February 29, 2012

Wednesday Morning


I dropped or knocked over seven things this morning.

I almost didn't get off the metro at my office stop. It's the first time in a long time that I've read on the metro in the morning. Apparently, it doesn't take long for me to become absorbed in a book and forget everything around me. Less than eight minutes in fact.

Going to bed does not mean the same thing as going to sleep. To actually feel more rested in the morning, I need to go to sleep earlier. Not just climb into bed and pull my computer into my lap earlier.

Walking into work, I took a few steps back from the curb to avoid the splash from car wheels speeding through puddles, and I backed right into the curb of the park's garden bed behind me. I teetered. I tottered. I laughed at myself. And caught the cute guy next to me looking at me with concern. Much much concern.

I know I have a few new readers (Hi! Yay! Thanks reading!) and I thought it might be nice to get to know each other a little better. Here are a few things I'd love to know about you all:

Names! What's your name? Or, what do you wish your name was? Or, what's your favorite name?
Places! Where do you live? Or where do you wish you lived? Or where are your favorite travel-but-not-to-live-there places?
Websites! Where do you write/post photos/share songs/pin things, etc? Or, which sites do you absolutely love?

What do you want to know about me? I'm open to answer pretty much anything...

 Answer and ask in the comment section or using Formspring. I have a few questions waiting in my formspring account, so your questions won't be lonely, I promise. And I'll post the answers, um... soon.

February 28, 2012

Where the Broken Road Led



Our second year of law school, we made a mixed CD before the first day of Spring Semester. We popped it into her car's CD player and drove out to the boat launch on a cold January night. Lined up, shoulder to shoulder, we tossed baseball-sized rocks into the Atlantic, shouting as the rocks crashed through the waves. We threw the first few semesters into the ocean - the 1am morning hours spent learning partnership dissolution, the upchuck of strawberry yogurt before the exam, the walls closing in above the bed, the spilled edamame on Whole Foods' floor. We intended to throw away the bad and keep the good. Keep the very best. When we finished tossing rocks and screaming into the darkness, we climbed back into her car and drove around Portland until the CD found its way back to the very first song.

The CD contained mostly songs about relationships. The songs didn't mention a word about school or jobs, grades, careers, internships, or exams. Yet, they said everything we could have possibly said about that past year and a half.

I have a relationship with this career choice. I chose it and it chose me. Long ago, really. I fell in love long ago.

[I try not to get trapped into the dichotomous thinking of a relationship v. a career. One winner, one loser. I don't have to be monogamous in this regard; I can love both, him and it, at the same time. In the same breath.]

But it has been a long and bumpy road. And yet.

Today, and yes, today for the first time, for the first time ever, I feel like I am exactly where I belong with this career. With this love. Had I not experienced every single difficulty, heartbreak, and disappointment, I would not be in this place. Had I not let it carry me on the days I felt too weighted down to even move myself, never mind myself and a career, I would not be in this very place. I am certain.

I have moved from hope to faith to certainty.

[I believe in questions. Question this certainty, yes. Always. But I had to arrive at certainty to even begin to ask questions of it.]

I could not have gotten to this place without every single difficulty. If there had been even one less, if there had been one less turn, one less bump, one less ditch, I would not have arrived here.

And here. Here is a place with steady footing. For the first time in a long time, I can stand grounded, take a deep breath, and see out beyond the peaks and the valleys.

Here I catch myself smiling involuntarily at tiny moments in my day. Remembering how to better care for myself. Getting lost in the months ahead, rather than the years. I find myself letting go of expectation and marvelling that this is even better than I thought it could be.

I am finding myself in places I didn't know I was hiding. I am here now. I am finally in a place where I am certain. Where I am steady. Where I can belt out -  ... God blessed the broken road that led me straight to you.*


[*Sans religious implications, please]

Seventeen Things. Or Maybe Just Two.

Y'all. My friends Nicole and Jeff are trying to win a wedding.
Check out their video below
- done by our incredibly talented friend Adam Flaherty, owner of Anchor Line Web and Screen Works -
and vote for her here:
http://www.realmaineweddings.com/itemlist/category/2.html


In other unrelated news, I did a guest post for Julia of Zoorebellion. If you want to know what I think of living in DC, you can check that out here. And if you're in the DC area, I'd love to hear about your favorite ice cream spots. 
(That last part really only makes sense if you read the guest post.)

So many links for a Tuesday that it almost feels like a Friday!

February 27, 2012

The Urge, The Desire, The Intuition


The year everything crashed, I listened to a piano version of a Coldplay and Taylor Swift mash-up by a musician I had not heard of before or since. I pulled myself up off my bedroom floor, stumbled upon this mash-up immediately, and found the repeat button through tear stained vision. I didn't even like Taylor Swift. I still don't, really. But I listened on repeat and it helped me breath through the moments I thought I might never breath again. I listened without explanation or reason.

I painted my nails black that fall. I had not worn nail polish in years, if ever, but I walked over to the kitchen drawer and pushed around Nicole's collection of colors. Pushed aside the reds, oranges, and blues. My fingers found the bottle of black in the corner, untwisted the top and mimicked her long, full strokes. The black spread, filling and healing. Unexpected but welcome.

I bought my mom's camera with me when I went to visit Nicole one Friday afternoon. I had it sitting on my desk from a vacation months prior. Reserved for vacations and special events, not Friday afternoon visits. We took the baby and the stroller down to the beach at the end of the road and began to snap photos. And I haven't stopped.

I began a tumblr, not entirely sure how to tumble, who to follow, what to do with this domain space. "Don't over think this. Just do it." I had an idea by then, of how this feeling worked. An urge, a desire, an intuition. Follow it. Let it fill me up. Photos and poetry and coffee and travel. I filled the space. I filled myself.

I pulled on an old black top, smeared my eyeliner, and pulled the black brim down to my eyes. I smiled at my reflection, at this new look. It's going to be a good Saturday, I knew. Turned on my ipod, grabbed my camera, my keys, my life, took a deep breath, and headed out the door.

I trust myself now. Without explanation or reason. I follow the urge, the desire, the intuition. I let it lead the way. To a place that fills.

February 26, 2012

To Everything There Is A Season


I don't love award shows, with the exception of the Grammys. But award show season reminds me of my time in LA. I didn't realize there was a season to it all until I spent a college semester in LA. I was there for award show season and pilot season, which seemed to over lap, interning at a talent agency. It was a semester of growth more than a semester of academic learning or glitz and glamor. It was, by far, the hardest semester of college I experienced, and I walked away with bittersweet memories. Yet, every year (for the past six years now) I feel an old pull towards LA and the days I spent at the intersection of Hollywood and Highland. I wrote the below post when I was living in rural Vermont two years after my LA semester.
16th January, 2006. 10:16 pm. 
Tall, white and slightly boxy, the Beverly Hilton looks the same as it did two years ago. The sun gleams off the white exterior in the same exuberant manner, while accentuating the lush green trees and shrubbery surrounding the building. It gives off the impression of a tropical paradise rather than the desert that it is. Two years ago I did not spend the evening watching the Golden Globes. Rather I was asleep, probably by nine, still suffering from jet lag and more second thoughts that I expected. 
We did watch the Academy Awards. They shut down Hollywood Blvd for the entire week before. Stuck in the routine traffic jam traveling south on Highland Avenue, we watched the handful of workers line the four-lane street with a red carpet and erect a larger than life statue of a gold naked man. It seemed as normal and routine as our forty-five minute commute to our internships, a mere eight miles away, and the eight dollar parking fee to see the twelve dollar movie. 
I believe I met Andrew* a few days after the Academy Awards. A rescue from paper cuts, crooked staples, drawers of black and white headshots and endless resumes. A rescue from Gabe, with the too short pants who always gave careful instructions on how to baby-sit the fax machine, a rescue from the mute grey cabinets and sterile white walls. 
A few doors down and over Andrew’s shoulder was Beverly Hills. Composed entirely of windows, the “wall” behind Andrew’s desk painted every fantasy I had ever dreamed of southern California: lush and green, although once again only a façade over the actual desert terrain. But in Andrew’s office I didn’t mind so much, and I never understood why he positioned his desk with his back to it all. Perhaps he was afraid of heights. 
Only slightly older than I, he often sat with his shoes off behind his cherry desk and we’d listen to Frank Sinatra, or occasionally Eminem, as the hours passed. He made sure I listened into all of his phone calls, I think mostly so he could have somebody to make fun of the industry people with. He never took anyone in entertainment seriously, and his office became a place of mediation between my growing loathing of the entertainment industry and my constant immersion in it. He would call his “crazy ex-girlfriend” and ask me to stay on the line and then make faces as she spoke; she was a true Hollywood stereotype. Andrew held my sanity for most of the semester. 
The internship really holds the only coherent memories I have of those months. The others move from warm swimming pools to the blinking lights of a Melrose psychic at midnight. Most of my memories revolve around car rides: Sunset blvd on a Friday night, Muholland on a sunny day, a drive through Bel Air on Easter Sunday and “the 5” at 11pm on a Thursday night. Mostly I remember coloring books and trips to Ralph’s for bulk candy, the scent of the old BMW and Radio Disney, the only station it received. Writing by the light of my vanilla candle at night and falling asleep to Dashboard…usually twice, because the four am entrances by my roommates were anything but quiet. 
On Highland Avenue, stood Shrek, announcing his re-appearance on the big screen on May 19th on a quite sizable billboard. The ad appeared most likely in late February and the first time, and every time, I saw it I could only think that I would be back on the east coast when he finally stormed theaters again. The time almost always seemed to be creeping by. That was two years ago and I still remember that date, May 19th 2004. 
Sometimes you need some tinsel to appreciate the granola.
I wanna glide down over Muholland [...] All the street lights say never mind, never mind. All the canyon lines say never mind. Sunset says we see it all the time, never mind, never you mind.**


*Names, privacy, etc.
** Lyrics mishmash
***I knew it was an awkward picture even as I took it, yet it remains the only picture of myself from Hollywood and Highland. 

February 25, 2012

#Friday Follow on Saturday Night



I'm watching college basketball with my housemate which means it's Saturday night (at least that is what it means this week), which also means I'm late with my Friday Follow links, but that's okay, right? And that run-on sentence is also okay, right? Yeah? I'm glad we're on the same page. And these might be some pages you'd enjoy also...

This love letter by (e) is just... wow. 

I've decided at least seventeen times this week to eat better. Healthier. I also ate my weight in Valentine's heart candy and Girl Scout cookies. But it's that time of year, right? Anyway, when I finally manage to follow through, my game plan is to eat real food

I would like to live inside this tumblr.

The Tappan Zee Bridge might become a walking and bike path, while the new bridge will support a train even though there isn't a rail line in the area yet. Build it and they will come. I like that mentality.

Meg, on forgiveness.

Wanting something more. Yes.

Suzy talks about cleaning the house before company and putting on make-up before going out and not sobbing in the grocery store and how this relates to The Internet. Fun and smart and important.


What are you reading this weekend?







February 23, 2012

This Week


This week. Oh, this week. Good week? Yes. Fast week? Holy moly. One of those weeks where half my wardrobe is piled on my chair and I still have not unpacked my suitcase? Definitely.

I wrote a post on the train ride from Connecticut to New York City on Monday night. It's in my moleskin in my bag across the room. And the post is filled with words. Hopefully meaningful strings of words, as I'm sure that was my objective Monday night. But it's not Monday night anymore and I'm just not in the mood for those strings of words tonight. (And let's face it, I'm comfy in my bed across the room.) So, instead I am going to post a few photos of the past week. I'll post the train ride writings in the next few days when it's not 11 PM on a Thursday night. Good deal? I thought it might be...

So here's what my past week looked like:
(They're all taken with my iphone because I haven't had the time/energy to upload my camera photos.)

The Brooklyn Flea Market. 

Someone needs a haircut... 
But not until she gets in her morning cuddle.

 Small-town Connecticut does mean street fairs with ice carving contests. 
Think Stars Hollow from Gilmore Girls and you get the idea...

February means coat weather for everyone.

This photo cracks me up. She's actually fine with wearing the coat (and had been wearing it for a while at this point) but doesn't get the concept that rolling around just isn't going to be the same.

 Holy sunset, Batman.

This is the view from my brother's couch, which is the place where I sleep like a log every. single. time. I spend the night. 
(Which makes me realize how many nights I've slept on that couch over the years...) 

Another favorite view. 

I ate so many of these that I threw the only half empty bag(s) out yesterday afternoon before I turned into a valentine candy heart. I saved this one as a reminder though...
(Also, work notes blurred in iPhoto. No actual water was spilled in taking this photo...)

The sky was still light when I walked home tonight. Spring is on its way!

This past week was filled with all of this and so. much. more. But I'm tired and going to leave it at that.
Hope you all had a great week, too!

February 20, 2012

And This Time Around


There is time and space between the tipping of the water glass and the splash of water on the floor. Brick by brick, build this life. 

I have time, so much time. In between and before and before and before. I sleep more hours than I have in years. Work less than I ever have. And yet. I am tired. Always short on time. Too much time. I watch the clock. Never sure of the hour. Just that I am behind. Or ahead. Never on time. Time and time and time.

She handed me a pocket watch on a necklace chain. It is time.

I flipped the glass of water the night stand. I opened the blinds. The water has not yet reached the floor. The sun has not yet arisen. In seconds less than a deep breath, the water will splash, the sun will emerge. But I am holding my breath. Never certain of certainty.

Brick by brick, build this life.

If I wait with held breath for the water to meet the wood floor.
If I am expecting the night to never end.
If I am watching the clock's second hand.
If I am tired.
Can I muster the patience, the strength, the faith to build this life brick by brick?

Begin now. Even if.

I believe in beginnings. I create beginnings. Do I leave in the middle? For new beginnings? Give up and fail and abort the middle. I believe in beginnings.

Begin now. In spite of.

Eat healthier, send more cards, take a photo, write a blog entry, make a mistake, say yes, say no, make coffee at home, take care of the body, take care of things, get rid of things, pick up the phone, plan trips, give more hugs, laugh harder, squeal more often, take more walks, spend time alone, read more, meditate, make it all a habit, cry harder, write and write and write, focus on what matters.

[I bought books on kindle for the itouch/iphone. As not to carry heavy pages to work and back each day. As not to box them up and move them in the future. As not to spend more money. And daydreamed about having a library someday. I woke up and realized I need books, the kind I can hold, to have a library. Buy books. Flip through the pages. Read. Everyday. And build that library day by day.]

I begin and I realize: this all has always been. I lay the same bricks: writing, photography, healthy decisions, travel, affection, books. I have spaces to write; months, years, decades of logged words; a camera and thousands of pictures; a coffee pot and organic sugar; Whole Foods gift cards; books on my shelf waiting for my time. I worry less about abandoning middles. I worry less about patience and strength and faith. I have moved from hope to faith. I have moved from beginnings to middles. I am building brick by brick. Each brick feels like a new beginning. But I place it down in the middle.

I flipped the glass of water the night stand. I opened the blinds. The water has not yet reached the floor. The sun has not yet arisen. It will. It will.

[It will. And this time around, I'll talk about it. All of it.]

February 17, 2012

#Follow Friday


Reads I'm loving this Friday: 

David Foster Wallace's Kenyon Graduation Speech from 2005. 
I've read parts of his speech before, but this is the first I read the whole thing... wow.

Life is more interesting with a growth mindset. Justine Musk thinks so and so do I.  

Unreasonable Choices. Yes, please. Those are my favorites.

I may or may not have emailed this youth-focused overview of the President's proposed federal budget for FY 2013 to friends and family this past week. Don't you wish you were on my email lists? Oh, those lucky recipients. Well, here's the link in case you are actually interested.

I'm not a die-hard Dear Sugar fan, but I can appreciate awesome (honest, well written, paradigm shifting,at the core of life) advice when I see it. This week (I think) Dear Sugar identified herself as Cheryl Strayed. Which means that Dear Sugar was the one who wrote this essay I loved a couple of months ago and now I can't wait to buy Cheryl Strayed's forthcoming memoir Wild.

Maura linked to the NYT Magazine article on consumer shopping habits and how Target can tell when you are pregnant, which she notes is both equal parts fascinating and disconcerting, but she also highlights a fantastic couple of paragraphs explaining the brain process of creating habits. 


What are you loving this Friday?


February 13, 2012

The Burning Question - How Do You Want It All To Feel?

Your day, kissing, next success, friendships, nervous system, money-making… How do you want it all to feel?


Danielle LaPorte has launcher her new Burning Question series and says, "[L]imber up, loosen the images and adjectives encrusted on our goals and most-desired states. It helps to get poetic, lyrical, and abstract. Go there with me." Yes, please and thank you.


I want my day to feel like the first sips of hot coffee.
I want my 
next success to feel like jumping into a cool pool on a hot, humid, steamy day.
I want my 
body to feel like the first few beats of a favorite dance song.
I want 
smiling to feel like a bite of fresh pear.
I want my 
friendships to feel like warm winter coats and cool summer breezes.
I want my 
nervous system a serene Vermont lake.
I want my 
neighborhood to feel like my best friend's hand in mine.
I want my 
integrity to feel like the beating of a human heart.

I want kissing to feel like the first snow.
I want my challenges to feel snowboarding for the first time.
I want my money-making to feel like breathing.
I want my 
laughter to feel like ocean waves.
I want the 
end of the day to feel like the encore of a favorite concert.
I want 
being of service to feel like drinking a cold glass of water after a long run.

I want my love to feel like standing at the base of mountains and at the peak of mountains.
I want my 
writing to feel like 
Sandra Cisneros dances with Wally Lamb.
I want my ideas to feel like the invention of the lightbulb, the telephone, and hot chocolate.


February 12, 2012

Red Walls


The walls were red. I had forgotten that. A foggy memory jogged by stumbling upon an old bio. “Likes include green cupcakes and the red room.” Oh. Right. But do I really remember?

I remember the height of the ceiling. The double bunk bed with room to spare. I remember red carpet. Could the walls and carpet both been red? No, no... I don’t remember red carpet. I remember typing out “plush red carpet” one June evening when I couldn’t be the keeper of our story anymore. Not alone. So I typed it up and stuck it in an envelop with a stamp. For him to hold and carry for a while. “Plush red carpet.” I think the carpet might have been black. And I wonder how much of the story I got wrong. How much I got wrong as I lived it.

The walls were definitely red. Bright red. The windows, the great big bay windows on the roundel portion of the room, had black trim. Perhaps. I didn’t know the word roundel then. The walls were definitely red.

That first night, half the house, half the campus it seemed, stopped by to talk, joke around, ask advice, sing. A stream of never-ending, late-night company in and out of the red room. A room with an almost full size bunk bed, a water bed, a mac, a pc, an entertainment center, a recliner, a couch, a coffee table, an end table, and a mini-fridge with a brita pitcher also held a sea of people. Kind people. Interesting people. A lot of people.

I walked home almost certain I would never go back.

In fact, I had gone there to say just that. This isn’t going to work. It was nice to meet you. See you around. I said it, finally. Quietly. When he asked them all to leave. I walked home in the quiet dark. Along the bank of the lake. In the biting cold. The wind had teeth that night.

I went back. First on Valentine’s day, for a romantic comedy and a pint of half baked and he wasn’t there that night. I could hardly eat a bite. I went back a second time to say again this isn’t going to work. It was nice to meet you. See you around. I said it. I said it louder this time. I looked him the eyes while I said it. Eye-level, I was sitting in his lap. He said fine. I got up to put on my coat, one arm after another I could do this, but he took my hand and pulled me towards him. We slow danced in that college bedroom to songs that reminded me of my grandparents. I closed my eyes, but I could still see those red red walls.

He walked me home, he insisted. But I insisted only halfway. I wanted the quiet dark and the bank of the lake. I wanted the biting cold, the sharp edge of the wind.

I went back after that. Again and again. As friends. With friends. Our friends now. Friday nights we watched movies, whichever movie was making the rounds in the house. In the beginning, we sat on the couch, on the carpet, on chairs. Friends. All of us. In the beginning, I fell asleep before each movie ended. Drained from keeping the distance all week, finally at peace with us both under the same red walls. I fell asleep curled up on the corner of the couch, my best friend sitting next to me. She would wake me when it was time to go home.

She and I walked the bank of the lake together. Not for a moment taking for granted the still water, the light of the moon, the curve of the bank on the other side. Not for moment taking for granted how lucky, how happy we felt. Even though, even though.

When it became routine to spend a Friday night in the red room, when the boys played a game of chess during the movie, when the rest of the house expected us to still be there when the bars closed at midnight, I fell asleep before the opening credits began. When it became too tiring to stay on the other side of the room, I fell asleep under the kind watch of the red walls. Safe and home and back again. One more week.

We talked in circles. Ate ice cream at midnight as the cafe closed and opened it the next morning as the winter, then spring, sun rose. We talked about everything. Drank jungle juice in grimy basements, his arms around my waist, and ginger ale at dinner with his family, his hand resting on the back of my chair. He said no and I said no and we wouldn’t talk. She would drive me down to the parking lot by the lake and pull out the box of tissues from the back seat. Then he and I talked in circles. Ate ice cream at midnight as the cafe closed.

We would still all clamour up the stairs to the red room on Friday nights (and Saturday nights and Thursday afternoons). Late in the semester we all fell asleep most Friday nights, the three girls on the water bed, to a slight rocking and the flickering of a horror movie. The boys on the recliner, the couch, across the carpet, whatever color it may have been. Content and happy and friends.

The next year they moved into the two rooms next door. Eight walls that have seen my best and my worst. All of our best and our worst. None that cared for us more than those red walls. We hardly set foot in the red room after that. It held the upstairs bar for parties with faces I hardly recognized. I went downstairs to get my drinks. My last year, the house caught fire and everyone moved out for the rest of the year. I walked through the house once, after it was repaired, after I graduated. The door to the red room was locked but I imagine the walls were white. And the red room became just a memory. That, too, has faded.

Today, I have a room with red walls. It felt like home the first moment I walked in, the first moment I fell asleep under the watch of the walls. Kind walls, my red walls, I knew immediately. I thought, weeks later, of the red walls from not so long ago, when I felt steadied, steadied, steadied by red amid nights of red nightmares. And thought, a fling and brief love-affair come true.

I realize now it’s long standing. My love affair with red walls.

February 10, 2012

#Follow Friday

What I'm reading this Friday:

A sad but important article about people (some, not all) in one of my favorite states: Maine.

An awesome analysis of a question I frequently (too frequently?) ask myself: why am I doing that?!




I'm convinced Suzy made the best valentines. Ever. 


 What are you reading this Friday?



February 8, 2012

The Past Three and a Half Years According to My Photobooth

[Edit: Oops. I did the math wrong. (No surprise there.) It has been only the past two and a half years. But still.]

You guys.

This is probably the most absurd post I've put together in a while...

but I just flipped through my photobooth photos from the last three and a half years ((!!!)) and I just have to share the outtakes.

Please note:
   - the fact that my wardrobe is comprised of mostly hooded sweatshirts.
   - the number of times I appear to have NO IDEA that the camera is going off. um. what?
   - holy emo, batman. I could give a fifteen year old a run for her money in some of these...
   - yes. i once had short hair. and now we can all watch it grow...
   - photo locations include maine, connecticut, ireland, maryland, and dc. but not in that order.
   - Capo, Nicole's cat, loves to cuddle. Nicole will blame that on me, but... whatever. (ha.)
   - Blossom, my mom's pup, might be part cat with all that shoulder sitting.
   - those walls are no longer yellow (ick ick ew).

And without further adieu...








And that right there pretty much sums up my life for the past three and a half years.

February 5, 2012

Suits & Bracelets

She wore a bright-colored, glass bracelet, peeking out from under her black suit jacket. Matching suit pants. Wavy, long hair cascading over her shoulders. On some days, pulled into a simple pony tail.

She pulled out leather chairs in the Hill conference room and sat down with authority. But also sank into quietly into coalition meeting chairs without disturbing the loud rounds of hellos and announcements of personal ego. Her emails distributed out-of-office notifications with phrases like "six weeks" and "Guantananamo Bay"- but she spoke mostly of rafting trips and sun on California beaches. She smiled more often than not.

I cut my hair the summer before in favor of a shorter, older, more professional look. I wore naked wrists and naked earlobes.

More often than not, I still do, but two falls ago, I let my hair grow longer.

I want pant suits with perfect pressed lines hanging in my closet. I want the confidence to slip into one at a moment's notice and stand up quiet, loud, proud, with ease for what I believe. I have the belief, I have the knowledge, listen.

Most of the time, I want to wear jeans. I want to carry my camera everywhere and actually snap the shot. Stop. Move to the left. Bend down, stand on my toes, weave through the crowd, feel the eyes of the crowd, but take the photo anyway.  I want to take the photo and not notice the eyes. Everyday.

Write. Everyday. Write with a pen in a moleskin, notebook, journal. With the tumblr, twitter, gmail distractions closed and tucked away. Write with honesty at the core. Live with honesty at the core. Everyday.

Travel. As a lifestyle. Not a vacation. Not work. Buy tickets, pack the bag, and leave. Walk new streets, eat the food, say hello to new faces. In these moments, I am an extrovert. Sleep in tents, on trains, hostel bunk beds, airport lounges. Bring a pen. Bring the camera. Go, go, go.

Listen to music. Live. Stay up too late on a weeknight, lose my voice on a Saturday night, sing along, dance. Be inspired. To feel it. To express it. To share it. All of it. Listen to those songs on repeat, download the latest album, remember the old favorites. Fill the days, the hours, the minutes with melodies, harmonies, lyrics.

Drink more water, eat more protein, think about yoga on Saturday afternoons, pop a few vitamins, use more hand lotion, let the rest of it go.

Let most of it go.

I'll find my own bright-colored bracelet and slip it on under the cuff of my black pressed suit. 

February 3, 2012

#Friday Follow

What I'm lovin' this Friday:

An expansion of what my recent mantra might be. Perhaps a manifesto of my mantra

How I sometimes (as in, almost always) feel about blogging

This one is categorized under: Things I read that made me cry on the metro. 
(And that make me believe that good things do happen to good people.)

I'm not crazy in love with Pinterest like most people, but I do adore my 2012 vision board.


What are you lovin' this week? Happy Friday!