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Amy's Summer of 2014 Bucket List.

Sunday 6 July 2014

It's no secret how I absolutely adore my hometown of big beautiful Ottawa, but I've realized over the past few years that I've done very few Ottawa things. I haven't experienced a lot of the great things that make Ottawa Ottawa.

So, this summer, I've started to change this-- I've become more spontaneous, more open about great events happening in this city over the summer, and damn, have I been having a fantastic time. 

Here's my bucket list for the rest of this summer, with the stuff I've done already crossed off. The "Maybes" (due to money, interest, whatever) are in italics. The red writing is stuff that I didn't get to do.

What do you think? Do you guys have any other suggestions? 
  • Colin Mochrie and Brad Sherwood at the Centrepointe Theatre
  • Dragon Boat Festival 
  • Ribfest, PoutineFest
  • Nature Nocturne at the Museum of Nature
  • Poetry Slams and Artsy stuff
  • Fringe Fest (1 show: I tried.)
  • Comic Con
  • Doors Open Ottawa
  • Canada Day on Parliament Hill I fucking love Canada Day
  • Welcome to the Night Vale at the NAC, July 3rd (did not do)
  • July 6th: Grown Ups Read Things They Read as Adults, Pressed Café (Heard about this waaaay too late; I really did want to go)
  • July 10th: Cube Gallery: Dark Sky Party and Lecture
  • July 12th: Tommy Wiseau's The Room at the Mayfair 
  • July 12th: HOPE Volleyball Summerfest
  • July 12th: Summer Picnic Series by Harvest Noir 
  • July 15th to 27th: Book of Mormon at the NAC
  • July 20th: Batman movies at the Mayfair
  • July 20th: Ice Cream Festival at the Agriculture Museum 
  • July 27th: Latin Sparks
  • August 7th, 5- 9 PM: First Thursday Art Walk
  • August 8th: As You Like It, Company of Fools (Shakespeare in the Park) at Walter Baker Park (They're coming all over Ottawa!)
  • August 14th onwards: Crush Improv (gotta brush up!)
  • August 15-24th: Capital Pride 
  • August 16th: Lumière Festival
  • August 21st: Dr. Strangelove at the Diefenbunker
  • Salsa at the front of City Hall, Every Wednesday 6 - 11 PM-- there's a whole bunch of stuff happening in front of City Hall every week
  • Parliament Hill Yoga, which happens every Wednesday on- you guessed it- Parliament Hill at noon
  • Urban Quest - from the Haunted Walk 
  • Upper Canada Village 
  • Historical movies at the Bytowne Museum-- every Monday at 7 PM.
  • A games afternoon/night at Monopolatte, the Loft.
  • Slip n' Slide somewhere in Ottawa.... could it be a guerilla Slip n' Slide? 
  • Scarlett's Dinner Theatre at Fat Tuesday's (every Saturday and Friday night)
  • Afternoon Tea at the Chateau Laurier
  • Bon Echo daytrip 
  • Friday Night Live at Funhaven
  • Mosaika (any time, really)
And of course, there were a  few that I missed, for one reason or another-- I swear I'll go to these one day. I SWEAR
  • Great Glebe Garage Sale
  • Tulip Festival 
  • Summer Solstice Festival 
  • Westfest

Anyways, yo, I've compiled a great list of websites to look through for things to do in Ottawa. Check them out to make your own dream Ottawa bucket list. 
Some Reddit pages 1 2 
I'll be updating this as the summer goes on!

"The Opposite of Loneliness", two years later.

Friday 13 June 2014

Like those times when you slap on tube socks, brace yourself against a wall, take a running start and slide across the hardwood floor surf-style only to catch an uneven notch on the ground with your foot and go flying head-first into the wall opposite, we can glide surf-style through life to have our minds catch on the uneven little pieces of our past-- memories, thoughts, words, people rise, unbidden, and check in as guests in the hotel of our minds for a weeklong stay.

(As one of my close friends describes his own experience via text with having things caught in his head: "At this point I'm far beyond convinced that they're mindreaders and that they're implanting themselves in my mind")

My own mind is fixated on endings, on finishes and graduations. Perhaps it's instinctive: for most of my life, June has been synonymous with endings, graduation and change.

When I was in grade 12, on one of the last fading twilight days of my high school life, I tramped into my teacher's office before class, as I was wont to do when I was out of ideas for pranks to pull (these would range from blasting a 10-hour "Batrolled" videos on the speaker system with the monitor shut off to off to drawing phallic animals to put on my self-designated Artwall, which to be completely honest, was really the Amywall). But that day he told me that he had found something on the Internet that reminded him of me-- and he handed me Marina Keegan's essay The Opposite of Loneliness.

Marina Keegan had been an intensely talented young woman who had died in a car accident 5 days after graduating from Yale; her essay, The Opposite of Loneliness, was one of many essays she had written over her undergrad career, but was specifically written as a graduation exercise. An exit essay.

Loneliness was Keegan's reminder to the rest of her class- to everyone-  that we still had time, that we still had the rest of our lives to do what we want, what we dream, what we hope for. The terrible, heartbreaking irony is that she died shortly after, accidentally, suddenly.

When my teacher first handed it to me, when I made that initial scan, I don't think I completely understood what she was trying to say, or I understood it in a very sideways, slanted way that tangibly related to my then-present experience.

When I was 18, it was that part where she described accidentally trudging to an administrative building on a cold winter's night that made me stop:

"In the heart of a winter Friday night my freshman year, I was dazed and confused when I got a call from my friends to meet them at EST EST EST. Dazedly and confusedly, I began trudging to SSS, probably the point on campus farthest away. Remarkably, it wasn't until I arrived at the door that I questioned how and why exactly my friends were partying in Yale's administrative building. Of course, they weren't. But it was cold and my ID somehow worked so I went inside SSS to pull out my phone. It was quiet, the old wood creaking and the snow barely visible outside the stained glass. And I sat down. And I looked up. At this giant room I was in. At this place where thousands of people had sat before me. And alone, at night, in the middle of a New Haven storm, I felt so remarkably, unbelievably safe."

And I was suddenly back to a moment in my own life, some weeks previous, back to when I had been fiddling around with machinery on the Earl stage for the band banquet, only to look up and realize that I was the only one in the auditorium.  

In front of me: rows of those chairs covered in soft burlap-like fabric that made those distinct "dunka-dunka" noises when you got off them.

Above: the disco ball, swallowing and spitting out the stage lights.

Through the open front doors: the faraway echoes of mirth and laughter and loud conversations.

Me: alone, shaken free of the timestream, frozen in the infinities stretching between seconds ("~and in dis moment I swear we wer infinite~"), and my body was suddenly so awake and aware to all the time I'd spent in the auditorium, in the school, and of how I somehow, some way, managed to find a place for me.
And in that heartbeat of a second, just like Keegan, I felt so remarkably, unbelievably safe, and so remarkably, unbelievably fortunate. In that short breath I had to myself before people once again began streaming into the auditorium, all those Lonely Years were worth it: all those lightless days and all those years of uprooting and replanting and uprooting and replanting and uprooting again and again were okay because I'd found a place and a people to love and who (hopefully) loved me.

I'd found an opposite of loneliness.

On the day before school ended, I made a facebook post about my "squinchy feelings" on leaving this place I'd come to love, and how this love had blossomed in spite of my curdling pre-teen anger and fury at having moved to Kanata in the first place. I was on the cusp on university studenthood and awfully excited, but I was equal parts angry and sad and scared when I wrote it: it seemed that I was just destined to keep moving and moving and moving and moving. I was angry that I was being uprooted again, sad that I was leaving it all behind, and scared that I'd never find a tonic to my own loneliness again.

And that's all I got from Keegan when I was 18: a sad muddled mess about leaving and goodbyes.

But now, at 20, wiser and so much older, I read Keegan's essay again and new things jumped out at me, things that I waved away as a teen on the cusp of high school graduation.

Keegan first came to the attention of members of the media as a vivacious, passionate college student who despaired about the huge volume of students leaving behind their dreams to go for Wall Street, for finance, because of “this idea of validation, or rationalization”. She was an enormous advocate for the chase, the hunt, the pursuit of dreams and happiness and heart's callings.

“Selling out”, in other words. This has been the battleground upon which artists and bureaucrats have been fighting for years and years and years (“You’ve sold out to work for the man!”; “You’re not being realistic because we all have to grow up and take on our responsibilities!”).

I’ve had one foot in each my entire life, but it’s impossible to deny that I’ve started angling toward bureaucratic life, and most of the time, I’m okay with this because I’m doing something, I’m being productive, I’m contributing to society in my tiny little way with my tiny little voice. I like looking at the statistics, saying who this policy will affect, and which ones we should be enacting. I’m addicted to that “I’m contributing! I’m doing things that will affect people!” feeling—my workaholic-ness is entirely devoted to feeling that high.

It’s pure validation, pure rationalization: I have no qualms admitting these are at the centre of what I do, and you can see echoes of this in my “birthday post.

I recently came into contact with an elementary/middle school friend, and we spoke of how our young selves would have never imagined doing what we were doing now.

"I always thought you were going to be a cartoonist," she told me, "You were always a really good artist."

I agreed with her but said oh well, you know how those things happen.

But those words keep surfacing again and again, when I would turn the computer off, close my books, and I lay in silence at night, waiting for the Sandman to sprinkle dust on me. I think of my pile of canvasses and sketchbooks lying in a pile in my closet and the stacks of empty notebooks on my shelves often. I am uncomfortably aware of the chronological distance between the last time I put pencil to paper, and now (something over a year).

It’s weird and so bizarre and so human that such enormous parts of ourselves can slowly atrophy and die in our hearts, or that we just... lose touch with them. I remember how much I used to sit for hours just nothing but scrawling away and drafting and making stories. I often ask myself where it went, and if it’d be worth it or right for me to chase it, if I should drop everything, enter a pre-animation program at Algonquin and then apply to Sheridan.

I worry that I made the right decision and I feel again like I'm standing at the cusp of some huge canyon of choice and future choices and uncertain futures and plain old doubt, like I did last year when I considered transferring and the year before when I was looking at universities. But I don’t think this “cusp of a big decision” feeling ever really leaves us (and maybe the adults in my life can verify this for me) and that we always have a choice (they just might not be very good).

I envy Marina Keegan, for more reasons than one. I envy her talent, the way she could make her words cling to you like brambles, how she had Harold Bloom as a mentor and a job lined up at the New Yorker. Sometimes, terribly, I even envy her for having died so young, at the beginning of her incredible journey and imminent movement upward, for the purity of her potential, now forever encased in an amber droplet of time. The good die young, they always say, and now we will always remember her as this bright star that shot past us too quickly in the night’s darkness. Meanwhile, the living stumble around blindly in this same darkness, afraid of rejection and responsibility and disappointing themselves and others and of not amounting to anything, of just being one lonely, tiny speck in the faraway night sky that no one has noticed or bothered to name.

But she says this:

“What we have to remember is that we can still do anything. We can change our minds. We can start over. Get a post-bac or try writing for the first time. The notion that it’s too late to do anything is comical. It’s hilarious. We’re graduating college. We’re so young. We can’t, we MUST not lose this sense of possibility because in the end, it’s all we have.”

And I remember that even if we appear tiny dots in Earth’s faraway distance, we still appear big and beautiful and blazing to planets in our own orbits, but also that we can always still choose.

In my reread of Marina Keegan's essay online, it was actually two comments that stuck out most in my head:

One was a parent, older, saying that they had forwarded Keegan's essay to their children, and that "The future is theirs. I belong to the past."

But below them, I think in a way that would have made Marina Keegan proud, someone commented: "I think you are missing the point. It is never too late to feel the sense of possibility she describes. Please don't write yourself off as the past."














P.S.: I'd like to thank Mr. B for giving me that essay two years ago in the music office. It meant a lot to me.

"-on this day of days", June 5-6.

Friday 6 June 2014

Like I always do on those drowsy afternoons when my eyelids seem a heavier than usual, I took the elevator down 10 floors and walked across Bank to the Sparks St. Tim Horton's to buy myself a French Vanilla.
(Anything heavily caffeinated drives up my anxiety, but French Vanilla, as my friend calls it, is just "sugared water" so it's a trade-off.)

It was dusting rain droplets on the downtown core-- nothing heavy, just light layers sprinkling down from a salt and pepper sky. The walking pavement was stained two tones darker, remnants of the day's rains.

With my medium French in hand, I went to open the door when I noticed a heavyset woman sitting on the ground with her back to the glass door through which I could see her.

She kept adjusting her position on the ground, kept squirming, shifting her weight onto one buttock, then the other, and then the other again, seemingly unaware and/or not caring that her buttcrack was in full view of the Sparks Tim Horton's.

Homeless people often squat around Bank St, I've noticed (greater business? Hitting a better target market?). This was just another one, but it was weird how she was sitting directly in front of the main entrance.

There was a foot between the door and her immobile body, allowing me to complete the careful task of extricating myself from the door.

I saw then that the woman was shifting because her body was rocking, moving, squirming, her entire body tensing and loosening, tensing and loosening.

Her shirt was too white- she couldn't have been homeless- and her face was ruddy and moist (from sweat? From rain?), contorted. There are three tattooed stars on her upper arm.

"Are you... alright?" I ask her.

"Not really, no," she said, voice tense and terse, "I slipped. I hit... my leg."

I crouched down (and what I noticed when I did is that, suddenly, other passersby began "to see her", to clump together in groups and pairs to make a small crowd around us: an unending Greek chorus barrage of "Are you okay? Are you okay?"), and through clenched teeth, she told me that she slipped trying to go into Tim's and that she was here with an event.

She showed me her leg: a large bruise was beginning to flower purple and green on the outermost side of her left leg.

Various people offered their hands and shoulders and she refused them until a construction worker and a businessman offered their shoulders in tandem-- gently, gently they managed to pull her up, allowing her to put some weight on her injured leg, but her face collapsed and she fell heavily back on the ground.

"I can't stand on it!"- Her voice was becoming panicky- "It hurts so fucking much. Just get me my partner please."

A girl, whose long, wavy hair I had noticed before me in line, wordlessly offered her empty hand and without thinking, I gave her my French.

I was running down Sparks, my feet sounding rapid hard "pat pat pat" on the cobblestone (I'd long ago worn to the hard plastic soles of my flats). A man wearing glasses and a white Polo emblazoned with that Egg lobby group I see everywhere ("Get Cracking?") strode toward me and thinking he was the partner, I told him that "a woman had fallen and very badly banged up her knee."

He wasn't. We split ways here and he turned around to get her partner at a white tent some metres away while I headed back to the woman.

By now, harsh expletives were puncturing her sentences ("It really fucking hurts! Fuck, it hurts so bad!"), her face was tight and twisted. A pair of older women were standing to her right, telling her she needed an ambulance and another one, younger, was asking her shrilly, "Are you okay? Are you okay? Omigosh?"
Her partner arrived, 911 was dialed (which I should've instigated 5 minutes ago), and I went inside to tell the servers to block off the entrance (which I should've done immediately).

Inside: I advised the server to block off the entrance, or at least to make them aware that something was happening.

He stares at me blankly: "Should I get the manager?"

"Sure. Just letting you know what's happening."

Beside me: a construction worker, still with his hard-hat on, waiting, sneered-- "oooooooooooooooooh bossaaaay"

I can't remember what happened after that, only that I was standing at the edge of Bank, waiting for the walk sign to pulse green, feeling the lightest of mists dusting my face and hands, clinging to my lenses, staring into the glass windows of the Three Brewers on the ground floor of the CD Howe Building, thinking That's why they wanted to ban bossy.




(As I always do at the end of the day, I debrief myself on what happened that day and what I learnt, which was this on that Thursday:


  • Learn first aid.
  • Just because you are an improv actor, just because you create stories and can think on your feet relatively well does not free you from the very human errors of waffling. I waffled-I hmm-ed and haw-ed- when I should've called the ambulance right away, should've cordoned off the section immediately, should've gotten ice, and should've sent someone else to get her friend. When I'm in a scene, when I've been given my prompt, my entire body is tense muscle, skin and bones, waiting and eager to respond (I'm a better foil than instigator). But I wasn't expecting anything-- I didn't anticipate, wasn't prepared. What does that mean for the next time?
  • I understand why they wanted to "ban bossy". I get it now. )



Links for the Ontario Election

Wednesday 4 June 2014

Unfortunately, I've been a little busy lately so I haven't yet been able to finish the deck that I've previewed on my Facebook (I should also forewarn everyone that it's not going to be anything amazing).

However, I watched the debate today, and I was pretty proud to see that a few of my Facebook friends have already participated in advance polls, so I think it's at least useful to put a few links together of what's going on for the moment.

Here are a few resources:

CBC resources: 

Vote Compass is a pretty nifty site that'll help you find your political orientation. You are by no means sworn to the party you get but it will at least help you begin the process of thinking about and prioritizing issues.

Poll tracker: Follows the polls from Abacus, Ekos, Forum and Ipsos, all of which are quite reputable.

Find your Riding:  Does exactly what it advertises and allows you to view voting history.

Campaign trail: Tracks the paths of the leaders of the four major parties.

Not the CBC but didn't really fit elsewhere: Threehundredeight is doing some pretty cool vote and seat projections.

Elections Ontario resources: 

You should receive a Notice of Registration card, but if you don't, this does not prevent you from voting. Your name just might not be on the Voters List-- you'll need to put yourself on it. Follow their directions.

If you live on or off campus as a post-secondary student, you're allowed to choose in which riding you'd like to cast your ballot. If you want to vote in the riding where you're currently absent, you'll need to cast a special ballot.

*Also something to note: you can always decline your ballot

Queen's Park resources: 

Get in touch with your MPP (or their assistant) with the information from the Find your Riding CBC resource.

Platform comparison charts: 

This one's from Yahoo: it's short and sweet.
It compares:
  • Taxes
  • Debt and deficit
  • "Making life more affordable"
  • Jobs
  • Transit and transportation
  • Health care

Here's a much larger, exhaustive comparison presented by the Consulting Engineers of Ontario that covers the Liberals, PCs and NDP.
They compare:
  • Transit and transportation
  • Infrastructure
  • Jobs and the economy
  • Pensions
  • Taxes and Finance
  • Energy
  • Government reform and red tape
  • Labour 
  • Health care
  • Education
  • Social assistance
  • Interprovincial trade
  • Immigration

The OSSTF/FEESO (Ontario teachers union) compares the four parties' platforms with their own.
They cover:
  •  Education funding
  • "Schools as community hubs"
  • Broader Opportunities for learning
  • Safer and healthier schools
  • Beyond high school
  • "Looking toward the future"

This one isn't a handy chart, but is a worthwhile read on the comparative fiscal plans of the three main parties. 


Party Platforms: 

Liberal Party
Progressive Conservatives
NDP
Green Party.


And my most favourite tool of all: Twitter
Here are some lists to follow--

David Akin's "Ontario" list.
Ashley Csanady's "QP Press Gallery" for reporting on everything happening.
Steven D'Souza's "Onpoli" list.

(All three people mentioned above are journalists, not some random screamers I pulled off the internet who tweet "wynne will WIN" or "hudak is da bomb!!!!!!!!!!!!!! hudak got ur huBAK" or "you will feel the horWRATH" or "who is the green leader smoke weed 420" all day.)

Searching the #onpoli tag is always a great way to feel an online pulse.




Did I miss something? Comment below!

I'll have the deck up.... eventually.

On uncertainty and quarter life crises [warning: long post]:

Thursday 24 April 2014

This post has been a long time coming and very difficult to write. Uncertainty as a broad theme is something that has been festering and eating away at me for years and years, though only recently has it sharpened and culminated into something that has shaken me so deeply.

I'm 20 tomorrow, and this is just so absolutely foreign and strange and unfathomable. I already find adulthood (which I feel I've long ago reached) so exhausting, which I imagine is a little absurd and insulting to those older adults that I know. There's just this constant, overhanging, aching lostness that's been floating around aimlessly in the background of my thoughts and actions that I had hoped would be gone by now.

Beyond that, I was and am still surprised and frustrated that I am still nowhere near being the kind of person I wanted and want myself to be, and I'm still struggling with basic, fundamental questions, questions that maybe should've been answered through socializations and childhood experiences:

  • Does it scare no one else that we can never truly know what it is to be another person or to see from another perspective? Does it scare anyone else that our entire lives are singularly and uniquely our own, that we are can not even be sure of those close relationships with other people, because we won't ever really know exactly how another person feels pain, feel joy, feels love. People much braver and more courageous than me can put faith in other people, and I find that I can too in my clear-minded periods, but this question has been a shadow that has walked with me from youth-- I can remember the first day this thought first occurred to me as a 7 or 8 year old, lying awake in my bedroom in Barrhaven, realizing very suddenly that, though I could feel and touch the mattress I was lying on and see the light beginning to filter in through my curtains, that I could never be really sure that my own senses weren't lying to me and that I was in fact in the slimy fortress of a monster. And how could I ask my parents for confirmation, when I would never really know, never have any confirmation, that anything they answered would be correct and true? I wouldn't ever be able to slip into their minds.
  • Doesn't it scare anyone else how circumstantial our friendships are? I love my friends and it is not the action of loving them that scares me, but in how we become friends with and come to love them. They've changed me, and they mean so much to me that it frightens me that a small deviation, a small choice in the past would've completely starved me of an opportunity to be close with these people.
  • This is, perhaps, the immigrant's question--the one that I, as a first-generation Canadian, wonder as I lie in my bed on those nights when television screens of foreign lands and faraway countries imprint themselves in my mind's eye. Now I am able to look objectively at Japan and China from a distance, I know in my gut that I would be completely different had I have grown up there-- and that makes me wonder ho much of me would stay the same and how much would be better. Much of my me-ness comes from those breathless momentary experiences that I had in school, in at home, in this country; I have absolutely no inkling what kind of person I would even begin to be with these changed variables. And this is, by no means, unique to me--Nina sings about this in In The Heights in When You're Home, agonizing out loud about what kind of person she'd be if her family "had stayed in Puerto Rico with her people".
  • What it is about us that compels us to be us and do things in this world, in this country? If I would actually be a radically different person had circumstances presented themselves differently, how much of my own characteristics and qualities are variables, subject to change from the inputs? Which are the constants? Inasmuch, how much of what I deem to be an essential "me" part is really, actually me and not just a result of our environment and our biases and cultural upbringing? Nate Silver, in The Signal and the Noise(which I'm currently reading) tells us that statisticians will never completely be bias-free, but that the victory comes in being able to "recognize these biases". He says this as if it's easy, but I am still struggling to recognize the words our minds and bodies are born with, and what is fed to us.
  • If we are just an amalgamation of constants and variables and the outputs are themselves as flexible and changing from one day to the next, the changes come in the choices we make, and the options don't come in what they are, but if we even have them in the first place. In listening to my own friends think out their own decisions, I can hear their own thought processes, proposals, and how they seem to reason them out for themselves to what seems to be one direction and one point, and in my head, I can hear myself thinking that they already know their decisions-- but that they don't know that they know. But, as oft is when you're listening to someone else's internal discourse made verbal (like perhaps you are now with me), you are displaced from the individual's opinions and values and have replaced them with your own and you can objectify and intellectualize their decisions because they're of no personal cost to you. But we both know that it's so different in our own heads-- that these decisions are agonizing and anguishing in our own hearts and minds because our pasts, presents and futures are exerting massive downward pressures on our decisions.So, thus, are these choices supposed to be viewed outside of ourselves, away from the distraction of our emotions and hearts, and that they really are so easy to make? But because they're trapped within us, they're already made by our own pasts, our own experiences, our own values and and our preconceived notions of what's right and wrong? How much of our choices have been pre-told based on who we are and what we are, given to us by our pre-delivered experiences, rather than what we want to do or intend to do? Maybe in all our heart of hearts, we already know our truths, yet I hear myself screaming and screaming and screaming as I present this idea to myself, screaming like Larka did, falling to her death in the ravine, screaming like Harry did, lying on the floor of the Headmaster's Office, screaming like classical Greek heroes do to their gods and to the heavens, screaming "Don't I have a choice? Can't I have a choice?"
  • Though, on those quiet days, those "day of days" when my heart and mind are still, dark water and seemingly absent of outside influences, the possibility of choice and its burden are suddenly possible and available. Without the overhanging pressure of any immediate decisions to be made, I can somewhat objectively look at and analyze the paths I've traveled, at the deviations and small side paths that might have become major roadways in my own life; I can face forward to see those winding roads that run beyond my vision in front of me and I am frozen at the choice, at the utter fear of a misstep, of a false start and disappointment. The fear makes me angry ("how ridiculous and utterly selfish to feel so!") and yet-- it's the first thing I can identify in the cluttered cloud of emotions and anxiousness and it's all I can feel and all I can know. I never seem to see or find other people frozen in the present and the past like I was and am-- why does it seem like I am the only one so terrified of the future when I have nothing but stability, a wealth of resources and a sturdy support system helping me ahead? Is there something inherently wrong with me that makes me unable to look forward to the future and instead fixate obsessively on the past and present (and is that thus an output of my childhood and growth)?

In all, I find that these questions personally find centre around fate and free will--two ways of thinking that are mutually exclusive and yet inexorably intertwined with each other. Maybe they're not separate entities though-- perhaps they exist as two extremes on a spectrum of blurriness, growth and influence like sexuality and emotion. I just don't know.

I think people with more grace than I have found their answers in a myriad of places, both inside and outside of themselves-- or maybe not. We could all be a little lost but unable to recognize it in each other because we're all lost on different roads. I think that I'll never fully come to a conclusion or an answer and that my mind's ears have only just been picking up this theme being whispered from my reflections on my own maturation patterns, reading, talking to people older than me, and trawling those hubs of collective cultural consciousness: that we all experience differing levels of being lost and of loss through our lives and that it never really leaves us.

I am just beginning the process to accepting that this possibility of being lost is indefinite. As a kid, I carried around this persistent belief that I would find "my fate" (which would follow somewhat of narrative structure and would be monumental and earth-shaking) like a shield: all the "scrambly madness" of my life would straighten itself out and align to form a timeline where I would be able to point out the foreshadowing, the major themes, the supporting characters, and on and on and on, but until then, I would walk with my heart light and head high.

In all honesty, there are parts of my childhood belief system that have never left me. Unhealthily, I obsessively compartmentalize and organize my cumulative moments and my personality in an effort to get it to fit into some story and trope structure (like one of Kurt Vonnegut's) and (more aesthetically) I like the thought of someone reading my thoughts and bits of my own life, which is one of the reasons why you're reading this right now. And I do think I have found some meaning, pieces here and there: I do hold things like my family and friends above all else, and I do feel quite certain that I do love and believe in the fields that I'm entering. But those fantasies of grandeur do swallow me whole in my occasional to frequent adult moments of weakness and ego.

I'm going through some tumultuous internal struggles with my identity, with my sexual orientation, with my raison d'etre, with myself: I'm experiencing significant deviations of my own thinking and actions from my perceived truths. I'm not sure who I am and from there, what I want, where I'm going, why I'm doing what I'm doing, and on. At first, I was terrified of the onset of these new questions-- did this mean I had been lying to myself my entire life? Were my childhood dreams really my childhood dreams or were they just pre-fabricated dreams thrust onto me by my family and culture? I could feel my life's backbone- my narrative, my fate- shifting and blurring in and out of focus and I intellectualized my own inner turmoil by stripping away every layer of myself right down to the core of my values: whether I could choose my own forward directions or if I really was led by decisions that were made eras before me.

I still don't know. All that I really know is that I feel sore and raw- like having a layer of skin peeled off and your underneath is suddenly stinging from the exposure to the elements- and tired. I think about how nice it would be to just not think for a little while, to have blurry white noise filter through my brain with no room for anything else. I think about how nice it would be to find a small wooded area on the edge of a looming suburban development, squirm an imprint of my body onto a padded bed of moss and soft earth, listen to the hum of the highway breathing like the ocean, and sleep for a century until the earth swallows me whole and my atoms scatter to the wind.

But that would be selfish. I've been given an enormous amount of opportunities and resources and it would be incredibly wasteful and incredibly selfish to just let it all go.

Sometimes I just look at it all and have nothing to say except to ask why me? I've won the cosmic lottery and I don't know why (which is of course the root to my fantasy of finding meaning). I almost feel that it's wasted on me because I still have to struggle so hard when I feel that so many other people- greater, more charismatic, smarter than me- could have and would have benefited so much more, gone so much further and contributed so much more than I have.

I still feel like I'm so far away from the person I feel I want to be, from the people I admire and the qualities in them to which I look up. I am continuously struggling to reconcile so much internal dissonance: the Western philosophy of the individual and the Eastern philosophy of society's whole; how, in spite of all of the meaningful connections and relationships I've made, people still flabbergast me and I still find making friends difficult; how I feel like I seemingly have to work so much fucking harder to put even the littlest piece of information in my brain (does this mean I'm not meant to be doing Economics?); how I feel like I'm lying to people when I just let myself go on autopilot in social situations and don't fight hard enough against my fear and discomfort to reveal the other equally valuable parts of me (like this one); how I feel like I'm such an intensely emotional person yet still find it so difficult to express my emotions out loud (which, to me, almost feels more real) and how I feel I can only do it in writing because of the distance and separation of the medium and in how I can aggressively edit; how I feel like I have a lot of opinions but have to struggle so hard to express them because I feel like I don't have adequate stakeholdership or research to back them up and because I choke on my fear of confrontation.

I just feel so guilty to be feeling any of this because, well, I feel like this lostness is a distinctly middle-upper middle class "first world" problem-- self-actualization, after all, is the highest level on Maslow's hierarchy of needs. To be feeling this way means I'm already more fortunate than many in terms of economic and emotional resources.

And of course I feel (selfishly) that these "fate vs. free will" questions- my own lostness- are coming from my own slow and ongoing conclusions that I am going to be middle class and historically forgotten: I feel myself trying to fight it, trying to fight against the cultural, emotional molds that have been shaped for me from birth, trying to scream to the world and the heavens that I do have a choice and that I will break free from them, that I will do something big and earth-shaking and tumultuous, but in reality, I know so many people much smarter, more successful than I, who are well on a trajectory to greatness while I'm still on the side of the highway, trying furiously and fruitlessly to fill my punctured bike tire with my own mouth.

I knew I had lost childhood when I realized I had no fucking idea what exactly I was meant to do and that that scared me. I still have no idea; I still have those unanswered questions. All that I know is that this vague lostness has identified a guilt, and this guilt has sharpened into some vague direction to give others those same opportunities and resources I received (the plain irony of which is that I'm seemingly trying to break free of the molds that I essentially want to give to others). But I do so in the hopes that these people, many of which will have steadier minds and hearts more open than I, will be able to use these opportunities better than I did to find and know what their truths and meanings are, succeeding where I've failed.

That's the general direction of my next 10, 20, 50 years: I'm going to follow that guilt into giving me something to do while I "fart around" on earth, with the hope that someone, somewhere will be able to know and do what they were born to do. But I'm a deeply conflicted individual (as the above attests) and these internal wars are barriers to completing these tasks. So I set on myself three goals to achieve in the next year, or five or 10: to spend more time outside of myself, to learn acceptance, and to find more emotional anchors (because I have very few right now).

Anyways.

What a huge internal barf. I wrote this over two weeks, slowly adding things that would occur to me riding the bus home, lying awake in my bed at midnight, playing Pokemon, jumping in puddles. There are some conflicting ideas and emotions tossed in here, but I imagine that that's just human nature-- always shifting, somewhat contradictory, never constant.

I wrote this post because I think better when I write (it's soothing and methodical), and because I know that I, personally, like a reminder that other people exist in inexplicable ways beyond the limitations of what our human flesh and five senses can feel (remember my fevered point on my fear that we never truly know what the other person is thinking?). I love reading novels where parts of the writer leech in (think John Irving and Douglas Coupland), those personal posts on tumblr and on blogs, conversations completely written down and non-corporate tweets because I see the words with my eyes, but I can hear other peoples' thoughts like my own-- it reaches past the boundaries of our wimpy human flesh. I remember my 10th grade music teacher telling us after we handed in our major written assignments that she "could hear our voices in her head" as she read them. I wrote this in case other people feel the same way.

I also love closure, and I'm hoping that writing something purging like this will help me learn to accept all this teen-ish dissonance and hold me accountable to my three previously mentioned goals.

Is this attention-seeking? Of course: everything we do is a cry for people to hear us, to see us, to justify us by validating our feelings and experiences. I know I've done this in my cruelty to other people: I've invalidated many out loud and in my own head though I working toward improvement. This is our curse of our own human, singular perspectives: we judge other people on their actions and judge ourselves on intention, trying to keep ourselves the protagonists of our own stories. I find it too easy to forget that other people are the "me"s in their own heads.

And maybe some of this will be helpful to other people too. I'm not okay with being lost yet, and maybe you're struggling too. I'm trying to be okay that I have no idea what my sexual orientation is, that I don't know what my calling is, that my future will never robust like I'd love for it to be-- I'm trying to learn to be, because I sure as hell don't have that talent by grace. Sometimes I have good days when the world is singing to me on-key and in beat, and sometimes I have bad days when all I hear is shitty dissonance that makes me cringe, but mostly, I have days in between, when everything is shades of gray. I go through cycles, but so too do ocean tides and housing markets and moon phases and the weather and political balances of power. Nothing is relative; everyone is an individual in our beliefs and feelings.

I mean every word I've said in this post, but some thoughts and ideas are more and less true to me at certain points of the cycle. These questions have bubbled up because I'm frustrated, angry and antsy: I'm stuck at a geographic and structural rut in my work, academic and extra-curricular careers, I have nothing to distract me from spending too much time inside myself, and I have very few emotional anchors (someone or some people to center me and give me perspective outside of myself). This has been the first time since middle school where I've had anywhere upwards of 2 months free to myself to do nothing in terms of extra-curriculars and school and things to occupy myself with and all of my emotional turmoil has caught up with me. Which begs the question of what my default state of being should be-- occupied and happy (but perhaps distracting myself from my internal issues) or without anything to do and home to utter inner turmoil. I don't know.

What I do know is this: I have been fortunate to have had experiences where I forget all of the above messiness and have nothing holding me up but utter, bubbling joy and a deep, glowing love that makes me feel like I've become one of those Hollywood searchlights beaming pure light up to the heavens. These have moments both big and small: smells and strings of words (said aloud and whispered), meals, bus rides, silences, photos-- I've been extremely fortunate to be privy to such marvelous things.

I am still lost and I am likely to be for the rest of my life, but this is what it means to be alive and living. I'm learning to accept this, and hopefully I'll have a day in my future when this becomes a lesson learnt.


- A
 

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