Monday, July 15, 2013

Life's Balancing Act: The Power of a Friendly Ear

Recently I had a friend who reached out to me in trouble. Not exactly life-in-dire-straits kind of trouble, just your normal, everyday trials and tribulations that we all experience in this great experiment called life.

It occurred to me that everyone, absolutely everyone, is not without a problem or two. Life has become filled with more tasks, more details, more products, more more more! That being said, I feel as though the media portrays life as perfect, always in balance, happy, positive, something that cannot be in any way imperfect. That is SO not the case.

My friend is going through a rough patch/eye-opening time in her life, and I thought, wow, what a perfect time to talk about this now. I have been having my own issues for years, and haven't until recently felt free (or freer) from them. Talking to her about them made me feel so much better - relieved not because my problems are gone (I don't think they ever will be), but relieved because I now know that they're not unique to just me, I'm not alone in the world, I have friends that I can rely on, and my issues are so much better managed with the power of a friendly ear.


It's taken me years to see this, but now that I have, acceptance and management is not far off now. I can envision a future less dark, less scary, less alone. At the very least, I can now talk out how I feel instead of bottle it up inside so it gets worse. That's when the real trouble happens.

I feel guilty rereading this and realizing I have been talking all about my problems, myself. Case in point - talk to others - get to know them on a deeper level - don't be afraid to reach out - don't be afraid to simply listen - don't be afraid to lend help in tough times - everyone is together in their individual struggles.

Chances are, you are not alone in your problems. You likely (99%) share issues. We're individuals, but not all that unique. Similar issues happen more often than you might think. Humans are universal in that way - we are human beings with different personalities, interests, problems, but we also share these characteristics and feelings with others. Maybe not everyone or even most people, but someone out there has done, felt, expressed, or suffered just the same as you.

On that note, here is something interesting and fun:





This website discusses something in numerology called the 'life path number.' It uses our birthdays to assess the type of person we are. And guess what, we most definitely share these characteristics with others, even celebrities who seem perfect! It gives us the hope that we are not alone and can sleep better knowing we're loved, cared for, understood and respected. Maybe not all day everyday, but at least we're in good company.

Keep calm everyone, and carry on :)



Thursday, May 23, 2013

The Lessons of Marathon Monday - Boston Love, Boston Pride, Boston Strong




Recently, the events of the Boston Marathon bombings on April 15th brought my great city to a standstill. Having grown up outside the city and now living in Boston for the past 5 years, you always think, "Something like this will never happen here, it just doesn't, it's Boston."

Apparently not so.

On that fateful day, I was enjoying a lunch and some beverages at a restaurant on Boylston Street to watch the marathoners with some friends. Watching the runners is as much of a spectator sport as any, maybe even more so with all the camaraderie, participation, and fervor you see every year from this fantastic, character-filled, intense and exciting city. We love our sports, from the Red Sox to our Patriots to the Celtics and the Bruins - our fans are crazy, loud, loyal, proud, and happy to support our beloved teams. Just ask any NY fan. So like our sports, we feel no different toward all the great runners on Marathon Monday, no matter where they come from.


As early afternoon hit, the sun was shining, there was a light breeze, the windows were open, and our lunch had arrived. My friends and I were excited to be participating in this great event, as spectators but supporters nonetheless.

What happened next shocked everyone. Suddenly, in the middle of cheering and eating, we heard a large boom. Our first thought was, 'Wow, whoever's family and friends just set off fireworks in their honor, that's awesome!' We literally believed someone had set off fireworks nearby to show their support for the runners. I only wish it had been that simple.

Too soon after the first blast, another one followed in its wake. We looked up from our plates and locked eyes thinking the same thing. Oh my God, this is definitely not right. Something bad happened.

Our thoughts were soon confirmed when we saw hundreds of runners being turned back, policeman guiding everyone past and behind barriers, people everywhere running away, looks of stricken panic and confusion on everyone's faces.

Thinking the worst, we threw money at our table and ran like hell out of the restaurant. The doorman ushered us past and said to the waitstaff inside, "Don't let anyone leave, we're on lock-down!"

We ran outside to see smoke and people blazing by in fear, nearly trampling others in the process. We had parked on Newbury St. a couple blocks down from where we were, so we simply ran that way to get there as fast as we could.


Stumbling over each other, looking frantic, calling our family and loved ones, panic-stricken, confused, teary-eyed, these were just some of the feelings and emotions running through us that day. My boyfriend was down the street working, so of course I was worried sick, calling incessantly and not getting a response. The cell lines we soon found out were becoming jammed and no one could get through. Same with text messages. Finally I got through to him. "I'm okay babe, we're on lock-down here in my building, where are you?" "I'm downtown on Newbury, we're running to the car!" He had no idea I was watching the Marathon in the area that day, so that was news to him. "Oh my God, okay, well get home as fast as you can, I will leave when they let us, I love you!"

Tears streamed down my face as I heard his voice, not knowing what was going to happen that afternoon on April 15th. After what seemed like forever, we got to the car and high-tailed it out of the city. We drove over the bridge toward MIT and headed east on Memorial Drive home to Charlestown. I stumbled into my apartment down the stairs and straight into my bed, climbed in and started crying. Uncontrollable sobs, watching the news in my PJs, waiting. Waiting to hear better developments, waiting to hear if my friends and boyfriend were safe, waiting to see if they had any further news on who could do such a thing to our beloved city. Thankfully my boyfriend arrived safely home, but 3 precious lives were lost that day, much to the utter dismay and despair of the people of Boston. Hundreds of others were injured and lost limbs. It seemed just so surreal.

I just couldn't believe it. You always, ALWAYS, assume that your city, the place you live and work day after day, will never be attacked. I even thought, okay maybe somewhere else, but not Boston. We're bad-ass, we're strong, nobody messes with us. Movies like The Departed, The Town, Boondock Saints, Mystic River, and more attest to the fact and really speak to the attitude, strength, resiliency, and overall power of the people of Boston.




Sometimes I overhear tourists say that Boston is very unique - it's no New York, it's not LA, but it's Boston - the city where we just don't care about your opinion of us, we're Boston and we like it just the way we are.  Our character is still here, loud and proud, accents and dropped r's and all. I must say, I completely agree.

Boston may have been shaken, Boston may have been at its feet that day, but more importantly, Boston's character, the one we know and love, was in full force that day - the power of love, support, help, encouragement, faith, pride, and strength. What I saw were strangers helping strangers, runners donating blood after an exhausting run, volunteers helping others to safety, emergency responders taking care of the wounded and the helpless, people pulling together for the efforts of the greater good and safety of everyone that day. 

In essence, what we saw was what we knew all along: Boston Love, Boston Pride, Boston Strong.






After we processed what had actually happened, of course everyone still couldn't believe we were attacked. So brutally, so suddenly, so unnecessarily evil.  But we didn't let that stop us from being who we naturally are - strong and ready to respond. Everyday people became heroes that day. It was a beautiful thing that rose from a devastating tragedy.

Of course, social media was inundated with images from that day. Images of tragedy and loss, of support and love, of devastation and destruction, and then of course these types of pictures developed:



boondock saints - Bad guys never learn Never mess with Boston




These images of Boston pulled us together as a community. It appeared that not only Boston, but the rest of the world was on our side. Terrorists be damned, we would not let this stand, we wanted justice, we wanted safety, we wanted to catch these guys. Above all, we wanted the victims to recover, we wanted the city to feel safe again, we wanted everything to just be okay.

As the first signs of a memorial went up around the blast sites and on Boylston and Copley, I couldn't help but be so PROUD. Proud to be a citizen of Boston and proud to call this great city my home.

The sound of helicopters flying overhead and ambulance sirens going off still scares me today. Looking around, wondering is this going to be another day like April 15th? What will happen?

Regardless of what the future may hold for Boston, I can't help but think to myself:

This city will go on and rise above as it has before, always has and always will. Boston Strong.




-Dedicated to the victims of the Boston Marathon bombings. May you Rest in Peace

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Pins and Needles - The Story of Survival, Hope, and Trust

Just perusing through some old college term papers and I came across this gem, my famed 'Pins and Needles' story...one for the ages, and one I hope you all enjoy.


“Pins and Needles”
            On that Monday morning in February of 1997, I could feel the cold wind brush against my face. I was hungry, and that was expected. I hadn’t been allowed to eat for twenty four hours. The doctors who were doing my surgery had met with me the week before to discuss plans for my operation, and casually mentioned I couldn’t eat a single thing exactly one day before my surgery. Even when my stomach rumbled, all I could do was drink lots of water. Damn them. I hated them for lots of reasons, and after the month I had been through, I think I had the right to. But right then, I hated them because they said I couldn’t have food. I wanted to eat!
            On the way to the hospital, I was somewhat excited. That’s a strange feeling for a nine year old fifth grader to have when it comes near due time to having surgery. I was missing school, so I was sort of happy about that. All my friends wished me luck and knew that I would be in school the following day, so no worries there. They knew I would be okay. At least, now everyone could be sure. A month earlier, no one could have predicted what would have happened to me. Of course, I knew. I knew the entire time. The Ouija board never told lies.

            It was Christmas morning, 1996 when I received the infamous Ouija board as a gift. I loved that game and had been playing it with friends for months before at sleepovers, where we would ask it questions. The dial would move and guide our hands like fingers over a map, searching for the right path to the right answers. Being fifth grade girls, we wanted to know who secretly had a crush on whom, which girl was the most liked, who would be the first one to get a boyfriend, stuff like that. But what I asked that Christmas night was different.
            After all the presents were opened, after all the relatives arrived, and after all the bits of crumbs were scraped off our plates, my two cousins, my sister, and I headed downstairs to consult the Ouija board. I decided to be the first one to test it out, so I asked the first question.
            “Ouija board, will something bad happen to me soon?”
            My cousin Melissa joined me as we put our fingers lightly on the surface of the dial. It began to float its way over the board while we sat, silently waiting for it to tell us my fate. Our fingers posed, our breath suspended in midair, our eyes wide with excitement. Finally, it spelled out ‘y-e-s.’
            “Yes! Yes! Oh my god! It said yes! Holy crap! I hope it’s not serious!” I said, with a hint of awe and surprise present in my voice.
            “It probably means that you’ll trip over yourself at school, you klutz,” my cousin said.
            We all laughed. She was probably right. This game was used at little girls’ parties to see who liked who, not to grant bad things to happen. Or at least that’s what I thought before that day in early January came.
            It was after school, and my sister, my neighbor Lucy, and I were innocently playing ‘school’ downstairs in the basement. But, unbeknownst to all of us, there was a needle in the rug from when my sister last sewed. None of us could see it. Yet there it was, gleaming, standing upright. Innocent, yet foreboding and threatening. The Ouija board was going to be right.
            The next thing I know, I take one step. My right foot no sooner strikes the needle than I fall and collapse onto the floor, cringing, crying, screaming bloody murder. Lucy screamed too, my sister freaked out, and my dad came running from the room next door, all of them wondering why I had fallen like a lifeless soldier upon the ground.
            My dad held my foot in his hands. Tears were rapidly descending down my cheeks and onto my shirt. I was rocking back and forth. I was a mess. I didn’t care. I had just stepped onto a needle! I said I felt it pierce through my foot, but my dad saw no evidence of that. I told him that it was there, that I could feel its frozen sharpness cut through my flesh as we spoke. Being nine years old and more or less a cry baby, he didn’t quite believe me. No one really did. But I was convinced. The Ouija board had been asked a question. It had answered. No one believed, but it came true. Painfully true.
            For almost a month after that, I endured the most pain I have ever felt in my life. Every waking hour, every moment of the day, was like being tortured in hell. My foot seemed separate from my body; a tense stump with constant and shockingly fresh, cold pain. It felt like not just one, but a thousand piercing needles stabbing through my foot.
I spent the next couple of weeks in a continuing effort trying to prove to the world, including my family and friends who I trusted, that I indeed had a needle immersed in my foot. We tried everything. We tried soaking my foot in hot water with salt to try and draw the needle out. They gave me painkillers. We visited the doctor twice. The first time, I received a Novocain shot in my foot. I remember walking in the room that day, seeing nothing but sterile, eerily white walls, white floor, white containers, white table bed, white everything. Whoever was there must have heard the piercing screams that erupted from me that day. I almost hyperventilated while my mom held me down, my body emitting waves of sweat and suffering. My sister and dad stood sympathetically off to the side, watching while I struggled and wriggled helplessly on the table like a fish out of water. The doctor, of course, didn’t believe there was a piece of the needle in my foot either. And for a while, she proved it, saying, after she jammed the shot needle around my foot during the most excruciating ten minutes of my life, “I can’t seem to find anything. There’s no needle in your foot.”
I wanted to say, “Bullshit.” I almost did, too. I was not joking around. I didn’t want any special attention. I wasn’t looking for an excuse to skip gym class. I just wanted this stupid needle out of my foot. It still hurt, and after three weeks, I knew it had to be more than just pain. I was not going to give up. No matter what a stupid doctor said. No matter what.
After that awful day at the hospital, we tried prying it, poking it, prodding it. But nothing worked. Even my classmates at school thought that I was faking it. Most of my family, my friends, and even my fifth grade teacher didn’t really think that there was a chunk of needle penetrating through my foot. That was the most disheartening and painful thing of all.
I felt helpless. My closest friends who knew me for years, even my fifth grade teacher who I also had for third grade didn’t believe me. I trusted them. Everyone seemed to be in a constant battle fighting against me. It felt like struggling to win a war when you’re the only soldier defending your side. No one came to my rescue. I went through a period of about four weeks where I walked around in the snow, the classroom, and around home with a boot on my right foot. A boot was the only shoe I could get my right foot into without feeling a wince of pain. I had to walk on my heel, toes pointing upward, because the forepart was where it was lodged. It was so irritating. I couldn’t do anything for myself. I felt so betrayed, like everyone turned against me. This battle had now turned into a crusade, one to put an end to the skepticism once and for all and to prove the truth, that there was something menacing, something hibernating, in my foot.
Most everyone has times like these. Something’s buried within them, burning to come out. No one knows it but you. You feel alone, solitary, confined, as if anything you say or do won’t matter, won’t account for anything. You’ve become a weary advocate desperate for someone to talk to, to side with you, to share your worries, to take you under their wing and swathe you with confidence. I needed someone like that, desperately. I needed someone to help me win my struggle.
Four weeks had passed. My mother had seen me in pain constantly and, equipped with her motherly instinct, knew that I wasn’t pretending. She originally requested to have an x-ray done first, but the doctor insisted upon the shot. Deep down, she knew. I could see it in her eyes amidst the fear and worry. My mother kept pursuing and finally arranged for a second doctor’s visit, where the x-ray at last took place. And it was painless. Thank God. She was still by my side, still believing in me. I felt a little better and heartened when I knew that she was on my side. My dad and sister somewhat believed me, but my mom genuinely trusted me. Most of all, she became my second, my partner, my savior. The one who could give me hope and help me win.
Then, they found it. They called my family in, put up the copy of the x-ray, and showed all of us. That picture showed what took me a month to try and persuade to everyone, that the needle existed. God damn! It took all I had not to yell out and scream “In your face!” to the doctors and everyone else who never thought I was right. A mixture of happiness, anger, and relief all blended together in my head. I was furious that they seemed to need evidence, other than the trusty word of a nine-year-old fifth grader, to truly be convinced that a needle lay settled in my foot. Yet in spite of my deep hatred for these doctors, this also marked the first time in weeks that I smiled, the first time where I sensed that I had won a long, tiring war. At last, I had been liberated, for now we truly had answers. It felt like a great victory for young kids everywhere. And yet not just for young kids, but for any human being who never had people to believe in them, to trust them, to have faith in them. I felt like I had made a milestone in history. But of course, it was a small, personal event and simply meant that I needed to have surgery, as soon as possible. Nevertheless, victory never tasted so sweet.
When I got to the hospital for the surgery, I met the nursing staff caring for me that day. They were really nice, even made me cards and decorated my room. But what was most striking about that day was that they all told me how brave I was. Brave. Yeah. They said that if they ever had a needle in their foot and no one believed them, they would have gone crazy. Right then, I started to cry. It wasn’t because I was nervous, scared, or sad, even though at some level I was. Instead, I cried because finally, the battle was over. I wanted to hug them for not immediately doubting what I said, what I felt, what I knew to be true. Finally, they had surrendered. Finally, someone had come to rescue me.
Less than two hours later, I was rolled into the emergency room. The doctor, looking like the Pillsbury doughboy in his hospital white clothing, gave me laughing gas, and soon the whole room became fuzzy. I don’t remember falling asleep, but the last glimpse I had was of my mother watching over me. She was with me in the surgery room. The doctors said I could have one family member with me, and I chose her. She deserved it. I wanted her to be there with me through the whole thing, because after all, she was there from the start. And for that, she needed to be there for the end.
After the surgery in the recovery room, the doctors said I did wonderful. They all were smiling. The procedure went well, and the needle was out. They even gave me a cup with the piece of needle they took out as a souvenir. I giggled, still drugged up on morphine, but I kept it. I still have it to this day, as a reminder. A reminder of a journey filled with pain and agony, but also one of love and faith.
The doctors told me, after the drugs had worn off, that if I hadn’t persisted, if I hadn’t kept pushing for what I believed to be true, that I would have died of blood poisoning exactly one week later. Funny how these things happen, isn’t it? Funny how our lives can be normal one minute, be changed the next, and become all better again in the end. It’s funny how life is.
Fighting for what you believe in is not an easy task. Try asking Martin Luther King, Jr. if it was easy convincing the entire population of America of his dream for blacks to be viewed as the white man’s equal. Try asking Elizabeth Cady Stanton, the Founding Fathers, Christopher Columbus, Rosa Parks, Galileo Galilee, even Ray Kinsella in the movie, Field of Dreams, if they didn’t experience anger and frustration when they couldn’t convince people of their ideas. I’m sure that any one of them would tell you that it wasn’t easy trying to get people to confide in their seemingly foolish ideas. But what’s significant and what remains in our minds today is that after years, even centuries, of being dubbed impotent, ludicrous fools, they are now regarded as great individuals who stood by their thoughts and proved them to be true. George Bernard Shaw once said, “All great truths begin as blasphemies,” where what you know to be undeniably true is doubted by everyone you know, love, and trust. It was devastating not to be believed from the beginning by those who I thought knew me best. I sincerely thought that everyone would have understood me, no matter how crazy my story may have seemed.
I guess everyone is naturally skeptical of things that appear to be improbable. All throughout history this has been the case. My account is no real different from any other, except for the fact that it was mine and I could have died! But I also had my mother with me, every step of the way. All those people I mentioned also had at least one follower, which made things not altogether strong, but still a little easier. Even when we can’t see it at all times, there’s always that one gleam of hope at the end of that palpably dark tunnel of doubt. My mother was that ray of light for me. Her love and faith in me from beginning to end made that painful, agonizing battle slightly less strenuous to go through. Thanks, Mom.
Oh, and just for the record, I haven’t consulted the Ouija board ever since. And if I ever do, I won’t ask it questions that could potentially end up resulting in death. I think I’ve had enough needles for one lifetime.


-by Me, circa 2005

The Lessons of Family Bonding

Recently over Easter, I visited and spent time with my family, a stressful and joyous time for many.

Over the course of the weekend, I realized something huge.

First, my mom valued my advice and most importantly, LISTENED AND HEEDED IT. That was crazy - a first time for sure.

Second, I listened to my parents complain of simple marriage and family issues (at least so they seemed to me, from the outside). I gave them advice in return and acted as a pretty successful (if I say so myself) family therapist. My mom realized she couldn't have 'perfect' and needed to relax more; my dad learned to speak up and voice his opinions and not get angry about things he couldn't change; and my sister (later) learned to listen to my parents' requests while still living under their roof and respect their wishes for just a bit longer.

Tolerance and respect were the lessons of the day.

What I myself realized was that I was pretty good at listening, something I've always previously struggled with...I was pretty good at giving others advice that was clear, unbiased, and helpful, all while not pissing everyone off...I was good at being the normal one in the family for once, something I've also never previously achieved.


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I can be calm, I can be a good listener, I can help my family, I can play mediator, I can learn to be stressless and happy and relaxed all at the same time, knowing that the world won't end or collapse if I allow myself to be.

Marvelous. :)


Friday, December 21, 2012

Newtown Tragedy and the Mayan End of the World: What We Need to Move Forward into a New Era

Okay...so...recently there have been a couple things that have happened to give us all pause. Mainly the Newtown massacre. A slaughter of the worst kind - one where not only staff and faculty were killed but also children, and lots of them. How can someone possibly think that ending the lives of innocent children, the most innocent beings on the planet, will bring them joy, relief, peace, satisfaction, pleasure, pain? I'm not sure what an assassin or murderer really wants to get out of killing others - that's something best left for the professionals.


What I really want to get from all of this, since it's been talked about more than enough and no one needs additional sadness or anger in their lives, is the notion that life is most definitely short. And unpredictable. Guns, in my opinion, are a thing of the past, when the Constitution was written by citizens for citizens worried about the next war, about protecting their families when times were different and militias were more common than jobs in business or public relations. Unfortunately, we are no longer in that world. I do believe in having guns for the purposes of hunting and for war (however awful as that still is that we have them in this day and age), but for the everyday common occurrence, we simply cannot let this continue. The NRA and lawmakers must pass a bill into law making it mandatory to ban all assault weapons and become more rigorous and strict with their restrictions on gun ownership and background checks. This is where I believe everyone can begin to heal, having some hope that the world can be a better place.

I want to take a moment to pray for those angels now connected to their God in heaven, and also a moment to think of the families and other lives affected by this tragic incident...

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On a completely different note, it's odd but the Mayan End of the World prediction (TODAY!!!!! wait, I'm still alive??) coincides and plays into the Newtown subject quite perfectly.

If you think about it, the Mayans predicted that the calendar would end, that Armageddon would be upon us, that the world would shift into a new age of thought and enlightenment...


Don't you think we're already there????

It seems odd I know, but if you can see that their ideas of the human race advancing into a different era of thought, of broadening our horizons, of connecting on other levels unbeknownst to them centuries ago, of learning from one another, of being in a world that is dangerous and scary and tragic and sad and awful -  have already arrived...you might be surprised, but I think the Mayans were right. We are in another time altogether. 

Gas prices are out of control, guns are slowly killing our children, the climate is completely out of whack, we're losing arctic ice and sea levels are rising, global economies are in turmoil, wars are still raging everywhere from Afghanistan to Mexico, social media has begun to mean more than a simple human face-to-face interaction, and countless other issues and happenings...think about it! We're facing a new era, the dawn of a new age - I just hope that maybe we can all learn something from our mistakes, good and bad, and learn to appreciate one another, and if we can't agree, then appreciate the beauty of compromise and respect. 

Put down your weapons, your hurtful words, your evil pride, and give back something to the other side. 

Appreciate, respect, learn, love, smile, speak, cherish, protect, and comfort. 

Do what's best for humanity and the world, not just yourself. 

Let's enter this new age of enlightenment together, peacefully, without hurt and tears, but with love and affection. Patience and thoughtfulness. 

Peace at last, peace at last - let's have peace on Earth at last.


Tuesday, October 16, 2012

What's the Rush? Social Media's Role in Speeding Up Our Lives and How We Can Slow Down




Social-Media-437x234.jpgIt seems that Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram, YouTube, GChat, and other online social media sites have become ingrained, even necessary, in our daily lives. Most of us think that these applications are beneficial to society, allowing us to connect with others in ways that were never previously possible. With globalization continuing and not looking like it will slow down anytime soon, social media links the villages and cities of the world together in no time at all.

While all those above reasons are certainly wonderful and limitless, they do come at a price.

What ever happened to privacy? Personal down time? The right to take a breather and relax? The ability to disconnect from all things technology? What ever happened to slowing down????

I am guilty probably just as much as the next person, me and my addiction to my devices and websites and social media applications, etc. But at the same time, I am very aware and careful not to use them too much so as to lose that important real genuine connection to the 'real world'. Living in social media isn't exactly living at all, is it? Your conversations and interactions online don't hold enough of a physical presence as much as real live face-to-face conversations. There is much to be said for the reactions you see, the emotions you can detect, the gestures shown. The internet and social media just do not offer those very unique and sincere benefits of conversation. You need to slow down and take your time to have a meaningful conversation.



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So please, again, put down those devices, those iPads and iPhones, those tablets and computers, those PDAs and Palm Pilots (do people still have those??), and take a moment to chill out! Stop moving at the speed of sound and look into the eyes of the person you're talking to - it will provide so much more and reconnect you with those basic principles of interaction and meaning.

Slow down, take a second, talk to people, not at your technologies!



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That is all. :)

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Rejection: The Positive Side

Today I was talking to a friend, and we came to a pretty mind-blowing conclusion:

We were rejected for a reason.

Now I know that sounds harsh, but it's true. Rejection led us to having more free time to do what we want, grow and learn more about ourselves, reach our goals, try new things, and work toward a better future for ourselves. One that we shaped.

Rejection often (okay, about 99% of the time) gets a bad rap. It's meant to be negative, and most people consider rejection as the worst thing that could happen to them at any given moment. Truth is, I think rejection has been overlooked. I think it should be viewed as more of a positive thing - one where we can analyze, consider, grow, learn, and reflect. Rejection is a time where we can ask ourselves questions like Why? How come? and may or may not come up with answers. If you can't answer those questions, sometimes the answer is just 'Because it just happened that way.' No other reason.

And you know what? That's okay! Yeah, it's okay to be rejected every once in a while and face the 'hallway of No' as I like to call it - Bypassing door after door, opening them and finding a big fat 'No!' staring at you on the other side. But you have to close that door, and continue moving on. Otherwise, you're just standing in a doorway with nowhere to go and no one to talk to.


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So I'm posing this challenge: Try something new or take a chance to do something you've really had your heart set on for a while - like a new hobby or activity or hairdo - and try it out. If you succeed, great! If you don't though, I hope you'll take rejection like the champ I know you can be and learn from it. It's okay that the job you wanted and applied for didn't work out - it's not the end of the world and it may actually prove that you're stronger than you think you are, that something else is in the works for you, that you deserve a better one, something more suited for you and the employer alike.

So go, challenge yourselves today, and try to find the rejection as a positive thing and a chance for personal development and growth. Otherwise, you're just living in a world of denial and fear. No bueno!

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

What's the Rush? Why We Can't Seem to Slow Down

So in today's world, we seem to be running, walking even, in a million different directions at about a hundred miles a minute. Why is that?

When we're slated to die eventually, why make it come any faster, any closer than it really needs to be?

Technology.

Seriously - think about it! Without computers, smart phones, e-readers, email, social media, whatever else that involves humans staring blankly at screens for hours on end with no real true interaction, what's left? We've completely lost our ability to have conversations (I'm not talking about 'text message' conversations people) but live, human-to-human, person-to-person conversations.  The valuable kind where you can actually see their live reaction, hear the emotions in their voice, smell the sweat when you're getting into a really heated debate, feel the tension in the room building...

It's magnetic, and yet we're denying ourselves the luxury of interacting as humans are naturally and genetically programmed to do.

I once read a book for a communication course in college about the evolution of gossip. It was actually a fascinating read - it argued that since the dawn of human existence, humans have a natural need for cultivating relationships. The human ancestor, the chimpanzee, had some of the first instances of gossip and interaction as we know it today. I know it might seem crazy, but for real people - chimps, females mostly, would get in a line and groom one another and gossip (yes I said gossip!!) to each other during this process. So in theory, cleanliness for survival was part of the social experience, and vice-versa one could argue.

So what are we to take away from this?

I for one am just as much a victim of technology as the next person - I mean I'm writing this blog post on a computer for crying out loud. (It happens when I can't sleep, can you blame me?) But I like to think that I keep a decent balance of being technologically savvy and being a normal, conversing human being with thoughts, emotions, opinions, fears, hopes, dreams, the whole shebang.

One thing I really hate is when I see people on public transit, reading their e-readers and texting and scrolling on their phones, never once having just a normal, natural human conversation. I'm not saying you need to strike up a conversation with every person you see on your way home from work on the subway. Trust me, I did it for years and love my peace and quiet just as much as you probably do. Especially after long, hard hours at the office. All I'm asking is that you look up - on occasion, just glance at the person next to you, see if you can find a window of opportunity to smile, or just laugh or offer them your two cents if you happen to stumble into someone else's conversation. It won't hurt you, and it certainly won't be artificial like that phone you're holding. It won't have a conversation with you naturally (you could say Siri might, but she's still robotic and I still find her creepy)...

So get off your phones people! Look around you! You're not going to learn the value of life and love, health and happiness, without some conversations - the live ones.

One more quick story (too late I know!) - I was in CVS today waiting for a prescription, and of course 'fifteen minutes' turns into about a half hour. Whatever, not like I was dying to get somewhere else, but no one seriously likes to wait for something they don't have to. One of those other natural human things - a desire to get something now, and be done with it.

My point is this - I was sitting patiently and a guy comes up with his niece, an older Italian guy with some years on him, and started telling me jokes. He not only made me laugh, he had me talking to him for a while during our wait. He smiled and laughed back, sharing experiences, talking about his cruises, telling me how he quit smoking after years of it and that was the best decision he ever made. Real good solid HUMAN things.

Everyone needs to realize that people are naturally curious and social creatures - you, me, the gal on the subway, the guy at the pharmacy - and we're all in this world together to create and live and converse and later die (sorry for that bit of morbidity in the line of transcendalism, my bad). But we're all supposed to have conversations, to share experiences, to live together, to share each other's feelings and toils, to discuss serious and funny topics, to smile and laugh together at each other's jokes.

My vote is this: Humans are and always will be socially interactive, so instead of our 'social media' doing it for us, let's do the talking ourselves, shall we?


Monday, September 17, 2012

Patience is Indeed a Virtue

I'm baaaaaack!

Okay so...where did we leave off? Oh, not sure? Good. Me neither. Doesn't matter.

Today I found myself at a loss of reasons as to why I'm still unemployed. Yes, lost my job in June due to lay offs and thought I would land something soon. Not three plus months later, but soon. Not happening.

So obviously I've had this pretty major setback, and you'd think I'd take it real bad. Which I did, eventually. At first, it felt just like a blur, one I somewhat expected and one I even predicted (and turned out to be right. Which makes me think I should just be a psychic, but that's another matter saved for another day and another post). But I thought I would have a worse and more intense reaction to getting laid off. Turns out I didn't, and I handled it better than my family, boyfriend, friends, co-workers, and even boss thought I would. Props to me!

Moral of this story though...I was fine at first, somehow got my life in order (at least relatively speaking and as much as I humanly and legally could) and I was good for a while. Enjoyed it even. Hell, it was summer and I had a couple of teacher friends on break and was going to the pool and beach and getting tanned all for free on unemployment! Sweet! (I was hardcore looking for jobs though before you report me to the IRS...if you check my Gmail, you will see over 50 job applications sent within the first week, so yes I was being productive).

Then I hit a wall...proverbial of course, but it might as well have been a real concrete one. Solid steel beams built in with concrete. That bad. Injuries sustained to the ego, tear marks streaming down my face, I had lost it. Completely and utterly lost my cool.

Nothing had panned out for a while, and even though I was getting interviews and everything, nothing stuck. I was feeling pretty crappy, as I'm sure anyone else in my position would be feeling.

Summer went by, (Fast!), and suddenly I found myself alone and still without any solid offers. Sure, I had one or two come my way but getting double their proposed salary in unemployment benefits...yeah, sorry buddy, I'm going to stick it out a while longer. Thanks but no thanks.

Now I find myself berating myself, doubting myself, running out of free friends and time and medical benefits, the whole shebang. Nothing is going my way!

This is crazy and very unnerving because for the first time in my life that I can really remember, I am without work and it is not my fault. Things are not in my control and I'm doing everything I can but I still am getting nowhere.

This. is. driving. me. NUTS!!!!!!!!!

Depression settles in like an unwelcome guest, and I find myself going stir crazy but not wanting to vent at ever walking pedestrian for fear they might catch my temporary insane boredom disease. I feel like a leper without the obvious physical signs but with all the emotion signs to lead them to believe I had in fact been bit. By the boredom-going-out-of-my-mind-with-crazy-freetime-I'm-going-to-kill-someone bug. Not super contagious, thank goodness.

Suggestions as to what to do? Because I'm all out.

All I can think is that God is perhaps finally giving me time to (for once, or at least for once in a very long time) think about my needs, my concerns, my problems, myself. Is that so crazy?  God is teaching me a very important lesson I probably never truly grasped - PATIENCE. Be patient, and things will work out the way they were meant to. God never gives you something you can't handle, so maybe this is my chance to figure out some time to work on myself and learn the art and virtue of PATIENCE.

Not something I'm great at or even remotely come close to comprehending, but hey, considering I have nothing else to do, I'll give it a shot. :)

Thursday, August 2, 2012

The Here and Now: The Gift of The Present

So many of us in today's society go through life at a rapid speed - so fast that we often don't remember to truly live in the moment and cherish every second. We're always thinking of the past - what we could do to change it or what we could have said or done, and also in the future - what we could be doing, what we want to do later, what we wish we were, etc. Too many times we're thinking of things or concepts that have either already happened or haven't happened (and maybe won't happen).

We can't keep living like this! If you really critically think about this, if we continuously think about the past and what we could be doing in the future, we're never really experiencing the 'here and now' - in other words, we're not truly experiencing. We are simply agents of thought, consumed with the ideas of before and after, never actually now. It's crazy, isn't it?!?!




So why is it that we can't stop this train of thought? (Literally, going back and forward)...

Well, I have a couple of ideas.


First, our society dictates that we're supposed to feel retribution for our actions, that we need to think critically about subjects, to contemplate life's happenings, to think about what we did and really learn from it. Yeah, that's all well and good, but how much of what we've done in the past do we truly and seriously learn from? Not much, I'd say. At least, not enough to keep thinking about it constantly and not living in the real moment.




Second, many of us are so entranced with the idea of the future - the unknown, the mystery of the future, the unwritten. We want to know what will happen, we have goals we want to achieve and start planning for them now for the future...Again, all well and good, but still doesn't make us take a second, right this second!, and say, 'Oh yeah, remember the moment of now? Literally, this split second, fleeting, changing, moving, never to be replaced or seen again?' Yeah, that's what I thought. You didn't...And don't typically ever do.


I propose a radical concept here: Forget the past, dispose of your thoughts of the future, just for today. And think about just moving...Moving forward and continuously in motion...Floating, coasting, evolving. This is living.

 

Try it. Just for a while. You might see that you really enjoy it. 

Now that's life changing.