Weblog
Thursday, May 01, 2008
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The more hours your friends work, the more they’ll lie about how much they love their job.
Job titles these days are painfully vague. I know this is true because just one short year ago I was sitting in my closet-sized room in the good old sorority house searching, scouring, and stressing my way through endless lists of job openings in search of the answer to the elusive question: "What am I going to do with my life?" I was looking for something mildly entertaining, decently paying, and promotion-ready. Needless to say, it didn't take me long to discover that this job doesn't exist. At least not in the sense that I was imagining. Or in any sense, actually.
When I stumbled upon the listing for my current job, it didn't seem so bad. It was entitled "Adolescent Care Specialist" and seemed easy enough. Not to mention that it advertised my agency's free health insurance policy and had good hours that would allow me to sleep in nearly every day. Easy transition from college, right? Getting free stuff? Sleeping obnoxiously late every day? I already know how to do all of those things! Can I wear my pajamas, too?
My job title now, although my job has never changed, is technically "Youth Care Worker." This is horribly misleading, often causing people to assume that I read Dr. Suess books and pass out sippy cups for a living. Oh, if only that were the truth. Even throughout my interview and the first few days of my job, I wasn't entirely sure what my purpose was at the agency. After all, for a job applicant, an interview is to be sought, then dreaded, then endured, but not really analyzed. And managers rarely relish interviews any more than the trembling supplicant on the other side of their desk, so it’s probably just as well that people can’t read minds. If they could, most interviews with me would have been aborted within about 45 seconds.
This explains, though, why my parents seem to have absolutely no idea what I do for a living. My mom spends quite a bit of time bragging to her friends about how I've become some sort of accomplished psychotherapist. This isn't terribly far from the truth, since I often spend time dealing with clients' psychoses with methods that just prove I have no idea what I'm talking about. My dad, however, seems to think I'm some sort of prison guard. Also not terribly far from the truth, except for that minor detail that the unit isn't locked and if they really wanted to leave (which they often do) I probably wouldn't do much about it. These misconceptions persist despite the fact that I've been working there for a year now.
I was discussing this with my supervisor and he and I were joking about initiating a "Bring your Parent to Work Day." It would be a wonderful idea if my parents weren't quickly approaching an age where they are more prone to heart attacks. I wouldn't want to speed up the process of nature or anything. I do, however, think it would make my parents appreciate my brothers and I a lot more. And they thought I was a problem child...
Despite their confusion, I do recognize all parents have the inalienable right to brag about their kids. They spent years and years of toil to make us who we are today and now they really just need something to occupy their time. I would love the opportunity to show them the things I've learned from my family put into practice. From my mother I've acquired the elusive eyes in the back of my head, allowing me to know when kids are threatening, touching, or otherwise attempting to get themselves, and me, in trouble while my back is turned. From my brothers I've learned how to get yelled at and cursed out without even flinching. They would also probably be interested to see how I can restrain an out-of-control kid and not manage to get knocked out, since I spent years and years fighting with them and somehow always seemed to be the one who ended up in the E.R. with a bleeding head and a complicated story.
The hardest part about your transition from college to the real world is the transition to the working world. The first job out of college is tough and I've learned not to sweat it. Of the seven members of my graduating sorority class, six of us don’t even work within our majors anymore. Also, two of us are married, three of us are getting an MBA, and one of us fights with teenagers for a living (that’s me!). The point is, who knows where your career or your life will take you? Your first job is all about networking, doing paperwork with a blinding headache, and daring the other young coworkers to do stupid stuff that may or may not get you fired. If you would have told me a year ago I would have a job that required me to carry a walkie talkie and a huge ring of keys, I probably would have laughed at you. Or I would have assumed I failed my thesis and ended up as a janitor, which I also probably would have laughed about. Upon seeing all of these things I really do all day, my parents would probably march straight to my boss and demand I get some sort of promotion. Before which I would politely remind them,
"If you get me fired, I'm moving back home."
Monday, April 28, 2008
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Currently Listening
Siamese Dream
By Smashing Pumpkins
see relatedReflections from a "guys' girl".
I have to admit it, the reason I understood what GreekPhysique was referring to in his posts about the female equivalent of the "nice guy" is I've always been one of those "one-of-the-guys" type of girls. This has even become more apparent to me since I moved to Indiana and have not made a single girl friend in a year, not to mention when I struggled to come up with six close girlfriends from my entire life to be in my wedding party. However, the change from predominately male friends my entire childhood, to living with exclusively sorority girls in college, to choosing to only associate myself with guys post-college has given me some perspective on the way guys and girls interact when the opposite sex is not around. More specifically, that girls can be difficult to understand. In fact, I don't blame guys for being so confused all the time. I know I was when I was living with them too.
I often hear twentysomething guys refer to their guy friends as “my boys.” Likewise, women often refer to their female friends as “my girls.” But there’s a huge difference between my boys and my girls. My closest girlfriends change every season. My girls are catty and like to talk about one another. One of my girls is probably dating anothers' ex-boyfriend. In my experience, female friendships tend to be contentious, plotted, and, ultimately, ephemeral. But not so with my boys. I started with a group of them in elementary school, gained a few in high school, added several recruits during college, and all those guys remain my boys to this day. It's a situation very comparable to that of the twin sister in Eurotrip in that the guys often forget I'm a girl to begin with. Moving to Indiana last year was difficult, but whenever I get a text message from one of my boys back home telling me how much trouble he's gotten himself into this time, along with how "little" he misses me, I kinda feel like I never left.
Girls, in my experience, also often seem surprised when a friendship suddenly fades. Guys, on the other hand, are pretty good at knowing who their true friends are, and I feel like I've picked up some of that mentality over the years. For example, if I’m genuinely excited to be invited to a friend’s wedding, as opposed to secretly calculating how much this is gonna cost me at crateandbarrel.com – that’s a true friend. If I call a friend, know he's available, and don’t hear back from him right away, and yet I feel totally comfortable calling a second time and leaving a “What the #$%$? Call me back, jerk.” voicemail – that’s a true friend. And if a friend knows something embarrassing about one of the guys, promises him he won’t tell me about it, but then just tells me anyway right in front of him -- clearly that’s a true friend who’s as trustworthy as they come.
I really do appreciate my girl friends though, even if there are only six of them and one of them may or may not be my little sister. They've definitely played their part in making me who I am, or more specifically, who I am not. But living with them taught me a lot about myself and the qualities I like and dislike in people, as well as my strengths. After all, there is a reason that , among my college girl friends, I earned the nickname "The Voice of Reason". No relationship decision, drunk or sober, was ever made without consulting me first to hash out what the guy was really trying to do. Likewise, their tendency to get into frequent cat fights has helped me in my job, where breaking up fights is probably about 90% of a days' work. I can mediate between two screaching teenagers without batting an eyelash. And then I'm that much more thankful to come home to my houseful of boys who will play video games for hours without talking. They appreciate the nice things I do for them without searching for an underlying motive. They can take a joke without taking things personally. They leave me alone instead of contantly nagging me with "what's wrong?" Working in an environment in which talking and therapy is the mainstay of my day, it's great to just come home and be comfortable with one another without having to hash out every detail of the day. I definitely miss my girls from Cornell, but I'm happier these days, living with my good old boys from Nowhere, Illinois who have known me my whole life. And since Fiance is one of them, I think I have a lot to look forward to as well.
(PS - We don't normally dress alike, it was a theme party. We're not quite THAT close.)
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
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Our faith in the present dies out long before our faith in the future.
I've been really horrible at getting on xanga and updating lately. I could say I've been busy and such, but I think we all know that would be a big lie. I'm never busy. I've just been taking a break from the computer, mostly because it's so nice outside. I can honestly say I spent the majority of this past winter with a computer on my lap and it's been really great to get a break.
Although I'm not terribly busy, I do seem to have a lot going on right now. OK, that statement is a bit of a paradox, so let me explain: I guess a better way to put it is to say that I have a lot to think about right now. It seems like several major life changes have all come up at once and all of the decisions I'm making right now are going to have quite a bit of weight over the next several years of my life. Obviously, this is mostly financially, but as much as I hate to admit it, financial issues have a lot more weight than they probably should.
Fiance's dad offered to sell us his car - a 2006 Malibu: not flashy, but sufficient - to replace my car, which is beginning to fall apart since I've been driving it since I was 15. He's selling it to us at trade-in value and we can pay him back whenever. This is also in addition to helping pay for the wedding. In fact, his dad is going out sometime this week to put down a $4,000 deposit on the conference center. His parents are so generous to us, it kind of makes me feel guilty that my parents aren't more willing to help, but our families are on opposite sides of the parenting spectrum. My parents believe that they raised me to be independent and, if they did their job, I should be able to care for myself. His parents are concerned about helping us now and getting us securely on our feet in exchange for allowing us to help them more when they need it. I guess neither style is right, but I'm sure appreciating his parents these days!
School should be starting soon and, after a year a off, I'm a little anxious about going back to class. Writing the entrance essays was stressful because I was out of practice and I'm wondering what going to class is going to be like. Furthermore, I'm also curious about when I'm going to find the time to do all of this work out of class. My supervisor at work is a year ahead of me in the same program and he always seems like he's taking time off work to transcribe an interview or write a paper and I'm hoping that maybe he's just a slow worker and it won't be as difficult for me.
I'm still waiting to hear back from that landlord about the super cheap apartment. I can't wait to move out of this apartment and start saving that extra money every month. I wish I didn't have other things to put it towards so I could invest it. Regardless, I'm excited to be moving to a nicer, safer neighborhood and living upstairs from all of my friends. We were all hanging out on the front steps there last night and I would absolutely love it if that would be the norm more than the exception. Especially now that my friends are slowly starting to disperse and move away, opportunities like that are few and far between. I have a feeling that, as stressful as these times are, I'm going to look back and really miss these post-college, pre-married life days.
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
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A house that does not have one worn, comfy chair in it is soulless.
Tonight I am finally starting to look at a prospective apartments. It's been an up and down discussion with Fiance, but I think we've finally decided to appease his uberreligious parents and live in separate apartments until we're married, despite the fact that we've been together for more than eight years and have basically been living together (for safety reasons) since I moved here. So, while we were originally looking for a starter home to invest in, I now have to begin the arduous search for a lower-rent apartment, in hopes that I'll find a perfect place for both of us to live a year an a half from now when we're finally married.
I'm by no means a picky person, especially when it comes to living accommodations. I spent the majority of my childhood in a century-old farmhouse out in the boondocks, so just about anything has that beat. For the past year, I've been living in a newly-renovated, overpriced one-bedroom which regularly gets tagged by the local gangs. My guy friends always have suggestions about where I should move, but for some reason their idea of perfect living always involves a roommate. I lived with a friend for three years prior to graduation. Since then, I've pretty much resolved never to live with another human being again until forced to do so by marriage. Realistically, I think I just needed some time to myself. Post-Roommate, I moved into an apartment which was literally down the street from Fiance. People constantly asked why we didn't just ignore his parents and move in together, but in my mind, the negatives outweighed the positives. The positives were that we'd both save a ton of money and we'd get to spend a lot of time together. The negatives were that I might have to kill him.
The apartment I'm looking at tonight is an amazing compromise for us. Fiance's current roommate is moving back to our hometown, so now he's looking for a cheap place (with roommates!) and will most likely be moving in with our guy friends in a lower level apartment in a decent-looking colonial house. With any luck, I will be moving into the two bedroom apartment upstairs. Now, if only the place is a not a total dump, I'll save a few hundred bucks a month and be within a 10-second walk of most of my friends in a much, much better neighborhood. It's a good thing that a place would have to be pretty awful to fall below my standards.
Thursday, April 03, 2008
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Currently Listening
In Between Dreams
By Jack Johnson
see relatedDiligence is the mother of good luck.
Today is one of those amazing days where I get the chance to see a lot of hard work finally pay off and I finally realize how completely fortunate I am. I'm so excited, I can barely sit here long enough to type, but I needed to tell someone this stuff and every other normal person is at work at 3:45 on a Thursday afternoon. So here's all the good stuff that happened to me today:
1. I fixed my car by myself today. I couldn't even begin to tell you what I did, but I connected this thing to that thing and it worked. The "Crustang" lives!
2. I bought a pair of size 3 jeans that actually fit. This hasn't happened in, oh, about 10 years. To be honest, I wasn't sure it would ever happen again. I'd like to thank my running shoes.
3. The weather is even nicer than it was supposed to be. I actually opened a window today. What a novel concept!
4. I finally got over my little bout with strep throat. I no longer feel like I'm constantly trying to swallow my tonsils and I can breathe through my nose again. In other news, I also don't sound like a 12 year old boy when I talk.
5. AND ... I got accepted to my first choice graduate school! A year from now I probably won't think this is lucky, but hindsight is 20/20 and I'm just going to be happy for myself for the time being and NOT think about the next three years' worth of no sleep.
OK, I'm off to make dinner...I'll come up with a better post soon. Hope everyone has an awesome day!
Sunday, March 30, 2008
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Love one another and you will be happy. It's both as simple and as difficult as that.
As most of you already know, I am (fairly) recently engaged. I'm always a person to consider situations with a critical eye and I've kind of begun to view young marriage among the great equalizers of twentysomething life. There’s nothing I enjoy more than watching a girl wait desperately for her boyfriend to get off his ass and propose. Fiance and I had dated for 8 years before he proposed to me (and I was still caught completely off-guard by the whole thing), but some girls are really eager. As a girl who only hangs out with guys (literally, not a single girl friend these days), I've acquired a bit of a cynical view of the all-important proposal. Guys' entire lives since puberty have been predicated on waiting for girls to make major decisions about what they're ready, willing, or able to do - from the first kiss, to moving in together, and so on. But by tradition, the man alone decides when to propose. This is one of the first times the guys hold all the cards. So when a guy has been beating around the bush about dropping the knee, I almost find it amusing to watch the girl squirm. I've grown to understand that it just takes a while to absolve fifteen years of frustration. Payback’s a bitch, but we all win in the end. The more I think about it, the more ready I am. I am never one to wish away time, but summer 2009 cannot come fast enough. Not only because I'm excited, but also because I'm ready to get on with my (our?) life, as well.
Next week, Fiance and I finally begin the wedding planning process, despite the fact that we've been engaged for four months now. We're going home for a long weekend, jam-packed with meetings and site tours and all of that other stuff I know nothing about. By now, we've discussed about a million separate options for our planning, and I can honestly say that there's a lot of unique ideas between the two of us. Part of me just feels like this whole planning process would go a lot smoother if I was one of those girls who spent her whole life thinking about what she wanted her wedding to look like, but I never cared about or even considered it before. I also think this process would go easier if all of our planning discussions to date weren't essentially fueled by the phrase "wouldn't it be hilarious if..."
Right now, it seems like all of my friends are getting married, so I have a lot of ideas coming my way. I guess it's just the twentysomething thing to do: college is over, the new job thing just kind of wore off, and there's not much going on in this one-horse town, so why not, right? As a result, I've recieved Save The Date cards is all shapes and sizes. My personal favorite is the one of my friends Catherine and Justin dressed up like pirates, but it kind of makes me wonder what Justin had to agree to in order to get Cate to allow that. Maybe I don't want to know. But the vast majority of them are all the same: a perfectly posed professional photo of the couple and a small caption. I usually envision the girl looking lovingly into her fiance’s eyes and saying, “Honey, we’re gonna take a picture in which I look beautiful and you look awkward, send it to everyone we know, and you have absolutely no say in the matter.” That's something to look forward to. In fact, Fiance kind of specializes in "awkward" so it shouldn't be a problem.
Now, I know that probably sounds like I'm not excited, which is totally not the case. I am excited. But I think, more than anything, I'm really just excited about being married more than the wedding itself. Wedding planning is exciting, especially for an artsy person like myself, but it's also very daunting. Within a week of being engaged, I had the soundtrack to the day completely finalized, since blending Fiance's taste in 90's hard rock and alternative with my folky, indie preferences was a blast for me. Now that that's all done, there's a million less-fun things to attend to. With a guest list of nearly 300, this wedding is going to be enormous, and we've decided not to cut people from our list. It wasn't a hard decision when we concluded that having all of our favorite people there outweighs having all of the fancy little details in the long run. But planning a series of 300+ guest parties from an out-of-state location is beyond me. Of course, with an engagement party, a bachelor party, a bachelorette party, a bridal shower, a rehearsal dinner, and then the actual wedding, the engagement is just the beginning of a yearlong series of events celebrating every incremental step of the process. It’s like Billy Madison is getting married! But we're always up for a party - and a year filled with them is an awesome tradition as far as I'm concerned. And if some of those parties have a few "hilarious" and/or "awkward" touches, I wouldn't have it any other way.
Monday, March 24, 2008
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A hangover is the wrath of grapes.
Being a second-shift worker with morning on-call duty twice a week, I very rarely get the opportunity to go out with my friends. This fact is only exacerbated by the simple fact that I don't have any friends in the town that I'm living in these days; but that's another post altogether. Self deprecation aside, this weekend the planets aligned and I actually had a Friday and Saturday off for the first time in two months. So, to take advantage of this momentous occasion, Fiance and I packed up and headed to Chicago to visit some old friends from high school. And, although he and I aren't big partiers these days, old friends inevitably means bar-hopping and unnecessary levels of alcohol consumption.
In college, I could count on going out several nights a week. My social life was higher on my priority list than anything else in my life. This changed radically over the course of the momentous week in June in which I graduated, moved across the Midwest, and started my first "real-world" job over the course of three hectic days. Since then, I can count on my fingers the number of times I've actually ventured outside of my little bubble to socialize. Due to this lack of exposure, I can honestly say I see the bar scene in a new light. And, I must admit, I noticed a few things I had never previously considered.
First of all, I noticed that I become really overwhelmed when I'm at a bar that has a ridiculous number of beer selections. I've never been much of a connoisseur; and I think it's safe to say that I have pretty low standards. If I'm spending a ton of money on a drink, I want it to be something I'm certain to enjoy. And, judging by the fact that I spent the previous four years of my life consuming mystery beer out of a red plastic cup, chances are I'm not horribly picky to begin with. If they could serve it up with just a hint of ping pong ball residue, I'd probably be that much more comfortable.
Then comes the inevitable round of shots which are pivotal to the reunion celebration. I hate doing shots. Always. I used to do them all of the time without any problems. Then I went to Mexico for Spring Break and my life was forever changed. In addition to the immediate gag reflex every time I smell liquor, I always seem to get a stray chunk of ice in my shot glass. Being a person who can't even take an ibuprofen without coughing like a cat with a hairball, the ice chip kind of makes me panic for a split second. Then, I finally relax enough to choke it down, remember how much I completely abhor SoCo and lime, and sort of wish I had choked to death anyway.
Furthermore, I don't know how people can afford to go out so much. Going out this one weekend just about wiped me out until next pay day: and I didn't even pay for most of it. This is probably just because I have a job in the nonprofit sector and somehow the feeling that one is making a difference is supposed to make up for the unpaid bills and ramen noodle diet. In any case, I have a hard time paying $4.50 for a PBR. Not only is that a lot of money for something that tastes like dirty water, but $4.50 is such an awkward price. I know how hard the bartender works, so I feel bad tipping only fifty cents. But I can't justify paying $6 per drink. In the end, I usually just get two. People think I'm trying to be a badass by double fisting, but I know I just have a natural tendency toward even numbers.
All in all, I can honestly say that I had a good time going out in the city with some old friends. People were surprised to see us, partially because we don't live in the city and partially because we have a serious penchant for staying home EVERY weekend. And it's a good thing too, because the next time I'll have saved up enough money and vacation time for another weekend off, I'll probably be putting it towards something for our wedding. Just remind me at the reception that I don't like SoCo and lime and even if I did, I'm still paying for that shot in one way or another: be it monetarily and/or the next morning.
Monday, March 17, 2008
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Currently Listening
Brilliant Ideas From Amazing People
By Iceage Cobra
see relatedFriends are God's apology for Family.
Last night, I drifted off to sleep to the drone of CNN on the TV and my fiance chatting amiably on the phone with his parents. When I finally woke up on the couch with a stiff neck and a sore back, he was still talking as if an hour hadn't just passed. Then I went to bed and he continued to talk for quite a while without even noticing I was gone. To be honest, I can't even remember the last time I talked on the phone for almost two hours. This is possibly because it's never happened. But furthermore, I can't even imagine having so much to discuss with my parents.
My fiance and I have drastically different relationships with our families. He turns to his parents for advice on everything imaginable. I look at all of the mistakes my parents made in their lives and try to do the exact opposite. He talks on the phone with his grandparents on a regular basis. I called my grandpa once out of the blue and he was so confused he thought my mom was pranking him. Fiance tries to meet his little brother once a week for dinner. I try to send my brother a snide facebook comment here and there to brighten his day. But, despite all of these differences, I don't consider my relationship with my family any less strong than his. In fact, I think it makes me appreciate the way my parents raised me that much more.
Fiance's parents are die-hard worriers. If he mentions something offhand - ANYthing - that he has been considering, it immediately becomes a family discussion. After the phone conversation is over, his parents continue to think about it, discuss the problem, and, consequently, worry about it. About a week later, when we don't even care about the problem anymore, his parents call back to offer up advice they found on the internet, reference books checked out from the public library, and the phone number of a distant cousin who suffered from a similar problem some 10 years ago.
My parents, however, try to stay completely out of my problems. My mom has always told me "if I raised you as well as I think I did, you should be able to handle yourself by now". And that's that. I believe her thinking is really quite insightful and smart, especially for her. I mean, this is the woman who can't seem to figure out how to email me pictures which aren't each three megs big and crash my hard drive every time.
If I mention anything problematic to my dad during our bimonthly, 5-minute phone conversation, I can count on my advice in the form of a "dadism". Dadisms are a series of catchphrases my dad can use to solve anything with as little effort as possible. When I complain about work, he says "sometimes you have to pay your dues". When I tell him I'm driving home overnight after I get off work, he says "don't be a hero". When I tell him about many of the other things I do, he says "show some class for God's sake". That's my personal favorite.
But really, one of the main reasons I don't call home as much as I probably should is because my parents are extremely busy people. Growing up, we didn't have a ton of money. In order for my siblings and I to do the things we wanted to do, my parents did nothing...ever. Now that they're no longer helping pay for school and having us at home for the summer, they've rejoined the rest of the human race, OUTside of the house. So now when I call home, I kind of feel like talking to my parents is like being a producer for CNN – even if nothing is happening, I still have to come up with some sort of news to satisfy everyone. The idle chat that Fiance enjoys with his parents inevitably ends up being awkward silence with my parents. These days, with myself and my siblings spread out across the Midwest, my parents are all alone in their respective farmhouses back in Bureau County. Occasionally, I wonder if they miss us. But then I call my parents with a pre-written list of personal news to discuss, only to be rushed off the phone because they’re too busy. And, somehow, I don’t think that’s how "Cat's in the Cradle" is supposed to go.
Thursday, March 13, 2008
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Currently Listening
One Cell In the Sea
By A Fine Frenzy
see related“Every parting is a form of death, as every reunion is a type of heaven.”
Do you ever log on to your Facebook (or myspace or friendster or whatever the new thing is now - I'm too old to keep up anymore anyway) to find a really random message from someone you haven't heard from in years? I never know what to do when that happens. I mean, of course I respond. I've always been one of those "too nice" people who could never find it in herself to snub someone. I do, however, only respond after spending a solid twenty minutes rereading the message, drinking coffee, and trying to come up with the wittiest possible response I can. Heaven forbid my second impression be a boring one.
Anyway, as a result of such a message, I'm now making plans to take a weekend trip to Chicago to visit some old friends from high school. These are friends who, barring the occasional run-in in a random bar in our hometown, I have all but lost touch with over the past 5 years since I moved away. They're still in the same band they formed back in the day, and they're playing a few shows in Chicago. All of this reminiscing got me thinking about young adulthood and how I look back on the past several years now that I've reached this elusive "real world" my mother was always warning me about.
After spending several hours looking through old pictures and listening to some of those classic songs that just seem to define my adolescent experience, I've come to a few conclusions. I think that twentysomethings are often overly sentimental or overly cynical about high school. Now don’t get me wrong, by the time senior year rolled around, I was ready to get the %$#@ out as much as the next kid, but for the most part I enjoyed high school. Throughout high school and college, most of us refused to admit that, mostly because the college "experience" is supposed to be so awesome that it clearly must be better than high school, but I think I really knew it all along. Sure, I took enough AP classes to earn a year of college credit when I should have been partying my tail off with the rest of my friends, but I didn’t quite have my priorities straight back then. My friends and I still partied the best we could. Though what more can you really expect from farm kids than drinking in a field on weekends and running from overweight cops? Overweight cops who, coincidentally, were also probably related to/neighbors with/family friends with just about everyone at the party. Gotta love that small town life. I haven't met a lot of people since I moved away from Tiskilwa whose high school graduating class was only like fifty people, and they’d all been going to school together since kindergarten. Honestly, it’s the kind of messed up thing that if, twenty years from now, it turned out to actually be some kind of cruel government experiment, I wouldn’t be surprised at all.
Don't get me wrong, I'm really excited about seeing old friends, but I’m not sure how I feel about myself as I approach a reunion. A lot of people tell me the best part of reunions is catching up with people you’ve lost touch with. The weird thing, though, is that I haven’t lost touch with any of my good friends – not a single person. The guys I broke curfew with then are the exact same guys I’m on the phone with now when I'm "making a business call" at work.. I guess what they say is true: bonds formed while sprinting from the hood-mounted searchlight of a cop car are bonds that last a lifetime.
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About Me
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You know how when you get on the treadmill, set the speed at which you’d like to run, and it starts accelerating, there’s always that brief in-between moment where the treadmill is going a little too fast for you to keep walking, but a little too slow to break out into a full sprint, so you’re kind of stuck in an awkward half racewalk, half jog for a few seconds? To me, being a twentysomething is like that moment. Everything before seems so easy in hindsight. Everything in the future seems so daunting. But right now, I’m stuck in the middle, simultaneously running in slow motion and walking as fast as I can. It’s scary, and uncomfortable, and exciting. I guess that’s what adulthood is all about, though.
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I love the months where I get to decide which is more important: making a student loan payment or my prescriptions...
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Worked 17 hours yesterday...a wonderful welcome back from a long weekend!
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Rough night at work last night...I'm praying the kids can hold it together tonight. Then - two days off!







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