A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines. With consistency a great soul has simply nothing to do. He may as well concern himself with his shadow on the wall. Speak what you think now in hard words, and to-morrow speak what to-morrow thinks in hard words again, though it contradict every thing you said to-day.”

So you’re a different person today than you were yesterday, or last week, or ten years ago; so what? In fith grade I wore unironically pink tinted eyeglasses that I KNEW were the raddest thing ever, and bless my parents for letting me make my own choices, even when they weren’t terribly sound. I changed my stance on that particular fashion statement, thankfully. I stopped seeing things through literal rose-colored lenses… and no one really cared! That’s part of growing and growing up. I would be worried if that weren’t the case, it would mean that we have done nothing that challenged our thinking or allowed room for personal growth or development. So don’t sweat it, everyone gets redfaced once in a while. But acknowledging when you were misinformed, or young and rash, or unprofessional? That’s nothing to be ashamed of.

Post 76: I Don’t Know (Yet)

Ah, good ol’ undergrad.
We definitely tend to romanticize our time in college, don’t we?

Those four-ish years were an intense and formative time in most people’s lives so it’s no real surprise that looking back we get a little wistful. Wasn’t it just a blast, that magically carefree space between childhood and adulthood? Wishing for that back is tempting. We miss the easy friendships-of-convenience, the abundant opportunities to explore new interests, the freedom and independence, the electric excitement at the big game, even the bittersweet end of a semester. Oddly, we often simply gloss over the education part of the collegiate experience.

Learning was the whole point though, right?
Yet we almost instantly forget the fact that mastering a new skill or subject is
hard work. The strenuous mental labor involved in creating new synaptic pathways fades rapidly from the fond memories of our time in school.

Learning is a chore, not a walk in the park. Anyone who has tried taking up a new language or hobby as an adult can attest to that. Beginning a new skill tree is fun at the offset but the endeavor ultimately sucks. Because beginners suck. Neophytes have to start somewhere, and it’s usually at the bottom bracket. Months of grueling mediocrity come before mastery, if mastery is even achieved at all. The sweet taste of victory is built on a foundation of willpower and repetition. We don’t get to grin from the podium before gritting our teeth through countless drills and practices.

So, while I do genuinely enjoy learning, I’d be a sucker if I expected it to be effortless.
I’m a work in progress—and that progress can be slow. The grinding pace might feel very arduous when noticeable improvement is incremental. My goals seem impossibly far away some days and I get frustrated by my personal obstacles and my mercurial motivation. I sometimes forget everyone has those awkward in-between parts. The half-way-decent athlete, the almost-eloquent political aspirant; we are all going through stages of personal growth. No one is ever really done improving. I dream of becoming my ideal self, having my dream job, effortlessly writing the perfect prose. But in the meantime, I’ll admit that I can be a half-baked human bean sometimes. I won’t always know the answers or even how to find them. But not knowing is not an excuse, it’s an opportunity to ask questions.

My quest for wisdom and expertise—to scale the mountain of mastery, is a journey I am proud to be on. I hear the view from the top is awesome.
I’m not there yet, but I’m on my way.

Post 73: Level Up

As graduation looms ever closer (11 D A Y S) I’ve been thinking more about my goals for post-grad. I have some great aspirational goals like fluency in French (25% so far!), traveling to at least one country not on this continent in the next five years, and (finally) learning to drive. I also have some financial goals like paying back my student loans as quickly as possible (very reasonable, I’m lucky to not have a ton of debt) and building myself a safety net/emergency fund (I’m about 1/3 of the way there already, yay). And finally, a somewhat cheesy personal goal: I want to finally meet my measure of adulthood, pet ownership. Yeah yeah, I know adulthood is such an objective and arbitrary standard. And what even really qualifies me to be an adult? I don’t quite know anymore, but a long-time dream of mine is to be the loving person of a French bulldog. I love dogs and I want to be a responsible owner, which means I am waiting until I have the time, money, and environment needed to make sure my dream dog will be well cared for.

The one thing all these goals have in common, besides being actually realistic, is that I am actively taking steps towards achieving them. Even if I’ve only done so by making a list of things I need to do to get closer to that goal (take passport photos, get passport, research destinations, find cheap airfare), I am always taking steps to actually accomplish the things I want to do. Because that’s the thing about goals; they’re pointless if all they become is a list of quickly forgotten New Year’s resolutions. If you have dreams, chase them! Don’t just wish for all the amazing things you want in life, work towards them. Maybe that means spending thirty minutes every day practicing conjugations, maybe that means emailing seventeen job listings every week, maybe that even means living like a college student two years into the ‘real world’ so that you can pay off your student loans in less than ten years. Then you can travel without guilt about the debts you could be paying off instead.

Honestly though, having goals isn’t some shtick so I can be better-than-thou, I do this to stay sane. I’m moving towards specific, realistic, tangible goals so that I don’t feel like I’m stagnating. I focus on my goals like milestones on the horizon. They are my point of reference that let me know I’m actually moving forward. My greatest fear is getting stuck in a rut and never getting out of it. Like that infuriating level of some video game that you can never beat and so you get trapped, unable to move on. That’s my nightmare in the game of life. A dead end job. Insurmountable debt. Failure. Those are things that keep me up at night, and straight up scare the shit out of me. So I make lists. I scratch things off and know that I’m making progress. I have my dreams to beat back the nightmares. And I follow them to outrun the fear. Don’t let your dreams slip away. Don’t let the fear win. Figure out what you want and go for it because, to quote Post 62:

“If not now, when?”