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NEWSLETTER

Sunday 17 June 2018

An Open Letter to Dads Like Ours

Isn't the phrase "thank you" strange? Good manners and basic etiquette aside, it baffles me how words so simple and small encompass so much.

I could say "thank you" a million times to my Dad and it still wouldn't be enough. It barely scratches the surface of how much I owe him and am grateful for him and everything he does. Words simply aren't enough (which is kind of ironic seeing as you were the one who always encouraged me to use my words and write.)

This is an open letter to Dads like ours. The best ones.

These are the father-figures (not always Dads) who deserve a thousand "thank yous" for just being the people that they are. For being supportive and kind and encouraging and annoying and embarrassing and all things Dads both are and are not.

Every child grows up looking up to a father-figure. And in the most literal and metaphorical of senses, I still do. You never have stopped teaching me; from riding bikes and reading books all the life lessons in between (though I'm still pretty sure that making me reverse around a roundabout is hardly a life lesson!)

*this is what happens when you attempt to reverse around a roundabout and leave the car in a temper :)
I thank you from the bottom of my heart and I wish you the greatest Father’s Day today, tomorrow, the next day, and for the rest of your life. I want you to know how huge of an impact you’ve made on me. Because we’re not with each other every day, it's so easy to point out the things that make us different and the things that separate us. In actuality, I’m finding myself pulling closer to all the things that you did, enabled, created, and taught me. It has been the foundation on which I hope to grow: bad jokes, good rhymes and an unbeatable work ethic.

So I thought it was a good time to just say “I love you.” And it sounds cheesy and words aren't really enough but yeah. Just so you know.

*ps I almost deleted this when you told me my puns aren't funny. You know my jokes are (always) funnier than yours.
**I PROMISE YOU I AM A FULLY LICENSED AND SAFE DRIVER
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Friday 8 June 2018

A Quarter Life Crisis (kind of)

Another year older and absolutely none the wiser, yet again. Ah, 20: here we are. We made it.


As my final teenage days expire, my birthday is leaving me feeling older for once. As I am sure we all can relate to, my teenage years quickly turned into something of a comfort zone. I could blame stupid things I did, said, or felt on my age. I could change my mind or my hair or my clothes or my opinions without question. I could be miserable and joyful within the same 10 minutes because…hormones, right?



So yes, from 9th June, I’ll be in my twenties and, what the actual hell, how did that happen?  But then again, I do exhibit pensioner-like characteristics daily so maybe I need accept my old age lol.  Very strange that in some ways I feel like I can have my “shit together,” or at the very least make it look like I can (big compliment from my pals lol), but in some ways I don’t feel like an adult at all. I’m still a bit of a scatty day-dreamer but somehow, I don’t think that will ever change. Let’s not ponder that contradiction, eh?!
I had grown to love the age 19: old enough to be considered an adult (although not in the exact same way as an 18-year-old is considered – an adult by law but a child in every other perspective) and to be seen as an independent human being, yet young enough to be allowed to dream but not required to turn dreams into actions. It is the age of having the best of both worlds. When turning 20, everything changes. Turning 20 is being on the eve of real life. Some might still be under the illusion that adulthood will turn out the way they had imagined for themselves, others might wonder: “Is this it? Is this life?”
I have always been quite the dreamer and terribly ambitious. Concerningly so. If someone ever tried to explain the truths of adulthood to me, even as a child, I would roll my eyes in disbelief. Call me an optimist, call me naïve, whatever. It never crossed my mind that something could stop me: work hard and nothing can stop you. But when 20 comes, I feel that it’s suddenly not OK to dream about the future anymore. The future’s here. If you want to achieve any of your dreams, you’ve got to work for it and it starts today.
Working hard for my dreams has never been my issue. I don’t mind working; from my previous blog posts, you’ll see me talk about that! It’s the fact that I am now very much aware that you have to be somewhat realistic about those dreams. Factors must be considered, choices have to be made, time is ultimately measured (NOT ENOUGH TIME IN A DAY INNIT!) I grew up believing that when you’re a grown-up, you pretty much decide how your whole life works in the way you want it to be: where you’re going to live, what job you’re going to have…but most of the time, it’s not entirely up to you.
And as you can’t have everything, choices must be made. I’ve never had to make truly hard choices in my life. I’ve either always been extremely lucky and grateful to make some positive choices, or in many a case there never really was a choice to be made. I always knew exactly what and how I wanted something: I was going to work hard. I was going to achieve. I was going to leave home and go to uni. But now every choice seems like a loss of something else. I just don’t know how to arrange my life. It’s like I have all these pieces of a jigsaw puzzle and I just can’t quite get to grips with how they’re meant to fit.



While life always seemed to tick at a convenient pace for me, something changed once I completed school and moved away. I was always a long time already ready for the next chapter in my life before I had finished the previous, so time couldn’t go quicker for me. Even now, to some extent, I still feel this way. Yet when I turned 18, things got out of hand. Suddenly I had much more obligations and other things on my mind and on my To Do-list than I had time for and I felt as if time was “slipping through my fingers” (‘Mamma Mia’, I’m punny today @mi1lie) like sand. I turn 20 tomorrow yet I am pretty sure I celebrated my 19th like last week. Has it been a whole year already?
So here I am today, pretty sure I’m struggling with a Quarter Life Crisis. My view on my life span is completely fucked up: I feel terribly old while at the same time I feel too young and too lost to be able to achieve anything yet. So much is expected of me, mostly from myself. I’m terribly tired, both physically and mentally, of all the things I have to and want to do, squeezed into the tiny amount of time that I’ve got. I want to learn so many things, finish uni, acquire new skills, travel to a million-and-one new countries and meet a million-and-one new people, work towards my dream job – all while I’m young, in a time where I’m expected to get good grades, volunteer to improve my CV (and my conscience), keep up my part-time job, spend time with family and friends, make sure my house is clean and tidy, exercise, eat healthily, take care of myself, enjoy my time in uni by doing fun stuff, travel a lot (as we’re supposed to have a lot of time left compared to older ages, which is even more terrifying!), oh and I need to have hobbies, too, otherwise I’m boring and no fun.
Part of me wishes I could take it easier and simply slow down but then I would feel like I’m wasting my time. Life’s short. It haunts me every day and makes me feel as if I need to use my time as efficiently as possible and I often only do things because I am afraid I will regret it if I miss the chance. It’s not a bad reason to do it, I guess. At least I’m doing it. Yet because I have so much on hands, I feel like completely shutting down and doing nothing instead. Isn’t that ironic? Oh, my inner Gemini is coming out: a bunch of contradictions and faces rolled up into one.
Maybe I just want too much. I mean, I’m sure you will all agree that a quarter life crisis is most definitely a first world/Fiat 500 Twitter problem. I’m pretty sure people whose basic provisions aren’t guaranteed don’t care for how they fill in their life on the long term; they need to get through today and will cross tomorrow’s bridge when it comes. Maybe I’m just being petty. I’m sure this is all just a phase that I will overgrow once I have accepted everything; I’ve wasted so much time on being clueless.



Some people have told me just to live, just do what you’ve got to do, just go with the flow, don’t overthink it, just accept it. So am I supposed to do that and ignore all that I know now? Do I have to become a mindless zombie and ignorantly exist without truly living? What is truly living anyways?
In short, I believe that truly living, (or giving myself some purpose) is to fully deploy and develop yourself and your potential. But strings of society don’t allow you to fully do that. You’re not being awarded for it. All you get to develop are your skills that will benefit society as a whole: skills that will bring you a job so you will be economically valuable, socially inclined .e.t.c. I’m not lazy, not mentally, and I want to learn. I want to learn a lot about a lot of things and acquire a lot of different skills. But society wants you to focus on a single field and become an expert in that field so you’re ready to work as an expert in that particularity. Feeling v restricted rn – send help xoxoxo
I love to blog because on my blog freedom is endless. I could literally write about anything and everything – even 1500 words on my so-called quarter life crisis, not giving a shit if anyone reads it. However, one thing I am a bit scared of is questioning why I am spending my time writing. Yes, it’s for fun, but it takes up a large amount of time and effort and is hardly beneficial to the society I live in. But it is when I start to question something that I love doing the most, I know the way my life is going is terribly wrong. I don’t know if I am alone in feeling this way. And I’m not sure if acceptance/ignorance will make it any less wrong: I just know that it can’t be right.
*Exhale*: rant over. Here’s to 20, everyone. Cheers!


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