Back to Then: What would you tell yourself (if you could)?

Every so often, I like to go back and reflect on what’s happened and what’s changed. The best way to learn and grow is to know where you came from. Every virtual yardstick we have – the successes, goals, failures, challenges – helps us by teaching us how we did – if we’re willing to take the time to learn from them. Earlier this year, I wrote an essay in response to a question David Damron of Life Excursion asked me: What would you tell yourself, if you could go back in time to the 18-year-old you? This is my response. 

If you could teach the 18-year-old you three things, what would they be?

When I was 18, I left California and my family to move across the country to college – a small school, a small town. It was terrifying, intimidating, and daunting.

No friends, no plan (other than “go to college”) and I was rife with worries about what I was going to major in, whether or not people were going to like me, and how on earth I was going to survive all of these life changes.

Eighteen was hard. Freshman year of college was filled with a lot of tears – a lot of missing home, my family, my foundation, and my friends. I lived in snow for the first time. I changed my major at least six times. I worked so hard in the pool trying to make the varsity swim team that some days I showed up to practice and stood in the corner, trying my best not to fall apart out of sheer exhaustion. The ten-workout weeks left me, quite literally, lying on the side of the pool deck with bags of ice on my shoulders, trying not to move for fear of how much discomfort simply moving would create.

At 18, we face some of the most exciting opportunities in our lives and some of the hardest challenges: College. Work. Independence. Travel. Decisions. Money. Happiness. Living. People. Relationships. Growth.  These are all Categories with a capital C that instill fear, anxiety, and trepidation in each of us.  What will we do?, We all think. Who will we become, and how will we be useful? How will we know what’s right and what’s wrong, or how to even begin making decisions?

It’s been nearly 10 years since I was 18. Ten years.  If I could take a shiny magic time machine and go back to my college dorm room, I’d want to tell myself great advice.  I’d sit in the room with myself and try to unload all of the information I’ve accumulated.

There are the basics that I would want to cover, of course:  Fund your Roth, Sarah, I’d say – and don’t spend so much money on things that are meaningless. By all means, set up an emergency fund, and don’t spend so much time worrying about what other people think.

But I’m not sure she would listen to me. The bright-eyed, terrified, 18-year old me would have no conceptualization of how $1000 can transform into $100,000 over time in small increments, even if logically I understand what compound interest is. I wouldn’t “get it” yet. The lessons I wish I could transfer to myself won’t have meaning without actually having lived through them.

The big fears then – about relationships, about being single, about having a good job, about knowing what I’m supposed to do (Don’t worry so much about those, I can say now – there’s so much life in front of you) – don’t seem as important now.

Looking back at the last 10 years, and all of the hard parts that came along with it – having a bone taken out of my body, breaking off a dead-end relationship instead of getting married, moving across the country twice, leaving my family, experiencing dysentery for the first time, and taking on $90,000 in debt – I nostalgically wish I could go back and protect myself from the hard parts.

But the hard parts make you who you are. And I wouldn’t change them for the world. So, if I could go back and tell me – and you – the advice I’ve accumulated over the past few years, here’s what I would go back and tell myself:

1: You are doing a good job.

You will do more than you can ever dream of, and you will have experiences that you can’t plan ahead for.  Today, you are right where you need to be. Leo Babauta says it well: You are already perfect.

Be prepared for things to change in completely unexpected ways. Take the time to figure yourself out so you can follow your heart – there’s nothing worse than getting on a path where you feel like you don’t belong. Explore. Change directions. Listen to your gut.

You will fail and fall and stumble and worry, but keep going. You are doing a good job. Don’t be so hard on yourself all of the time. Life is for living.

2: Explore.  Experience is the only thing (never stop learning).

Stop looking at the finish line.  The definition of stupid is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. Try new things. Explore everything as often as you can.  Do it while you can.

Pay attention to smart people and good advice. If you can’t learn it yourself, learn from closely observing others. Watch great people and learn everything you can from them.

Take the plunge as often as possible. Try something new every day. Get good at the things you’re scared of. Stretch yourself beyond what you think is possible. You don’t have to do them perfectly. In fact, you don’t need to be the best at them – you’ll slowly carve out a niche of talents specific to you that you are great at and eliminate the other things – but don’t shy away from trying something new. Scared of meeting new people? Terrible at interviews? Tackle it. Take action, even small steps. Get as many practice sessions as you can in. I promise it gets easier the more that you do it. Fear is just inexperience. Look fear in the eye and do it anyways.

Never stop learning. Never. If you aren’t learning, you are obsolete.

Leave nothing behind.  Give it everything you possibly have, and leave nothing behind. My coach always said ‘Don’t leave anything in the pool.’ There are no could-haves, should-haves, or wants. There is only DO and DID (or didn’t).

3: Feel.

Worry less about what other people think. Worry more about figuring out what YOU think. Pay attention to your heart and your thoughts and your wishes. Do not dwell in negativity or fear. Don’t diminish your dreams and your wishes and your desires. Cultivate the lost are of listening to yourself and giving yourself space.

Have fun.  Play and be silly. Don’t lose your inner kid at heart, and do handstands, swing on swings, and laugh often.

Be prepared to be happier than you ever expected. You will also have moments of terrifying sadness, of grief, and of overwhelming joy.  You will be frustrated, angry, excited, scared, terrified, lonely, thrilled, amazed, and continually surprised by everything – more than you can ever possibly dream or imagine.

When you feel like you won’t be able to make it through the other side of the hard stuff, keep going anyways. You’ll be glad that you did. Emotions are the color of life, giving it depth, dimension, and feeling. Let yourself feel, dream, and be. Enjoy everything, it goes by quickly.


Oh Sarah,
I’d say, sitting on the quilted corner of the twin-bed in the freshman dorm room, Don’t worry so much. You’re doing a good job. Just keep learning and feeling, and it will be okay. 

She wouldn’t have any idea what’s coming.  Explosions of happiness in unreasonable proportions, challenges and goals that are smashed early and often, failures that teach invaluable lessons – these are all part of what’s coming.

I wish I could tell her that it’s all going to be okay. Better than okay: it’s going to be GREAT.

That there are times that will be really hard. But that the hard parts get better. The hard parts are, in fact, what MAKES it better. Nothing is a better teacher than experience, and each time you do something hard, challenging, or different – or just go through life experience – you learn. You grow. You expand. You develop. You will come out the other side, better.

Enjoy it.

Love, Me.

 

 

One-way ticket to Tucson …

I just booked one ticket (of two, I’ll be back soon – just not sure when) to Tucson. I’m headed out of town for a bit to be with my Grandparents. While I talk a lot about things past (that I’ve already dealt with), I struggle to talk about current events – things happening right now. Today, I’m leaving. Today, I’m going to Tucson. I’ll be helping my Grandparents move out of their current home and packing up their things. As you read this, I’ll be en route to the airport, big bag of books and computer and things in hand, running to the airport with my sneakers, swim suit, and brown luggage case. 

While the computer comes with me, and I’ll be working for a few hours here and there, it’s the least of my concerns for right now. We can put the computers down. We can walk away. We’re allowed to stop, breathe, and think for a minute. 

I thought I’d share two short essays I wrote in the past two weeks, because they’re how I put words together to say what I’m feeling. For anyone who has lost a family member, grandparent, or is in the process of saying goodbye, this may hit home. Often times – more often than not – I write in my notebooks and journals as a way to figure out what’s going on (most of this unfiltered stuff I share over here). I’ve joked with friends and family that if you ever read my notebooks, you’ll find a different person, because in my writing I cover a full range of emotions and thoughts – often dealing with the toughest stuff through writing. In my journals is a heart-wrenching amount of sorrow, puzzlement, some lectures to myself, and indecipherable notes  – because it’s where I go to figure things out. I only pretend that I know what I’m doing, but I really don’t (for the most part).

Between the skips and the jumps, the love and the hugs — I’m also the person on BART, crying for a minute, remembering the people I love and writing in my journals as the trains screech and jolt back and forth. I’m the one who stops on the corner of the sidewalk, immersed in thought, struggling.

And so, ponytail up and sneakers on, I’m out the door. Goodbye for a bit, San Francisco. I’m out of town for a week to spend time with my grandparents for a bit. Cheers, and more cheery-ness soon. Give an old person a hug today. We’ll all be there one day. XOXO. Sarah

 

***

Dear Grandma

Saturday, June 25, 2011. Riding on BART.

Hi Grandma,

I woke up thinking about you this morning.

I hope you are doing well. Mom said that you’re being moved to a help center and I think that’s good. I wish I could be there to help you every day.

I just wanted to tell you – I don’t know how to say this, but before its too late — I’m becoming the person you said I would be. This week, I skipped down the street laughing because I started to see what I could become. I see everything about what’s possible and I am in awe that my life is becoming what you and grandpa said it could be.

I want you to be around 5 years from now so you can see everything that I’m working on. I want to see you when I’m 30, then 35. I want to tell you the stories of the things I haven’t done yet, because I know that you would be so proud of me.

In a few years, I want you to meet my kids, to see the third round of what you are grandpa started, to show you the kids of the future’s future.

But I know that even today, you’re slowly slipping away. The last time I visited, your mind was slowly disappearing somewhere where you can’t access it anymore and you couldn’t remember most of the things we talked about. Grandpa gets so frustrated with you because you can’t remember the things he tells you – and I feel so helpless because there is nothing I can do. And so we walked around the house and looked at pictures, and I told you the stories of each of your grand kids. You’d written on the back of each one the names, the years, and the ages. You picked one up and looked at the back, and said, ohhh! This one is Ellen! And I smiled because you recognized my younger sister, my beautiful, talented younger sister –

And you opened your eyes wide and smiled at me and said next,

“Who’s Ellen?”

I tried not to let my face fall but my lip quivered and I stuttered for a second. I braved a smile and said, gently, Ellen is my younger sister, this is a picture of her from when she was four. She’s 21 now, tall and gorgeous, living on her own in Southern California.

You smiled and nodded, and with all the graciousness of a woman who was born in 1922 and lived through the 30s, 40s, and 50s – all the way until today – you looked at me as though these were the most fascinating stories a guest in your home could ever tell you.

I stayed in the small bunk bed where my mom lived long ago, my mom and I, exhausted, crying, working to help you as much as we could, telling you stories over and over again and learning to live with the constant repetition of your identical questions as they surfaced every few hours. My mind got slightly dizzy itself as I tried to remember things I’d told you and then forget them all so I could start the stories afresh. I sat on the edge of the bed and sobbed, wanting to know if could do anything, how I could fix it, knowing that this is something you can’t fix.

“Thank you so much for visiting,” you said when you hugged me goodbye the next day.

“It was so nice to meet you.”

Grandma, I love you so much.

***

“You are a good grand-daughter.”

Thursday, July 7, 2011

These words echo in my mind as I walk home alone, slowly, breathing in the shrouded mist of the fog in the dark. Van Ness is a lonely, busy street, one of the streets I dislike in San Francisco’s repertoire of interesting passageways. The six lanes of traffic and cruddy sidewalks add a cacophony of bad noises to my loneliness; the contrast between the race of the cars and the patter of my footsteps always seems asyncronous somehow. In a blink, the feelings and moments before, of being with good friends and wandering and laughing – they softly disappear into the past and I am confronted with a feeling that keeps surfacing in my mind this week.

It’s dark, and I’m hesitant to cross the street, and I look fearfully both ways for cars.

I can’t help but let my happy face crumble, briefly, as I mourn in the memory of my grandmother, who’s not dead but almost gone. My heart aches – scratch that, I don’t know how to describe that, because it sounds so cliche – but little noticings in my body register the changing feelings. My posture sinks in lethargy. My hands hurt, because I don’t want to hold anything. My legs don’t feel like lifting as much. I’m done, I’m alone, and I just want my Grandpa to stop hurting.

Grandpa. He’s alone, and they’ve forbidden him from seeing my Grandmother, and I’m afraid, terribly afraid for him because I don’t know whether or not he will get through this ordeal, and he’s not gone yet. He’s here, but he’s buried under the weight of the loss of his wife, of the end of his life, of the need to make decisions he’s been putting off for so many years.

And I’m sorry. I’m sorry for writing about this, for sharing this, for talking about this. I like being a happy person, and I feel – I don’t know, I feel strange talking about this and what it means, but it’s real. And I promised myself that I would write no matter what, and that I would tell the stories no matter what, because it is. And life is. And that’s just what it is.

I leave town in 3 days to be with them. I am scared of this, I am.

***

Thanks for reading my stories. I try to paint life as it is, in the bits and pieces I see and feel. It’s not always easy, but as I said at the end of last week’s Hello post, it’s worth it. Undoubtedly. 

32 things you don’t know about me – or, Hello.

Hello …. Hi.

Oh Hey There.

I was sitting down to a beer with a friend I met on twitter (yes, Mom, I met someone on TWITTER), and he interrupted me after a bit and said, “You know, you’re way cooler in person.”

I’m not really sure what that meant, but upon some reflection: I think (before you meet me IRL), I kind of give the impression of a being a little too watery-inspirational online. I do talk a lot of cheer and happy-goodness online. I’m no Ashley Ambirge (although I could definitely use a little more of her online sass). It’s hard to talk about the things I love and that inspire me without sounding, well, a little ‘woo-woo,’  as my friend Natalie says. Words like Awesome, Excellent, Amazing, Phenomenal, and Epic – they’re just letters and placeholders. They don’t capture it, and sometimes, give a false impression of who I am.

There’s been quite a few posts going around emphasizing the art of the honest introduction – Amber Naslund’s “What I Wish People Knew About Me,” and Corbett’s brilliant “Things I Never Told You,“) and Jenny Blake’s 100 Things About Me. Inspired by these posts – and spurred by the reaction I met from my Twitter friend, I thought I’d try again.

SO. How do you say hello? How do you introduce yourself, tell your story, tell your ideas? In my work, I interview people and write articles – about people, projects, ideas – and tell the stories behind the scenes, about the people and the projects that make ideas happen. I like telling other people’s stories – but there are things that I have never told you. Things that maybe I’m scared to talk about, or that I forget are important in how they shaped the story of the person behind the blog.

So, Hello.

Here’s 32 things you don’t know about me.

1.  My sister and I were born in Germany, in two small towns – Heidelberg and Karlsruhe. My parents are fluent in German, and when they came back to America, they brought with them a love of skiing, adventure, family, cheese and close friendships after their 5-year stint as engineers abroad.  We made it back to California by way of friends in New York, Idaho, and Palo Alto. When I travel the country – and the world – I bump into people all over that know my family and my friends – we make friends for life. Now, for all intents and purposes, I only remember being raised in California. And oddly, according to the rules of our country, I can never be the President of the United States.

2. When I was younger, I was deaf. From age 4 to age 5, the world around me slowly grew quieter and quieter until I couldn’t hear anymore. At home, I would sit in front of the small brown television and rotate the dials upwards to their max and sit very close to the television to try to decipher what Bert and Ernie were telling me. In the Kindergarden classroom, I would sit in the back of the room and stare off into space, not able to tell what we were doing.

“Mom,” I would say when I got home, “I don’t like Kindergarden. The teacher whispers to us and it’s annoying.” And then I would go outside and play, in my own world of visions and colors and textures – but not sounds. When my mom realized what was happening, she was horrified.  But how would you know? How can you tell if someone is deaf if they don’t tell you (the two clues, above, being her only clues) – and how do you know when your world is different than someone else’s?

The repairs on my ears were painful – mostly psychologically. A truck drove by the hospital after I emerged, and, high up in my dad’s arms with my blanket for comfort, I ducked my head in my Dad’s chest and covered my ears, terrified by the loud sounds of the new world I was entering.

3. I was trained in classical piano. Despite my skirting the world of the non-hearing, music was incredibly important in my life. In what already feels like another lifetime, I spent 11 years behind the piano. Listening and learning how to do music is another way of seeing the world. I want to get back into music in a more meaningful way – particularly singing – but I keep hiding it from myself and not doing it. I’m currently tinkering in guitar and singing, but not very well. This is one of my biggest current personal failures – sticking to things I’m already good at (swimming, running) and not branching out and trying new things.

4.  I love swimming, but I have no idea why I’m good at it. I grew up swimming, and the years of practice are a testament to the amount of skill that can be built over dedicated amounts of time. I still swim two or three times a week, and for me, it’s easier than running or biking or most on-land activities. It’s now something I’ve done for 20 years, and the combined years of training have led me to a level of finesse I’m not sure I’ll be able to replicate anywhere else in my life. Swimming is where life makes sense.

5. I started running three years ago and formally doing yoga 2 years ago. I am a trained swimmer, but these new kinesthetic movements of yoga, dance, and running also match my body wonderfully. I think body work should be done every day. I now stretch a few times a day, and I could do yoga twice daily without thinking about it. (I have been known to do yoga while skype video-chatting – true story). Yoga and breathing are some of the best mind balancers. If I don’t move, I don’t think.

6.  I sing and dance at home by myself in my apartment when no one is watching. I sometimes think the neighbors out my windows can see me – they probably can – but I don’t care. I LOVE the show “So You Think You Can Dance” – mostly because I move all the furniture out of my living room and dance around on my own. I love singing along to the radio (possibly one of the unspoken reasons why I kept my car even though I wanted to sell it).

7.  I love hugs. The greatest gift you can give someone else is your smile and your time to listen to them. For me, a kinesthetic person, a hug means more to me than most words. “I’m proud of you,” and a hug is enough to make my day. If and when I meet you in person, it will definitely be with a hug.

8.  I didn’t use to talk very much to people I was afraid of or admired. Actually, there are a lot of times in my life when I didn’t talk very much at all.  It took me a while to get out of my own way to be able to do things.  In college, my coach thought I didn’t know how to talk for the first few months when I moved to school. One day, I walked onto the pool deck and was humming along to a song I had stuck in my head. My coach – a very tall, 6’7″ Italian man, turned around and faced me square on. “For a while there, I didn’t think you could speak,” he said to me. That was our first interaction.

9. I worked in high school, college, and graduate school, sometimes more than one job – sometimes as many as 5 jobs. I’ve already had well over 50 jobs in my lifetime and I’m just getting started.  In high school, I worked in the early mornings at our local YMCA as a lifeguard, and after swim practice in the evenings, twice a week I’d head back to the pool to close up the gym for the 10:30PM shift.

In graduate school I worked a night shift monitoring – yes, this is for real – Frat parties. I got to stand in at every frat house on campus. My shift ended at 3AM on Saturday mornings after the Friday night shenanigans. There were always a lot of … propositions. In college I worked just a few hours as a TA and a Tutor, but my parents told me not to work. They wanted me to focus on swimming. This is one of the greatest gifts they could have given me.

10.  I lived on an off-the-grid farm in Ohio. While at school, I lived on a farm for 4 months. We worked on three gardens – the kitchen garden, the herb garden, and the main garden, and lived communally in three cabins (there were 12 people).  The grounds had an open-deck solar-heated shower in the woods before ‘sustainable’ and ‘green’ were cool buzzwords. We ate food we made. We lived 2 miles from town. In the mornings, in the hot, humid, sticky summers of Ohio, I would walk to the highway, catch a ride, and go 8 mile up the road to work as a farm hand. All afternoon I would pick weeds and maintain crops for a family of five farms.  It was certainly back-aching work, and each weed was a war. The whole summer, I was smelly.

11.  Moving away from home was one of the hardest things I did. I come from a family of four kids who grew up nearly on top of each other, compressed into 800 square feet of a house full of fits and fights.  For better or for worse, I now am best friends with each of them. I absolutely love and cherish each of my ridiculously smart and talented siblings, and they are the first to tell me when I’m goofing up or how to be better when I need to step up my game.

12.  My brother and sisters are my best friends. This one is obvious.  I can’t imagine my life without them, and I am the person I am because of them.

13.  I love coffee and wine, but didn’t start drinking either one until I was 21. Yes, you read that right. I didn’t drink coffee or alcohol for almost my entire college career. And I was on the swim team. (Maybe that’s part of the answer to number 4…)

14.  I can rarely say no to something sweet. I have a huge sweet tooth. My roommates can attest to the brownies, cookies, pies and other delicious goodies I like stirring up. It’s probably why I swim so much – just so I can eat brownies.

15.  I’m addicted to reading (seriously, addicted). Perhaps it came from my inability to hear the world for a while (I can still lip-read better than hear, so I like looking at your face and I hate it when you cover your mouth) – or perhaps it is just innate; when I was four, I painstakingly copied books word for word and displayed them, proudly, to my family and called them ‘my first books.’ I’ve since published a handful of things on Lulu and Blurb and can’t wait until my first “real” book comes alive in my hands. I’ll probably cry.

16. On that note … I’m also addicted to learning. I can’t stop. I love figuring things out. I read books because I have a hundred questions I want answered, and each time I figure out new ways of thinking about my first question, I am flooded with 327 more questions I want to figure out. It’s exhausting. And exhilarating. I love explaining how things work, and if I don’t know, I like asking questions and finding people who do know and can teach me.

17. Most of the people around me don’t understand what I do online – and don’t get Twitter, Facebook, Blogging, or the potential of the interconnected webs we weave. I try desperately to explain. I love what I do, and I am fascinated by the intersections between the architecture of the physical world (my job) and the architecture of our digital spaces – and how they both collide to create spontaneity, surprise, and unexplained phenomena.

18. I want to write a book every year. I write almost every day, and I’ve already got stashes of book drafts in my digital closets. I’m inspired by the likes of Asimov or Crichton or Kevin Lynch – each of whom write approximately a book per year during a 30 year span. Why not?

19. I gave up in graduate school. For all intents and purposes, I quit. I stopped two years into the program and said, “I have to get out.” I went to the registrar, found out the bare requirements to graduate, dropped out of the second degree program and certificate program I was in, and finished the degree with all the energy I could muster. This was not the easiest thing for me to do, by any regards. I felt like a failure for a long time during and afterwards. I suffered from burnout, paralysis and procrastination after graduating, and struggled with the transition into my new job and role.

20. I’ve broken 5 bones in my body, lost one, fractured another, and had stitches across my eye. Nothing was as painful (heart-wise) as falling down a flight of stairs two weeks before the National Championship meet my junior year of college. I tried to hide it from my coach – but being on crutches was difficult to mask and we had to come up with an alternative game plan. The decision was simple: we decided that I’d either swim or drop out, but I wouldn’t pansy around and use the foot as an excuse for two weeks. So I stayed on crutches up until the last minutes before the race and we agreed that I’d swim come hell or high water.  I swam. My foot was broken. I skirted into 8th place. I was exhausted. But we did it.

Nothing was as physically painful as being strapped to an intervention radiology desk and being unable to move as the doctors tried to figure out what was wrong with my body and why my blood wouldn’t move. Circulation systems are beautiful things that, when they fail, are bloody annoying. The combination of fear and the sting of the shots in my arms scared the crap out of me. Being told I might never swim again made me cry. Creaking down a linoleum hallway strapped to a million wires and tubes and being wheeled into the 6th floor sick room to watch the fireworks on the 4th of July from the hospital room was an imprint I’ll never forget, as much as I’d like to try. I am so grateful for the hospital, but I never want to be back there.

21. When the going gets tough, I’ve learned to dig deep. Life isn’t easy, but it certainly is fun.  I still don’t know how deep my resolve is, but part of me hopes I never have to find out. Everything you’re going through – every single thing, even if you’re in the middle of it – teaches resilience, tests your character, strengthens your resolve. Everyone has a story, and you might be living yours at this very moment. It will turn out for the better. Trust me.

22. I like being alone. While I’m addicted to the internet, I also need a lot of space to myself. I like to stay alone until I’m full, and then I rejoin the world. For introverts (and I’m somewhere hovering in between an introvert and extrovert), we take lots of space to think, feel, breathe, and be; and when I’m at too many events or parties, my brain fractures and fizzles and I have to go hide for a while until I can put the pieces back together. Sometimes at events I’ll do just that – disappear and go running or walking – so I can come back and continue the conversations. I think blogging is a huge game-shifter for introverted people, because they can now interact with people from behind their computer screens and on their own terms.

23. I  love being prepared. I carry a big bag with me and in it, I (almost) always pack my running shoes. My giant purse is filled with a million regular to extraordinary things, usually including a pair of Tevas or my Vibrams so I can take off and go running.

24. I do handstands nearly every day. Being upside down is good for you. I’m writing an essay on it.

25. I love kids, and I was a pen pal with one virtually in Honduras for 10 years, after I demanded to my parents that we do something about people who couldn’t live as lucky as us. While I was in high school and college, we wrote letters to each other as he grew up in a family of 8 kids. I now sponsor a bunch of kids in Kiva and in my business life, I want to make a lot of money so that I can do amazing things with it. I believe in philanthropy, and I think being a businessperson is a phenomenal way to give back to the world.

26. I want to live in a Spanish-speaking foreign country. If I can do that while volunteering, and preferably working with kids, I will have died and gone to heaven.

27. I believe in being away from the computer for extended periods of time. The computer, the cell phone, the facebook, the twitter – they play on our minds like crack, and we’re all addicted. The way that networking and the social web works is changing the world, but it will come at a cost, and we need to retain other skills. Plus, we have to find our sanctuaries, and the spaces in between that facilitate innate creativity, productivity, and exploration. Sometimes the best answer is to work less, not more.

28.  I always have a notebook handy. If I don’t have a notebook, I feel naked without pen and paper, and I’ll figure out some other way to draw a story for you.

29. I didn’t realize I was a writer until long after I started writing. Color me stupid, but I didn’t know that I wanted to write, teach and speak until well after I started writing. It was just something I did, something I had to do, and when I finally, dumbly started a blog, after a long inquiry of giving up other things in my life to find out what I really wanted, a light clicked on after a few months. I got it. I could do this – something I love and enjoy – and make it my work. I could be a writer. When I realized what I already knew, it was a “duh!” and “Aha!” moment all at the same time.

30.  Losing (almost) everything makes you stronger. In the span of a year, I didn’t have a quarterlife crisis, I had a QUARTER LIFE HELL MESS that invaded my life suddenly and unexpectedly.  At the end of my 25th year, I found myself in a hospital with a blood clot in my chest and IVs dripping from my body, my sister gently washing my hair and changing my clothes because I couldn’t move either of my arms (too many needles), and my mom holding her breath for the entire five days of intensive care and emergency surgery.

In the nine months that followed, I fell in love with Vicodin, got engaged, moved in with the ‘feller, and then in a whirlwind that still surprises me to this day – had the fiance leave me in a garage, drive away, and never call me again.  This gut-shock can be characterized by lots of single-word headlines, read in bold:  Head spinning. Awesome. Gut wrenching. Liberating. Terrifying. Wonderful. Confusing. Reconstructive. Determined. These are a few of the words that I grasp onto when I try to talk about that summer (and many of them made it into the now infamous post from last year, One Word). 

Realizing that all you have – even if it’s a sleeping bag, a too-short twin bed, and a closet with no windows to make your home – is yourself and a few things, and a few things at best – was one of the greatest hidden treasures of those months. I suddenly and unexpectedly found myself undeniably broke, in piles of debt, and without any friends or family in my new neighborhood. I learned, quite simply, that what I have is enough.  Who I am is enough.  And with nothing, and no one else, I knew that me – I – you – we are enough.

It was a painful but necessary lesson. What you have is enough, and you really don’t need much.  Losing things, and living with less is the best teacher. It grounds you in the truth that happiness is completely in your hands. It reminded me that it always was – and it always is.

31.  That said, I’m still terrified of dying. Most things don’t scare me too much, but I am scared of dying. I don’t want to leave yet, and I don’t want to leave before I’ve done what I’ve set out to do. The Life List is kind of scary, because the looming end date is intangible and unknowable. I’ve made, instead, a 30 things before 30 list and I like doing things. I do them because I can, because there’s no sense in delaying what you want or hope to achieve because of fear, worry, or insecurity. Those will always be there. Do it anyways.

32. I am in love with living. My fear of dying is tempered only by my absolute joy in living, being present, and experiencing the world. It comes across as cheesy sometimes (exclamation points! smiling faces! worlds dripping with adoration and enthusiasm!) but I believe in life and living and being, and I’m happy doing just that.  When I die, I want them to write on my epitaph, “She loved living.”  Even though it gets gnarly at times, it’s because of the tough stuff that you get to the good stuff, and it’s worth it.

Thank you.



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Commitment.

Goethe, on The Power of Commitment:

“Until one is committed, there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back, always ineffectiveness. Concerning all acts of initiative ( and creation), there is one elementary truth the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and splendid plans: that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then providence moves too. All sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have occurred. A whole stream of events issues from the decision, raising in one’s favour all manner of unforeseen incidents and meetings and material assistance, which no man could have dreamed would have come his way.

Whatever you can do or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, power and magic in it. Begin it now”.

– J. W. von Goethe

Generosity. World Give Day: More About We, Less About I

What do you give back to the world? Each day, each step, each moment on the planet is a gift. What do you give back? World Give Day is tomorrow, May 4. As part of the effort and outreach, Laura Kimball and Jolkona asked several bloggers to expand on the following statement: “Small scale donors are the backbone of philanthropy”

Giving is a series of moments.  Giving is not about the enormity of a gift or an idea. Giving can be simple, it can be small, it can happen in a moment. Giving is an attitude, a belief about the inter-dependence of the human spirit and the human condition.

Moment 1. In the line at the post office. Frustrated. Tired. Ready to go home. Sighing loudly. I wait, tapping my feet impatiently. The young man in front of me turns, smiles, and says, ‘Busy?’ – In a word, a phrase, a glance, my heart relaxes a bit. ‘Why don’t you go ahead – I’m just enjoying my day,” he continues.

Gift: gracious space. Gentle kindness. A reminder to live slower and just be. Thank you.

Moment 2. Flat on the floor, yoga, stretching, reaching. Tired, sore, worried. The instructor reaches over and puts his hand slowly on the small of my back. He stretches my feet out behind me, pressing downwards on the back of my ribs, reminding me to breathe.

Gift: Touch. A smile. Understanding. Support and friendship. I am so grateful.

My life is filled with moments of wonder as people all around me give gentle nods of encouragement and smiling reminders that we are all here together, working, doing, being. I am only humbled and wish fervently that I can be as generous with my time, money, and energy as everyone is to me.

In the spirit of World Give Day, I want to encourage you to remember that gifts don’t have to be monetary – we can give gifts of our hearts, minds, and ideas – and give them freely. Here are ten of my favorite (non-monetary) things to give.

Ten things you can give – every day:

  • 1. A hug.
  • 2. A smile.
  • 3. A Book or an idea.
  • 4. A listening ear.
  • 5. Advice
  • 6. A Lesson. Teach someone how to do something – for free. Share what you know with someone who needs it.
  • 7. Encouragement.
  • 8. time
  • 9. Space
  • 10. A thought or note. Appreciation and recognition.

What’s your favorite thing to give? What is the best gift you’ve received? If you do enjoy giving monetary gifts – and these are always highly encouraged – I admire many people who give 10% or more of their earnings each year. I strive to give 10% each year to people in desperate need. For those looking to give, here are some of my favorite organizations:

  • Jolkona is an organization built around the idea that small acts add up – quickly.  Connecting you to larger philanthropies, they show you how your giving makes a difference – and work really hard to make the experience interactive, so you can watch your dollars at work. (My personal favorite is teaching people with disabilities to dance – and then getting a video back! How awesome!)
  • Charity: Water is a non-profit organization bringing clean and safe drinking water to people in developing nations. With the tagline, “water changes everything,” this charity has become one of the biggest organizations in giving, with 100% of public donations directly fund water projects. Learn more or donate.
  • Kiva is a microfinance lending non-profit that funds entrepreneurs around the world through small loans given by many different individuals.  In lending a small amount, such as $25, your funding goes towards helping someone build a business or project. (To see the projects I’ve financed, take a look here.)
  • Red Cross. From money to time to blood donations (you can go every 8 weeks and they give you apple juice and cookies!) – the Red Cross gives around the world.
  • Salvation Army or Goodwill. When cleaning out your closet, decluttering, or moving – box up the things you don’t need and give them to someone who does need them!

“In 100 years, we will not be known for our technological advances; rather we will be known for how we used technology to tackle some of humanity’s biggest challenges.” ~ Adnan Mahmud

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“This post is part of a blog series inspired by World Give Day and hosted by GiveForward and Jolkona. To find other posts in this series please visit www.worldgiveday.com or follow the hashtag #giveday.”

Ten Things for Right Now.

Ten vows for – the new year – right now.

I write a letter to myself every year (in addition to journaling and obsessive list-making and many other things involving pens, paper and imagination).  One of the most important things on my list is not just what I want to achieve, but also my best guess at the way to achieve what I want to achieve – a means to get to the goals that I want to accomplish.

Next to each goal is a break-down of the steps that it will take to get there.

A little further to the right, hanging by my door as I leave my room each morning –  is a set of reminders for things to do, each day, as I live. These are my “rules to live by.” When I get overwhelmed with my ideas, my aspirations, and my lists, this is the list called “right now.”

On my wall I have posted my list of ten things for right now.

Somewhere in the middle, when it gets crazy (Hello, April and May!) – I breathe and remind myself to go slowly and focus on incremental changes. I remind myself not to race to the end of the year, but to let myself learn and grow, slowly, over time.

As part of my lessons from less series, and as a means for taking more time to step back and reflect, these are my rules for right now, for today, and probably for tomorrow.

They’ve really helped me in terms of sanity and balance (however balanced you can be as an intra/entrepreneur). And every day I try to remember these rules, from when I wake up each morning until I fall over in bed each night. I post them because I see them when I wake up, some mornings at 4am, and when I fall asleep at night. My wall, painted blue from a previous’ tenant, has a smattering of green post-its and sheets of paper pinned to it, tacked up, with words written and scribbled and crossed out.

When I get dressed in the morning, I can see the notes next to my mirror. And when I get overwhelmed by my ambitions, scared of doing the little things, terrified that I’ll fail miserably and beautifully, I breathe and try to remember my simple rules.

Here are ten things for right now.

1 – Keep it simple. Appreciate the small steps. Do something little every day and it will probably turn into something bigger.

2 – Live each day as though you may only have one more. Everybody dies. It’s not morbid. It’s true. There’s no guarantee of any second chances.

3 – Appreciate momentum. Never wait to get started.

4 – Laugh often. At least half of the time, when presented with fun and with work, do the fun stuff. It will help the work stuff. (Of course, the ultimate goal is to have the fun stuff BE work, but that doesn’t always happen exactly like that.) Often the fun stuff turns into the best work stuff, anyways. Smile and laugh while you work – it helps.

5 – Encourage others. Never discourage others. People are working hard to do incredible things. Let them.

6 – Wander, Walk, and Run. A lot. It’s what your body is designed to do. We are not designed to sit at computers or at desks. Listen to the most basic, fundamental tenets of design in your body (it makes you a better designer/worker anyways).

7 – Learn. Read. A lot. If you can’t read, watch. If you can’t watch, listen. Observe people around you. Ask questions. Question assumptions. Find something to be insatiably curious about it, and figure out how it works and why it does what it does. Cultivate an insatiable sense of curiosity and wonder.

8 – Listen honestly to the heart. When you get too busy, breathe. When you’re scared, question why, and let yourself feel the emotions. They are honest reflections of your opinions and circumstances.

9 – When you’re scared, it’s okay to step back and reflect before you dive in again. Just don’t wait too long. (You might miss the boat).

10 – When you’re tired, go to sleep. There is no better cure for anything than a beautiful night of rest. Sleep is the most powerful anecdote to hundreds of ailments. The time under closed eye provides a place for imagination, brain re-organization, mental sorting, and is exceptionally mood-boosting. In a world where we are faced with inordinate amounts of pressure to work more, find a way to be selective about the work you do and when your work is done each day, go to bed. Sleep is powerful.

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Hope this helps you as much as it helps me. I fail to achieve these simple rules on a regular basis, and posting them somewhere visible is a great way to remember to relax and do better work.


City Wanderings (and a 10-day hiatus!)

I see London, I see France …

What a whirlwind year already (And it’s only April!). I’m smack in the middle of deadlines, in over my head in responsibilities, and I want nothing more than to sit and write more of the pieces I’m working on — both for this blog and elsewhere.
Sounds like it’s about time for a re-boot.
After The Middle and even though I have deadlines – maybe precisely because I have deadlines – my Sister and I are taking off for a 10-day respite from the crazy of the working world.
I’m headed to London, UK, and Paris, France for 10 days. I’ll be wandering through cities, exploring the urban environments, and building marvelous plans for World Domination (or something like that).
I’m taking off! Time to get out from behind the computer and see the world.
I won’t be back in the States until the 18th, and I’m deliberately leaving my computer and my cellphone behind. I’m not sure if I or others will be more shocked from this digital vacation – I’m expecting to need the entire 10 days to rehab from my ever-building internet and facebook addiction.  My vacation responder now gives a stern rebuke to those trying to contact me (they have to go through my mom to get to me!) — and this will be a great test of my ability to actually slow down and see the world, even in the midst of crazy deadlines.
Vacation – and time off – is important. Extremely important. Most of us don’t take enough time to recover, to re-build our stamina, and to give ourselves the fresh breath required to do our best and most brilliant work.
I’ll have good things for you while I’m gone.
A special guest post will hit this blog next week while I’m gone. Enjoy! Other than that, I’ll be gone from the internet world for 10 days.
But I won’t forget about this blog for *too long.*
And I’ll have even better things for you when I get back!
When I’m back, I’ll have notebooks filled with observations, ideas, and new posts. And pictures – LOTS of pictures. Also, I’ll be launching several fun projects that I’ve been working on and sharing lots of fun things with you soon.
See you at the end of April!

More than Just Dreaming: Actually DO-ing. (And a short video: hello!)

Dreams are things that we either unabashedly work towards — or we keep them close to our hearts, unwilling to chase them because they might not come true.

God, I’m terrified of publishing this.

I have a big confession to make.

I love the show Survivor. I would go on the show in a heartbeat.  This year, in my year-list of goals and aspirations, one of the things on my list was an insatiable desire to be on the show Survivor. Yup, the television show.

Survivor? Being on a show that blends teamwork, psychology, athletic feats, exploration, camping, and a little bit of television? Color that AWESOME.

To be fair: I don’t think I stand much of a shot of actually getting ON the show. But I wanted to apply, nonetheless.

Is it pragmatic? Is it realistic? Is it possible?

I’m not really sure.

Pragmatism and realism should be thrown out the window when you begin dreaming of anything you want to do.  If we were to ask, “does it make sense?” The answer would be: Probably not. But I caught myself – more than once – sitting on the couch and watching the team battles, realizing full well that I was sitting on the couch stupidly doing NOTHING about this inkling of a dream that I had.  And so, this past winter, I made a vow to myself that I would apply and at least TRY to be on the show. Reserving all judgment, I would spend a few days putting together an application.

A great mentor of mine says, “If you don’t apply, the answer is already No.”

That is,  if you don’t put yourself in the running, you’ve already taken yourself out of consideration. This is really important to note: If you apply 10 times and you get 10 rejections, this is NOT the same thing as never applying in the first place. After each attempt, you learn, you grow, you get better. Also, the chances are that you’ll get 9 rejections and then ultimately get a positive response. Work for it.

So I put together a video, much to the help of some great friends and a whirlwind day on a motorcycle in San Francisco. And here it is, a testament to my zany quest to check off my goals and make things happen.

So put together a video application to be on Survivor.

This is part of a larger dream of mine to become a public speaker and teach people – audiences – about motivation, inspiration, and the psychology behind behavior and business decisions. To teach and speak about the intersection of business, design, and building great projects (big or small) is a huge dream of mine.  Yes, I’ll admit it: I sometimes like public speaking. Sure, it makes me nervous. Yes, I’m more introverted than extroverted and it completely exhausts me. Heck, it gives me stomach quivers and my palms get sweaty and I have sharp pangs of self-doubt. My voice gets shaky and I’ve bombed terribly before.

But I keep getting up. Something about it draws me back. I really like explaining things to people and I like doing difficult things and getting better at them.

So I put together an hold-nothing-back video for the sake of applying for the show.

The video is something a bit more arrogant than I like to be, but, well, I want to be on Survivor.

And as for the outcome of the video? Well, I probably won’t be on Survivor, after all. In fact, the season I applied for (Survivor: Redemption Island) is already in the midst of airing, and guess what – I’m not on the show.  My guess is that they don’t need another blond-ish gal from California.  But each time I get up, each time I practice, each time I rehearse: I get a little bit better. And better. And hopefully one day, I’ll be able to speak confidently in front of more people, in front of crowds, and teach whatever accumulated knowledge I have to people who are keen on learning. It might not be on Survivor. It might be somewhere else.

But for now, it’s me, the internet, and my short (and not very good) video audition for the show Survivor.

For many of you I’ve never met, consider this a hello across the internet.

I am still terrified to publish this.

Enjoy.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v3Jh8k4qjBM

 

 

There’s Someone I Want You To Meet. (LAC Book Review and a Free Book Giveaway!)

I want to set up a match.

You know, a little blind date. The one where your friends find someone for you that they KNOW is perfect for you.

Yes, you.

I want you to meet Jenny.

ABOUT YOU.

YOU: are insanely talented, fresh out of college or somewhere a few years into a job (or maybe you’re transitioning to a new career), and you are deftly maneuvering your way through inordinate learning curves and figuring out what life entails post-school.

Perhaps you feel as though your potential has barely been tapped, that there’s something unsettling about your current situation. Maybe your job isn’t quite the right fit. Maybe you tap your feet at the end of the day, itching for more to do, Maybe you’re not satisfied yet with the status quo and you want more. You know you want to figure out your life and your game plan, but you’re just not sure how.

You are somewhat stressed from time to time, wondering how to figure it all out. Perhaps you’re sometimes in need of a hug (I won’t tell anyone).

As with most people, parts of your life are amazing, but you need some help figuring out the other stuff. (Hello, Budget – what are you?). When your friends talk about 401K’s and BMW’s, you think, Holy Shit, I have debt – will I ever make it? Or perhaps you’re just unsure about making new friends and you’ve moved to a new city and you’re not sure what’s next.

What is next?

Have you figured out your own road map?

MEET JENNY.

About Jenny: Jenny’s story is pretty well-known (it’s really hard for famous people to actually go on blind dates, after all), but if you haven’t met her yet, start here.  If we describe her in words, let’s put a few big ones up there: Googler. Entrepreneur. Author. Friend. Personal-Development Guru. Cupcake Fanatic. Yoga Teacher. Vegas Heartthrob. (What? Who said that?). Yes, that’s right. She’s a Googler and Author who also takes Vegas by storm, her book and highlighter tucked away somewhere in her wonder-woman outfit and killer heels.

Jenny is a rockstar of our generation, and the author of a well-known blog, Life After College.  And now, she’s the author of a book by the same name: Life After College: The Complete Guide to Getting What You Want. (Available on Amazon – launching March 29).  To read the story of the book development and Jenny’s documentation of writing, pitching, editing, and publishing a book, check our the book website, LAC Book.) And check out the book trailer if you care to.

WHY I THINK YOU’D BE A GOOD FIT.

Okay, but let’s focus on this date I want to set you up on.

When life hands you the hard stuff, what do you do?

Jenny Blake makes cupcakes. Actually, she’ll do more than give you a cupcake. She’ll give you a worksheet, cheer you on by the sidelines, dig deep for the good stuff, and then hand you a cupcake at the end with oodles of frosting that’s inevitably decorated as one-of-a-kind, just for you.

THIS BOOK IS YOUR PORTABLE LIFE COACH. This isn’t a book or a manual – it’s a friend in your pocket. Jenny’s heart and soul – and intricately connected network around the world – is layered in bite-sized information that’s enriching, captivating, and more importantly, eminently approachable. Jenny pulls you into her book by virtually sitting down at a cafe with you, chatting with you and making you feel right at home within the first few pages. The book weaves her stories and anecdotes with powerful (but beguilingly simple) templates, tips, tricks and tools for you to use to start changing your life – right now.

YOU DON’T NEED TO GO TO COLLEGE TO READ HER BOOK.  she could just title her blog “Life and everything in between,” and you’d probably find something you liked. A hundred somethings. Life After College is basically just Life. Anyone looking for guidance, coaching, or advice in creating the next big steps in life should check out this book.

THE LIFE PATH. For people in college and earlier, the life checklist is actually fairly straightforward. Go to school. Attend classes and do assignments. Make friends, maybe join some clubs.  At 16, you get your license. As a senior in high school, you apply to colleges or get a job. As college winds down, you collect your accolades, craft your resume, and crank your way through some interviews. And try to land a job.

And then what? For many – if not almost everyone – the life checklist sort of fades after we finally “get a job.”  We’ve made our lists up until this point, and then the list gets fuzzy.  For some people, they know they want to “move up” the career ladder, but they’re not sure how to do it – or, after they’ve worked for a while, why they want to do it at all.  Other people want to get married, have kids, — but this too, is something seemingly unattainable and dramatically harder in practice than in theory.

AFTER COLLEGE IS HARD. If you’re a twenty-something and you’re struggling through your first or second job, floundering in figuring out what you want to do, and generally having a lot of trouble making it through what was supposed to be ‘the best years of your life.’ – don’t worry.  You’re not alone.

Once we extricate ourselves from the cushy educational systems that provide for us, once we flee the nest and leave our parent’s homes, there isn’t really a good rulebook or toolkit that tells you how to get things done and where to go next. After college, there’s just an uncharted path, and not much in the way of support or guidance. Many people stumble along the way, overwhelmed by the enormity of all there is to figure out: from money (how much do I make? where does it go? how do I save? what should I spend it on?) to friends (wait, we don’t all live together anymore!) to the “big picture” of your life (what are my goals? what are my values? who do I want to be?) .

So, insert Jenny. Life After College – both the blog and the book – give you organized, practical tips and tricks for navigating your way through Life after college, and figuring out the steps you need to take to master money, happiness, friends, career, among many other ideas.

AND THE BEST THING? YOU CAN WRITE IN THE BOOK. It’s been many years (for me) since I graduated college, but I found myself writing all over the book as soon as I got it, filling out the notes and ideas I had for my life and realizing how much this organization system can apply to anyone, at anytime. Jenny’s next move should be making a set of books that records these processes over time – so that I can do these exercises every few years and map my progress over time! The book is easy to use because it is so wonderfully organized – and you can start from anywhere, reading whatever chapter calls out to you.

SO GO ON A FIRST DATE. (And the Giveaway!)

And by first date, I mean, read her book. Take the book out to lunch (What did you think I meant?) To make it easier, I’m giving a free copy of the book away to a lucky reader, to be randomly selected on April 3, 2011.

Here’s how you enter: Leave a comment before April 2, 2011, with the answer to one of the following questions:

What was the hardest moment for you after college?

If you could do ONE BIG THING in the next 2 years to change your life, what would you do and why would you do it?

 

 

 

Simple wisdom: The five things you need to do to be a good entrepreneur

I recently got some really simple (but great!) advice on how to be an entrepreneur.

There are only 5 things you need to do every day to make sure you’ll make it.

Sleep

Eat well

Exercise

Be social

Get the work done.

It turns out it’s really hard to get #5 without the first 4.