Here’s to being half way through 2020! haha This journal entry update shows the strong emotions I felt thoughout this whole month. So much happiness, so much sadness, so much anger, so much lonliness. This all adds up to be the big feelings I felt throughout this month.
june
Lake Powell– Had a little vacation at the beginning of the month… and honestly Lake Powell has to be the happiest place on earth. This page includes tons of pictures, and stories from each day.
june 9- I think the best way to describe the vibe I felt throughout this month is a disconnect. I felt adnormal and like I was not apart of society. Like I was looking in on all the craziness of the world, but I myself was not apart of it. This feeling led me to feel how weird existance truely is for me.
june 11- Black. Lives. Matter. Something we have seen all over social media, the news, and even our streets. The craziness of 2020 continues, but this is long overdue and should not be seen as a problem. Instead it is a much needed shift in history. This is something I fully support and wanted to make sure had a well deserved page in my bullet journal.
june 15- That feeling of lonliness I mentioned earlier? Here it is. Even with people surrounding me, I still feel lonely. I guess a big reason for this is because I feel like those around me sometimes don’t understand me.
june 18- Sometimes I have to understand/remember that I am beautiful, just like the things around me. (plus I recently got a type writter, so I felt like it needed a place to be shown in the bullet journal)
june 23- I cannot wait for the freedom that will come with having the life I want: traveling the world on my own (don’t mind me, just manifesting my dreams into the universe).
june 28- Another way of realizing that I am just as beautiful as the things around me. There is beauty in everything if you look hard enough;)
It’s been my dream to write for basically ever and I knew I wanted to start here… Summing up high school. But I was so scared to start… How does one sum up (what seems like) the happiest and saddest 3 years of their life. It also scared me because once I started, that meant that it was coming to an end. Crazy.
I planned on posting this on the day of my graduation, but today the news came out that schools were canceled until the end of the year because of Covid-19. I might not even get a graduation soooo
What better time to post it than when it actually ended? Here we go…….
Going into high school was relieving. Junior high made high school seem like heaven. As scared as I was to go into it, I had no idea the lessons I would learn, the people I would meet, and the emotions I would feel through the new experience to come.
I have some advice to give, though, for those who have high school to look forward to, and for those no longer in high school- solely to remind you of the great experiences and lessons that come with high school.
First… Let the emotion hit you.
It is almost impossible to not become so sad in these fragile, teenage years. It is so hard. The amount of times I found myself crying in bed at night is uncountable. The stress will overload you. Your parents will begin to bug you. You’re beginning to find yourself, and it’s difficult. But, as cheesy as it sounds, the sadness helps you feel real happiness.
You cannot have a rainbow without a little rain;)
While in high school I gained a source of ultimate happiness through watching sunsets and seeing pretty clouds/skies. I flooded my snapchat stories with pictures of all the pretty skies I witnessed (sorry to everyone I annoyed haha). For a while it was the only happiness I could truly feel, and I would soak up every ounce of happiness that I felt from every sunset and sunrise I saw.
But, since sunsets cannot last forever, sadness would creep back. I began soaking up the depression that would engulf me, and turned it into poetry and bad drawings (I am no artist haha). I would feel all my sadness and would dig deep to find the source of it, and then release it onto paper.
Take your emotions and embrace them.
Use them towards something you love.
Cry every tear you need to cry and laugh at every stupid joke you need to laugh at.
All the emotions you feel are good.
Second… FRIENDS!!!!!
I feel that it is so important to make SO many friends in high school. This doesn’t mean you have to lose the old ones. I have grown up with 3 amazing, beautiful, inspiring girls that I have known since I was 3. We had our struggles growing up, but in the end, it only brought us closer.
I will forever cherish dancing in the rain or on parking garages, our almost daily icecream runs, our movie nights, sneaking in and out of my window at 3 am (sorry mom and dad), stepping out of our comfort zones and experiencing new things together, racing to a good place to watch the sunset, the many photo shoots, the failed book clubs, our bad singing to our favorite songs on canyon drives, the spiritual moments, the pictures taken in every mirror we passed, random drives to park city, dying my hair every couple months, thrifting all the time, the deeps talks, our daily hugs, the facetime calls and endless snapchats, all the hot tub nights, the “love you more”’s, the laughing, the crying, and everything in between.
Without them, I have no idea how I would have made it through high school or where I would be. My rocks.
But, making new friends is so important, too!!!!!!!!
I lost many friends coming into high school, but finding new friends is so much fun.
A lovely group of the cutest girls that I befriended brought me happiness DAILY! (I hope you know who you are;)) While passing any one of these girls in the hall at school would always come with a hello and a compliment. It would also always bring me instant happiness for the rest of the day.
AH! and going on mini vacations/adventures was one of my favorite things to do in highschool! I met a group of friends sophomore year and ended up going to Bear Lake and Flaming Gorge with them my senior year, and had THE. BEST. TIME.
Making memories with tons of different people is the way to go.
Oh! Also, the summer before senior year I started taking film pictures. After developing them, the memories flood back and the pictures are so pure and in the moment. The best decision I made was to buy that first camera. TRY NEW THINGS!!
Remember MEMORIES ARE MORE IMPORTANT THAN GRADES!!!!!!!!!!!!
Lastly… Love everyone and love life.
Something I came to realize my senior year is that everyone is going through something.
No matter how close you are to a person you have no idea what is happening in their head.
You have no idea their daily struggles.
And they have no idea what you’re going through.
Going into high school I was a really judgemental person (and as hard as it is to admit, I was pretty mean on the lowkey). This breaks my heart because it is never our place to judge. And this is why it is so important to LOVE EVERYONE. Whether that is a simple comment on their Instagram post, a hi in the hallway, complimenting their outfit, finding them in a crowded hall when they seem lost. Once I started to realize this, it was so cool to see how my perception of these people changed.
If they have a smile on their face, then a smile somehow makes its way onto yours. You begin to see the achievements they make, and it makes you happy for them. You begin to stop comparing yourself to others, because instead you are happy for them.
The moment you stop worrying about why you aren’t good enough, why you aren’t as happy as the ones around you, why you don’t do as good in school, why you’re not as tan, etc. you’ll be so much happier. And it’s hard to get to, but it’s a weight lifted.
In my opinion, it’s the only way people should go through high school.
Live life. Love high school. It may seem like the worst time of your life, but you’ll be sad when it’s over. My senior year was cut 2 months short. Like most of the class of 2020, I don’t get my senior prom, I don’t get to walk at my graduation, I don’t get senior week or the last 2 months of going to school with all my friends. I don’t get to go to the baseball and lacrosse and soccer games. I don’t get to have yearbook signing. It was taken from us. That being said, to everyone still in high school, PLEASE LIVE IT UP. You never know when it will end.
So…
Go to all the games and go all out.
Go to the dances.
Hang out with your friends, even when you have homework.
After a morning of attempting to prompt myself into productivity, I had a thought.
Why do I contain myself?
I try to force myself into strict, full schedules to fill any second of my day because I fear a life that is unlived. The problem is that I end up not living up to the expectations of this unrealistic life I have built in my head and I beat myself up over it. I am so hard on myself for every ‘lazy’ second I live.
I contain myself to an expected life of constantly moving. It ends up doing the exact opposite. Even if I am constantly moving, it is for the fear of disappointing myself rather than for the excitement and joy it is to be alive.
As I had this thought, I figured I should write it in my journal, as I do with many of my thoughts. I opened my journal to a random page, trying not to forget the words I was more than prepared to reiterate into the pages, when I saw an entry from January of 2023.
At the very top of the page, I had written, “WHAT A FULL LIFE I WANT TO LIVE! HOW HAPPY IS IT TO BE AMBITIOUS!”
The excitement from these words, the way the joy basically jumps off the page, reminds me to be productive because life IS exciting. That doesn’t mean my constant need and toxic way of keeping myself productive is justified, it just means that I need to ground myself into a better version of a productive, excited-to-live person. And I need to do it for the right reasons.
So instead of writing out these long and unachievable to-do lists, I will let it come to me naturally. I will try and remind myself how to live because the opportunity to do so is extremely beautiful and exciting.
I have wondered lately where the line between dreams and reality is. If the line is blurred, or even possibly disintegrated altogether, then does that make life a dream? Or does that make a sad and dreamless life?
If one achieves all of the hopes and dreams, do more come? Is life content? Is it even a possible accomplishment?
These thoughts, in a way, are honestly depressing. I am a big dreamer, and I feel as though I sometimes have to pick and choose what future versions of myself and my life I want to focus on because they cannot all be true at the same time.
I dream of being a writer/creative in a big city.
I dream of a simple life, maybe on the coast or in the country.
And, in many ways, I have dreamed of my life right now: in a normal town working as a barista living in a sweet little apartment with an amazing boyfriend and our sweet puppy. I remember dreaming about cooking together in our first apartment and how I would decorate it.
I dreamt that, yet I continue to dream.
Does attempting to define dreaming take away the value and whimsical nature of it? Does dreaming, at the root, keep us alive and excited, even if not achieved at the end of the day? As cheesy as it sounds, is dreaming less about the dream (the outcome) and more about the journey? Maybe I need to read The Alchemist again… haha
If that is the case then I am not enjoying this journey enough. I am not celebrating the smaller dreams-come-true nearly enough. I self-destruct my journey now out of worry of disappointment, wasted potential, and wasted time.
I don’t think it is a bad thing to dream, and I don’t think I could ever actually stop dreaming even if I really wanted to, but I need to view it in a positive light, rather than anxious.
The other day I randomly heard the song Dancing Queen and, as I was singing along in my head to the song, I realized that I did not dance enough to this song when I was 17. I know I definitely danced to it on my 17th birthday, and I probably listened to it right before my 18th birthday, but I feel like I should’ve made more of a conscious effort to listen to Dancing Queen while I was “only 17”.
This might seem like a really silly regret, and I will admit that it really is. But, it also got me thinking, what other random things do I regret? Or what things am I doing or not doing right now that I am going to regret in the future?
As I got thinking about this, I actually felt a lot of peace because I honestly don’t have a ton of things in my past that I truly regret. I am grateful that I have, at some point in my life, come to the great realization that I am who I am and where I am because of where I was.
If I think hard enough about it, I might remember a bad outfit I wore, or maybe I do regret a terrible ex-boyfriend or two (or three). I might regret a fight with a friend or I might regret not reaching out to people more. But at the end of the day, that is not something I worry about as much.
Right now, I am far more worried about what I am doing right now in my life that I will regret later. I feel like I am spending far too much time rotting away on my phone or just in my apartment in general. I feel like I am not getting out and exploring and actually doing things enough. When I am cooping myself up and find myself endlessly scrolling or accidentally watching a whole season of a show, I don’t realize it that much. But I really am worried about the regrets I will have about it later.
Maybe that’s why I do not have as many regrets in my past to worry about because maybe I’ve always been more worried about not having regrets. Maybe I only focus on regrets for a small amount of time and then they tend to be less regretful in the future, like how I regret not writing this post for Sunday and putting it off until today, but I’m sure I’ll forget about that by next week. And maybe it is just a little silly to be regretful. Doesn’t everyone say living in the past takes you out of the present? Or something like that? haha
Anyways, I think I’ll go dance to Dancing Queen now. See you next Sunday.
In my last post, I talked about meeting a lot of new people and reintroducing myself over and over again as an aspiring- slightly accomplished- writer. When I first started this blog I wrote an introduction post. It contained less of what I had to say about myself and more about what others had to say about me. Don’t get me wrong, I still think that post is the most innocently adorable post on here, I truly do still love it.
That being said, I did write that introduction back in 2020. Four years, two graduations, one book, multiple random jobs, lots of new people, and lots of goodbyes later, I feel slightly like the same person, but I feel more like a total stranger from that girl in 2020.
So, what could one more introduction hurt?
My first introduction post being more about what others said about me was really fitting because I am often really confused about myself…
(Before I dive into what I’m about to say next, I am not here to talk solely about my experience in religion, and I am definitely on here to bash it. This is simply such a big part of my life and it’s a big part of my introduction)
…Up until this point in my life, I have been completely connected to a religion I grew up in. It was planted in my family, my friendships, a lot of my relationships. It took up a lot of my time, energy, worldly understanding, personal and spiritual awareness, etc. Even though I’ve separated myself from it for a long time, it was always still connecting itself to me.
This is something I have had a difficult time dealing with. I was trying to find myself and what my purpose was without this outer influence affecting those thoughts and feelings.
So, let’s start simple. Here are some random things that Natilee loves, in no particular order:
typing in lowercase (i hope you don’t mind)
sunsets/sunrises/pretty skies
farmers market’s
flowers !!!! of any kind in any variation
dreaming… i love having a big goal to work towards
writing (that’s a given i think)
my puppy!!! i love being a dog mom
coffeeeeee
golf (i’m a newbie, but i love it)
TRAVEL!!! other than being successful in writing, being well-traveled and seeing the world is my biggest dream
pickleball
drawing/painting/being artistic in any way possible
making people smile and laugh (the best feeling)
clothes haha (thrifting especially !!)
reading!!!!!! (i don’t read as much as i think i should, sometimes i feel imposter syndrome because of this)
decorating, i love finding cute new things and implementing them into my life and home
CELEBRATING!!! if there is something to celebrate, i am going to go to embarrassing lengths to celebrate it
taking pictures, i am constantly documenting life in one way or another
sleeping in (i have the hardest time taking naps, but you will definitely catch me sleeping in on the weekend lol)
hiking, going on walks, being outside!!
THE RAIN! i will always love a sunny day, but i feel most at peace and like myself when it is raining outside. i just feel connected to it.
talking and chatting, it’s so cool that we get to share our thoughts, feelings, etc. with other people around us
I guess the conclusion I am coming to in this post is that I define myself by the things I love and am passionate about. I have become less worried about defining myself and my life as a whole. In this moment, these are the things that make me, me. 🙂
Last week I wrote a post talking about feeling like a writer and wanting to start posting every week. This week’s post is going to piggyback off that one in a lot of ways. I want to start feeling more like a writer, but why is that important to me? Being a writer and a creative person usually starts with looking deeper into emotions. So, where did these feelings come from?:
I started a new job recently and it’s not something I’m using my degree for. Since I am meeting a lot of new people at this job I am constantly getting asked about myself, and then I get a lot of confusion when I tell them I have a degree in English. With that, I am often asked, “Well, what do you want to do?” I always just reply that I want to write. This also gets looks, and I feel very grateful to have a published book that I can use as ‘proof’ that I can write and that I am, kind of, doing something with my degree that I can actually physically show. As silly as that sounds. And, even though my book is not necessarily super successful, it is definitely not a New York Times Best-Seller, it does get people to understand what I mean when I say that I want to write. Or at least it usually stops them from further interrogation.
These repetitive encounters have got me to really think, though. I got my degree because I love writing and I wanted to grow that passion of mine. It was never necessarily to get a job, although that would be nice. It doesn’t feel extremely necessary to me. Sometimes I pretend it does, but in all honestly, it really doesn’t. And that might just sound crazy, but it was what felt right in my life, especially at the time. But, why do I love writing?
I’ve come to a couple of conclusions in my mind. Although I find it entirely satisfying to watch my fingers fly across the keyboard, or a pen tracing along the page, or just seeing my thoughts on the page, I don’t think these points necessarily satisfy the question. It, of course, needs to be a lot deeper than that.
Even though I have struggled with a lot of mental health issues over the years, I love life. I love living, even though there were moments when I wondered if I could live any longer. But I love life the most because we each are all able to have thoughts, aspirations, dreams, ideas, questions. I love writing because it is so unique and beautiful to bring these feelings to life and show the differences between humans, but also the similarities. Above all else, I love to document life. Each small and big moment shows importance, especially when writing.
If there even is an answer to the big question of what I want to do in life then, at least for now, I just want to live life and document it. I want to keep pointing out the small and large moments and creating art out of them. If I make a career out of it then that is all the better, but it is not something I want to dwell on. It’s not a large thing that I am going to constantly let weigh me down. And when someone asks, I will try to just say that.
It’s important to work towards a goal and dream and do everything in our power to get there, but it’s also important to let life take you where you are supposed to go.
These posts have helped me lay out what I’ve been thinking about writing and my creative slump. Now I can and will move on from the topic of writing. Next week will hopefully be more about those small and large moments. 😉
I dearly miss the days when this blog was a place for me to blog my thoughts in a consistent and enriching way, and/or a way for me to show off physical journaling as well. Instead, it feels like a distant relative that you see once in a while and realize that the dread of talking to them is much, much worse than actually talking to them. It is actually, contrary to your previous belief, often and surprisingly eye-opening and enjoyable. (Depending on the relative, of course).
But, I would like to feel the same way I used to about this blog. More passionate, excited, etc. etc. I’ve decided I want to start posting at least once a week. It feels like this might seem like homework to me, but the truth is that I miss school. haha. Each Sunday I will post something and if I have no ideas I will use a silly and probably overused prompt suggestion. I need to push myself to write not too seriously and not just in an extremely personal journal.
The funny part about this is the inspiration. This week I found myself watching Sex and the City (I always thought it was Sex in the City, I think it’s definitely a Mandela Effect) and I feel, silly enough, entirely inspired by Carrie Bradshaw. I want to write on Sundays and find small things to point out in life. Probably not about sex and definitely not a column in The New York Star.
But the real truth is that I just wanted to feel like a writer. I write and I write often. Sometimes I hold my writing to myself for a little too long. Sometimes I feel like an imposter. Like I’m not a writer, writer. And most of all, I often have a voice in my head telling me that I am not an artist or a creative, which is certainly not true. I want to prove that to myself with this little self-promoted challenge. I know this announcement of a more consistent posting routine is definitely not necessary, but hopefully it will keep me more accountable.
A lot of my posts on this blog start with mentioning that I was in a rut, feeling very down and defeated, prior to diving into the story and/or lesson. It goes to show how sometimes you need to be down to realize how good the up is. I also feel like this is just the honest truth about mental health and dealing with that on a daily basis, while also looking for ways to be better and enjoy life even through low mental health days/weeks/months.
So, as you can guess, I have lately felt like I’m in a rut. (lol). I moved away from all of my family and friends and found myself in Oregon, a place that I love, but am still very much a stranger of. I have fond memories of visiting Oregon, and those made the move this way easy to do, but of course, living in a place day to day is going to look and feel a lot different from a vacation. I felt homesick for, honestly, the first time in my life. I felt alone, isolated, and afraid to be honest about these feelings because I didn’t want to be ‘proven wrong’.
As my partner’s birthday started to creep up I felt really excited to be able to celebrate it in our own place for the first time. I thoroughly planned the day out, making him take work off for the day even though he rolled his eyes a little bit. (He is not as big of a fan of birthdays and celebrations, especially when it is focused on him).
The day rolled around and I decorated the apartment, made breakfast in bed, gave him too many presents, and then we headed out on the first surprise of the day.
We drove about 40 minutes to a hike that I heard really good things about. It’s a big loop that takes you along a creek and to 3 or 4 waterfalls. It was sprinkling, but we were not even surprised, since it is Oregon, and we started on the trail anyway.
Soon after we started we could hear the water already and we found ourselves at the first waterfall. The trail split and it gave us the opportunity to walk right up to the waterfall. We took pictures and stared in awe. My partner tried to walk across the rocks in the creek under the waterfall and fell into the water. We laughed and continued on the trail as he was dripping wet.
We crossed really cool bridges and saw more waterfalls until we were at the bottom of the loop and then we started back up the loop. As we walked up this hike it started absolutely down pouring on us. For a second, I felt myself get pretty annoyed with the fastly repeating drops of rain hitting my face.
I immediately stopped and wondered why I was getting annoyed. I looked toward the sky and felt the rain. I connected with the rain and with nature, feeling lucky to be there. Feeling lucky to have water falling from the sky. Feeling lucky to be healthy and able. Feeling lucky to have a partner who was also not annoyed at the rain and was enjoying every second of this muddy hike with me. Feeling lucky to have a memory of my dad singing, “Raindrops are falling on my head, that doesn’t mean my eyes will soon be turning red, no! Crying’s not for me! …” when I was young and would get annoyed at the rain. Feeling lucky that he showed me happiness, even in rough times.
We arrived at the last waterfall. This waterfall is called Majestic Falls. It was massive and beautiful, and definitely majestic. It took my breath away. It was still pouring rain, but since I had connected with it and let myself feel the rain, I got to enjoy the moment with peace and happiness.
These were feelings I was having a really hard time gaining in my day-to-day life. I constantly felt defeated and I felt like I was drowning. Feeling like this made it hard to enjoy and see the good in this new beginning I had entered. Instead, I was constantly focusing and pointing out the rain, instead of embracing it and realizing all the good that was coming from it.
Back in high school, I remember arguing with my sister-in-law about whether or not I was going to attend college. I told her over and over again that college was not for me. I felt too ambitious, I wanted to travel the world and see things I wouldn’t in my hometown. I wanted to run away and write about all the things I would see. There was also a part of me that just felt too stupid. As I told her that, she said that anyone can go to college. I didn’t really believe her.
I left that conversation not feeling any better about my (then) decision. I was not going to go to college, and if I were to, it would definitely not be in my hometown. Not that the university in my hometown was not and is not a very good one, it just felt sticky. Like my life would be stuck in place.
And then, it was. My life was literally stuck in place as the pandemic took over. Now, this is not going to be just another story about Covid-19, it is just important for this aspect of the story, so stay with me here. The world got shut down and I was stuck in my basement room of my parent’s house. The world I needed to see, the things I needed to do, the people I wanted to meet, they were not only out of reach but simply felt nonexistent.
So, I started this blog. Amid the pandemic, I knew I needed to keep writing and have a place to share it. In those months, I flourished in my creative space. My walls filled up more and more and more with drawings and paintings and quotes. This room became my oasis. I had journals splitting at the seams, poetry spilled out of me. I had this blog that I now get to look back on, seeing a beautiful past version of myself. I was depressed, but I was creative.
It came to the point in the spring where I could either stay out of school or agree to a college. I sat in my room, day after day, not traveling, not seeing friends, not really living outside of the creative space I created, and I had no clue when the world would open up again.
I remembered something a teacher from my high school told me. A strict teacher, I had always thought he didn’t like me. Until one day, as I sat in his class the emotions and anxiety of the future got to me and I started crying. He knelt next to me and told me all about his life. All the different roads he had gone down. All of the different crushed dreams, and all the ones that succeeded. He told me that, “everything will happen the way it is supposed to.”
I agreed to the university in my home town.
That Fall I attended, all online of course.
I knew I loved writing, but it seemed unrealistic as a degree, so I went into school mostly undecided on what my major would be. I figured it would probably be psychology because I want to help people, that is what my writing is for anyway. It is to help me, but also allows people a place to relate. But, even though I thought my degree would go in a totally different direction, I took an Introduction to Creative Writing class my first semester since it would count for my generals.
I loved it. It was nothing like my creative writing classes in high school. The teacher really seemed like they wanted to be there and wanted to influence us, even through the screen. Even in this beginner class, I learned so much about writing creatively and improved my writing.
Toward the end of the semester, I turned in an assignment, one of our last assignments. It was supposed to be a non-fiction piece and I was having a really hard time trying to figure out what I wanted to write about, even though I love writing non-fiction. The day the assignment was due came and I went to work, hoping I would be able to create something once I got home. I was at work when the emotion and the idea hit me, so I typed out the ideas in the notes app on my phone and just waited to go home.
I got home just a couple of hours before the assignment was due and the writing spilt out of me. I cried and laughed while writing this piece. This moment felt like pure writing bliss, one of the reasons I love writing so much. I turned it in with not much time to spare, slightly worried, but also not.
A couple of days passed before it got graded. Not only did the professor give me a perfect grade, but he also left a lengthy video about how much he loved the piece. He told me that if I kept up writing then I would be a published author one day.
I changed my major to creative writing.
I fell in love with school. I fell in love with learning more about writing and art. I fell in love with the professors and students who all supported each other and our love for the craft. I kept writing and kept improving my writing. A couple of semesters into school I decided I wanted a place for all of the art and progress I had made throughout college, so I started writing a book.
I gathered up all of my poetry and sifted through it, deciding on what I wanted and didn’t want in this book. I kept writing and kept creating art. I thought and thought and thought about what the book’s main purpose would be and the title that this all would all fall under. Then it hit me.
Aimless.
When I told my mom this idea for the title she told me that aimless is a sad word. It is a word about feeling lost and directionless. She looked up the definition as proof for her argument, showing me that aimless means, “without purpose.” She told me how depressing that is. With that in mind, I kept thinking. I could never get off of Aimless, it just kept coming back to me. Again, again, again. Aimless, aimless, aimless.
I realized that being aimless meant more to me than a lack of purpose, but it meant that you are giving life the opportunity to make purpose out of you. Life is often so focused on set timelines and disappointment that comes from expectations. When in reality, when you are open and actively working towards goals, things will, as my high school teacher told me, “happen the way it is supposed to.”
I also did not want a specific purpose for the poetry that would be in the book. I wanted them to explore different topics and feelings. A rain of emotions instead of a little umbrella of a topic.
I kept working full time, going to school full time, and kept writing my book.
In the summer of 2023, my first book was published. Aimless: A poetry collection. It is perfect in the way that it is not, as every permanent thing is. Like the way my thin tattoos have slowly bled over the years. The way pages age yellow. But, there is really nothing I would change about it. It encaptures everything from those years of writing that I shoved between the green covers. There is a typo from the poem that I decided to include at the very last moment, literally right before production. A poem I included because I met a stranger that reminded me how many people there are to meet and how much connection there can be between you and people you do not know. It feels more special than is wrong, in a way.
After I published Aimless I knew I had just one semester left of school. I wanted to learn as much as possible this last semester, savoring every moment of it. I thought of that professor from my first semester of college and how I never got to be in another class of his, the stars did not align for that. I reached out to him and asked if we could do a directed reading class together, which would just be a one-on-one learning environment.
He agreed.
Every other Tuesday we met. We read poetry books together and I shared multiple poems every time. He would give me amazing feedback on each, all of the negative and all of the positive. He reminded me of poetry terms and practices that had slipped from my brain. He taught me new ones that I had never learned. I was taught through the greatest poets in the country, reading their work and dissecting it, figuring out exactly why it works.
The semester was over quicker than I ever imagined. I learned so much that semester, from all of my classes. In the last class with that professor, I gave him my book, the book that he manifested three years before, and he gave me one of his in return.
Then I was walking across the stage, hugging all the professors who made such a huge impact on my college experience, walking alongside students I also learned so much from. In the blink of an eye, I was graduating college when it felt like I had just been arguing with my sister-in-law about not wanting to attend. I was graduating college, tears in my eyes because I could not imagine if I had never had this experience. I was graduating college, knowing that I was going to be moving away from my hometown shortly after. I was graduating college with a published book.
This is not to say that college is for everyone. This is to say that sometimes you need to allow life to take you exactly where you need to go. Sometimes you need to let things happen because they are supposed to.
The satisfying numbers that this year held didn’t really live up to the expectations that I had for it. That statement is not to say that I had a bad, disappointing, or underwhelming year. But, the last thing I would consider calling this year was satisfying. I felt rushed a lot of the time, I felt lost a lot of the time, I felt stuck in a routine a lot of the time, yet I also felt like I never knew what was going to happen next. Kind of an oxymoron, but this year was both the greats of the greats accompanied with the complete opposite.
I could not tell you off the top of my head what New Year’s resolutions I set for myself in 2022. I think that’s pretty funny, more often than not we set these expectations for us to keep throughout a whole 365 days, yet we normally don’t even remember them by the end of those days. I’ll have to look in my journal and see what they were.
What I can say is that dreams and aspirations are just ‘New Year’s resolutions’ that can start whenever and are not contained within 12 months. I like New Year’s resolutions and the hope they give us, but I gotta say, I love dreams. Dreams are a lifeline for us to reach to the next day, the next week, the next month, the next year, and throughout life. You may have dreams that have been with you for a lengthy period of time or ones you’ve just discovered. I also love how individual they are. And, dreams are not often left in the dust of a journal or notes app, or even just the back of your mind. Dreams are something you are so excited to achieve, they are constantly on your mind.
I’m a big dreamer, for sure. I dream of seeing the world, every nook and cranny of it. My passport came in the mail yesterday and holding it felt so powerful. It felt like I held the whole world and everywhere I hope to see in the palm of my hands. I dream of being a published author and having my work displayed for people to see, a bigger version of the dream I had for this blog. I am weeks, maybe even days, from finishing my first book. It’s so surreal to look at the poetry collection I’ve created, especially holding the manuscript. Physically feeling everything I’ve worked on for this book, physically holding something that once was just a thought in my mind. Ever since I decided to attend college I’ve had a dream of getting my degree in something I love and am so passionate about. This semester I’m a senior and I’ll be graduating toward the end of the year. It feels like just yesterday I was sitting in high school, unsure of where life was going to take me and unsure of what decisions of my future I was going to make.
I have dreams to achieve this year… and every year. As for actual resolutions, I hope to show more love to the people around me, feel more gratitude more often, constantly document life (if you know me, this might be a surprising one because I document life quite a bit already), and knowing when to be selfish vs selfless.
I started the new year with 3 friends, hundreds of strangers, in the pouring rain, with fireworks above. The clock hit midnight and I left so much in 2022. Doubts about myself, lack of motivation, negativity, how freezing I was in my sparkly mini skirt. haha. I left those, but I am taking so many amazing memories, lessons learned, new people who have impacted me greatly, old friends that continue to impact me, and a continued love for this life and all it has to offer. So, happy new year! Here’s to 2023!
I spend a lot of my thinking on my future. Where I’m going, how I’m going to get there, how excited and hopeful I am for it. I have such a vivid idea of where I want to go in life. Sometimes I’m really worried about whether I’m going to get to my ideal future or not. The point is, I’m just focused on my future.
Today I was walking to class thinking about this future, per usual, but instead, these thoughts were interrupted. I felt the crisp air hit my skin and I looked around at the gloomy clouds and colorful trees. I was stepping on the crunching leaves. In class, I looked around at my classmates and listened closely to what they had to say. I texted my brother about a new coffee shop that opened up near us. Later as I drove home I looked at the mountains that surround my house and the colorfulness of fall that has overtaken my hometown. I drove past my best friend’s house, the one I haven’t seen in months but it’s still nice to know how close she lives. I walked inside and sat on the couch next to my mom and talked to her about my day. I walked to my room and picked up some clothes on the ground before lighting a couple of candles. I sat in my room and looked around at the contents of it, the room that my mom loves to say, “looks exactly what a college girl’s room should look like.”
Today I was walking to class thinking about my future but I was interrupted by the beauty of the present. I’m so focused on this future that I’ve been talking about that I sometimes forget how much I really do like where I am. Although it’s not perfect and it’s not where I want to be forever, I know that there are going to be parts that I will miss so much.
So, today I decided to focus more on that. I won’t stop dreaming of my future, and once I get to this future I dream of I’m sure I will still be focused on something that is not the present, whether that be the past or the even further future. But, that being said, I bet, or at least I hope, I will still have these random moments of pure gratitude for where I am. These moments where I’m grateful for the journey.