Last night, I watched the movie Julie & Julia. Besides
making me want to cook and eat everything that has butter in the recipe (isn’t
everything better with butter?) it reminded me of how long it had been since I
had worked on my blog and posted real updates about my real life. But the thing
is, I don’t want to update you about my real life. I feel like my life is frustrating, inconsequential, and not
going as planned. As I consider updating you, I feel quite a bit like Julie did
while having lunch with her friends.
(Except that I love cob salad. And I am not 30.)
Like Julie, I don’t feel particularly keen to tell you about
my life. I can give the peppy, chirpy, 5 second sound bite I give people either
to convey that I am quite happy with the way life is going or to make my life
seem as impressive as possible (and imply that I am succeeding more than I am
failing). But it’s more propaganda than news. Talking about my real life causes
that squirmy, shame-y feeling.
The truth is, I haven’t found the job I have been looking
for. I am past the deadline I set myself, and its time for me to look for more
‘in-between’ jobs to pay the bills and those approaching student loans. I don’t
want to give you that update, because I don’t like it one bit. Truthfully, I
want to be in grad school, and the research job I need to get me there was already
supposed to be my in-between job. I don’t want an in-between-in-between job. So
I feel frustrated and edgy, and I’m probably not very nice to the people around
me most of the time. It feels as if I am a rough chunk of rock (maybe
sandstone?), and whatever layers of fabric I normally have wrapped around to
make me look all pretty and cuddly have mostly disappeared, so now anyone who
gets close ends up with scrapes. Its not a very pretty picture, is it? Life
isn’t going the way I would like, and I am not responding in the way I would
like.
So yes, I don’t like
telling you about my life when its not going smoothly the way I want towards
clear success at an appropriate pace (according to my assessment). However, no
one else likes talking about their life when it’s like that, either, so we all
just feel alone and isolated when actually we’re not. I have found that when
I talk about how things really are and how I really feel, people often
encourage me by talking about a time when the same thing happened to them, or
they open up and actually tell me about the current struggles in their lives
that leave them with feelings similar to mine. This may come as a shock (I feel
like it shocks me over and over), but frustration and shame are not uniquely
mine. Who knew?
So take heart. Things aren’t amazing and awesome in my life
at the moment. My unsuccessful job search leaves me fighting frequent feelings
of guilt, shame, and failure. My grandma is really sick—she had to have her
second leg amputated a few weeks ago, and her recovery is slow—leaving us (particularly
Mom) worried about Mam-maw’s health and care.
Most of my friends are far away
and I miss Gettysburg. But there are good things, too. I am knitting a sweater
and its going really well. I gave my cats toy mice rolled in catnip yesterday,
and it was hilarious. My car has been getting an extra mpg every time I check
it, which means my gas is going further (yay!).
Catnip mice. Absolutely hilarious. |
Most of life is lived in-between the highs and lows. And
that’s where I am. It’s okay to be there.
I love you, Nana! Thank you for sharing :)
ReplyDeleteLove,
Jenny