Sometimes in life, the timing has to be right. I took a 'StrenghtsFinder 2.0' test this afternoon, and one of my 'strengths' is Adaptability -- apparently I like to live in the moment, rather than planning too much for the future.
At first, I totally thought the results wouldn't reflect me...but they actually did (after a series of choices for which I had no clear preference). And at this point in my life, I actually embrace living in the moment much more than I ever have before. I used to be one of those people who experienced great angst over uncertainty in my life (even though I have very little control over anything), and so was also anxious to stick as much to a plan as possible. This annoyed my then-boyfriend now-husband to no end (still does). I still kind of am that way, but am much more accepting of unanticipated turns in the road than I used to be.
Over the last few years, I started to think the pendulum had swung too far the other way because a lot of my peers at work had '5 year plans'. I never could make myself come up with one, because I think that sort of spoils the fun in life a bit. There's only so much influence I can exert on my future. Yes, I can take that photography class and keep at it. Yes, I can volunteer to play guitar at my church and keep that up.But at the end of the day, it's also just as much about the timing being right and the right opportunities presenting themselves that lead to a seize the moment kind of thing. I love that. There's nothing better than something completely unexpected and awesome coming together because of a complete confluence of factors that just makes something wonderful happen!
I just came to this realization while watching CBS News Sunday Morning. They had a piece on the coming back together of No Doubt. I remember loving them when I was a teenager, and listening to their songs again literally makes me that age again, with all of the drama and angst that went with it. I'm not quite as enthralled as I used to be, but it does take me back. As I was watching, I realized that they probably split up because they were at different places in their lives. Two band members wanted to keep going, one band member wanted to pursue his golf career, and Gwen Stefani went solo and started 3 clothing lines. The timing in their own lives changed their minds about being in the band. Ultimately, after 8 years, everyone had kids. And now, they're getting back together. The timing changed their minds. They were again probably back on similar life paths and that made the band make sense to them again.
I do feel like I'm blathering here a bit, but I think sometimes we don't give our instincts enough credit. That we second guess ourselves unnecessarily, and in so doing fail to realize what's right in front of us and how awesome it would be to just seize the moment for good or bad. Because if we didn't realize the perfection of the present moment, we would also fail to recognize the potential for greatness it possesses.
So go out there and do the thing that scares you. Be that guy/girl. Ask them out. Sell yourself into a job. Reconcile that relationship. Bare your soul. Admit your longings. Live your life and take the good and the bad. The timing is now.
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Monday, May 7, 2012
Papa
There are three distinct memories I have of my grandfather.
"Let's go out on the back porch for a drinky-poo and a little discussion."
My grandfather thought this was the most hilarious thing to come out of anyone's mouth, so the fact that it came out of mine at the age of 7 was just fuel on the fire. From that day on, our tradition was to spend our Saturday afternoons just before dinner on his back porch with our drinky-poos and talking the afternoon away. (And, no, there was no 'poo' in the drink....just alcohol in his, and soda in mine.) I don't know why we had so much to discuss, and I didn't know it would mean more to me later than it did at the time.
"Over-over-down-down."
Again, at the age of 7 I still had not mastered the fine art of shoelace tying. Much like bike riding, it remained an elusive skill that everyone else knew the 'secret' to, except for me. The shoes were my first lace-up shoes, and they were Keds that had pink and green flowers all over them. I thought they were the coolest shoes that ever existed, and I certainly wasn't going to not wear them just because I was a shoelace 'tard. When Papa found out that I STILL didn't know how to tie my shoes and was wearing the ugliest Velcro shoes EVER (once you got to the bigger sizes in Velcro shoes, your choices were limited to ugly...and ass ugly), he took matters into his own hands. That day we had a drinky-poo and a little shoelace tying intervention.
"Laura, something's wrong with Papa."
I LOVED my grandfather. We were pals. We went for walks around his neighborhood. He bought me my first bike, and although I taught myself how to ride it once we had hauled it from Baltimore to Fredericksburg, it ranked up there among those life events that fathers just do. He was my second father, the one that picked up the slack when mine was too tired from working, grad school, and Reserves.
So, when my grandfather could no longer mask his Alzheimer's with silence, pretending to know what was going on, or drinking...our family mourned...no one more than my mother. He had been everything to her, a father to me, and provider to us all. We entered into unchartered territory - mourning a loss that was unseen. It's grief that is not obvious, a grief that hides behind closed doors. You're forced to leave the person you knew behind and live with the person your loved one will become.
The thing no one tells you about Alzheimer's is that it robs you of a 'normal' and quick grieving process once your loved one is gone. It takes almost as long to grieve for their true loss as it did for them to degrade into mental oblivion - very slowly. Rather than a ripped band-aid, you're forced to slowly rip it...hair by hair. Your memories become as those who have Alzheimer's - foggy and from long ago, since it's been so long since you made any ones you'd like to keep.
Papa is hard for me to carry around with me. He lives within me, but as the grandfather I knew until I was 18 rather than the one from 14 years later. He doesn't visit me in my dreams, and my soul does not seek him out - and that's the real tragedy.
"Let's go out on the back porch for a drinky-poo and a little discussion."
My grandfather thought this was the most hilarious thing to come out of anyone's mouth, so the fact that it came out of mine at the age of 7 was just fuel on the fire. From that day on, our tradition was to spend our Saturday afternoons just before dinner on his back porch with our drinky-poos and talking the afternoon away. (And, no, there was no 'poo' in the drink....just alcohol in his, and soda in mine.) I don't know why we had so much to discuss, and I didn't know it would mean more to me later than it did at the time.
"Over-over-down-down."
Again, at the age of 7 I still had not mastered the fine art of shoelace tying. Much like bike riding, it remained an elusive skill that everyone else knew the 'secret' to, except for me. The shoes were my first lace-up shoes, and they were Keds that had pink and green flowers all over them. I thought they were the coolest shoes that ever existed, and I certainly wasn't going to not wear them just because I was a shoelace 'tard. When Papa found out that I STILL didn't know how to tie my shoes and was wearing the ugliest Velcro shoes EVER (once you got to the bigger sizes in Velcro shoes, your choices were limited to ugly...and ass ugly), he took matters into his own hands. That day we had a drinky-poo and a little shoelace tying intervention.
"Laura, something's wrong with Papa."
I LOVED my grandfather. We were pals. We went for walks around his neighborhood. He bought me my first bike, and although I taught myself how to ride it once we had hauled it from Baltimore to Fredericksburg, it ranked up there among those life events that fathers just do. He was my second father, the one that picked up the slack when mine was too tired from working, grad school, and Reserves.
So, when my grandfather could no longer mask his Alzheimer's with silence, pretending to know what was going on, or drinking...our family mourned...no one more than my mother. He had been everything to her, a father to me, and provider to us all. We entered into unchartered territory - mourning a loss that was unseen. It's grief that is not obvious, a grief that hides behind closed doors. You're forced to leave the person you knew behind and live with the person your loved one will become.
The thing no one tells you about Alzheimer's is that it robs you of a 'normal' and quick grieving process once your loved one is gone. It takes almost as long to grieve for their true loss as it did for them to degrade into mental oblivion - very slowly. Rather than a ripped band-aid, you're forced to slowly rip it...hair by hair. Your memories become as those who have Alzheimer's - foggy and from long ago, since it's been so long since you made any ones you'd like to keep.
Papa is hard for me to carry around with me. He lives within me, but as the grandfather I knew until I was 18 rather than the one from 14 years later. He doesn't visit me in my dreams, and my soul does not seek him out - and that's the real tragedy.
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