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9.26.2025

parade fail

Be gracious with yourself. Take your screw-ups in stride.

I once participated in an Independence Day parade-I was 16 years old. My simple task was to sit in the back of a pickup truck and toss candy to roadside parade watchers. The parade kept a manic pace; sometimes we'd idle for a few minutes. Other times, our truck would have to zip along to catch up.

A few blocks into our route, I spotted this girl I knew from school (she was watching the parade). It would be fair to say I was interested in getting to know her betterMaybe I was also interested in asking her out on a date at some point.

'Ah ... here's my chance to make a glorious impression,' I thought. My quickly-concocted plan: I could hop off the side of the truck, say hi and give her candy, and then keep moving with the parade ('Gotta run; I'll call you later!!'). Then, I could indeed call her later, continue chatting ... and perhaps ask her out on a date.

Seldom do plans this good come together this effortlessly.

'Let's roll,' I said to myself, swinging my legs over to hop off the side of the idling truck.

At that same moment, it lurched forward to keep with the parade pace.

It's quite astounding how, in an instant, good plans turn to rot. Instead of hopping off this truck, I was now falling off this truck.

Thankfully, I did not hit the road face-first. Instead, I sorta ... belly-flopped onto the street, about five feet in front of this girl (and her friends who were all watching with her).

Until I fell out from nowhere, she hadn't noticed my participation in this parade. She for sure noticed now. The sting on my chest from hitting the pavement mirrored the sting of mortification I felt because I'd just wiped out before her very eyes.

It suddenly no longer seemed like the ideal time to chat. I'd just fallen off the back of a truck in front of her, and the parade continued moving. So I gasped out, 'Hey ... [lands on roadway] Oww!! ... Well, good to see you! Here's some candy -- gotta go!', and hurriedly shuffle-limped off.
Smooth. 

At that time, I felt unfathomably embarrassed.
At that time, I hoped no one witnessed what had just happened. At that time, I felt like I'd just socially kicked myself right in the teeth.

Perhaps, as you're reading this story, you're also remembering a time when you endured a similar embarrassment. Those moments stick in the memory bank. 

But at this time? It's one of my favorite stories to tell on myself.

If I'd face-planted out of a truck in front of my best friends, we would have laughed, and kept on laughing until we cried.

Slowly but steadily, I've come to learn that I can't totally trust my gut feelings about myself. I often overreact to my own screw-ups, and assume the worst fallout. In the moment, I seldom extend the grace to myself that I eventually will settle into later. I've learned that a lot of the time, my dear friends have a clearer view of me and my worth than I do.

Screwing up is a part of life. It happens to me. It happens to you.
Anyway, blessings on your day today. 

Perhaps you can reflect on some of your past screw-ups. Your perspective could be kinder now than it was before. That's the wiser posture to hold. Try to laugh at yourself when you can, and as your friends would laugh, from a place of love and warmth -- that's where much of grace resides.

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4.25.2025

satellites connect us

Sometimes in life, some event scatters a cluster of friends outward from a shared space and common timeline.

-High school graduation.
-A church youth group slowly ages out -- going its separate ways, ending up worlds apart.
-A team finishes a season.
-Last night of summer camp.
-A best friend from elementary or middle school moves away in the summer.
-The final night of a play, after striking the stage.
-End of a spring semester of college.
-College graduation.
 
Like an exploding star of memories and matter, what seemed like one friend nucleus becomes multiple paths, spreading outward ... and away.
 
"You don't have to go home, 
but you can't stay here" -Semisonic, 'Closing Time'

There's an excitement to these new paths. 
 
There's a poignancy to stepping off the old paths.
Maintaining these ties to our once-clustered loved ones takes intentionality that it didn't once require.
 
"Nothing gold can stay," the poet reminds us. "A time to keep, a time to cast away," the writer of Ecclesiastes tells us.

The proximity we shared (and sometimes took for granted, though honestly, we didn't mean to) wasn't meant for forever. Goodbyes come at some point. Our times together become scattered.

"I guess this is growing up" -Blink 182, 'Dammit'

But: we're not without some hope. The metaphor of you and your friends scattering like an exploding star--forever outward and away--thankfully isn't the most accurate metaphor. It just can't be.

Why: because, Lord willing, there will be times to reconvene. There will be times to re-gather. There will be times to mourn together, to be together, and to laugh together, in a shared physical time and place again.

My vote for a more accurate metaphor is this: maybe we're more like a satellites orbiting a moon.

 
Times will come when our links to our friends gets tenuous. They disappear to the dark side of the moon (so to speak), and our signal contact gets interrupted. From other people's perspectives, we go around that side of the moon as well. But they (and we) can come back around. Our signal contact gets restored.

It's something exceptional when you and your people reconnect. The most unexpected tears of joy I let out on my wedding day was in our receiving line, seeing my dear college friend Vicki greet me and my wife. I knew she'd be there, so her presence wasn't a surprise. A vital, lovely, loyal friend from such a formative time of my life, traveling such a long way to witness a life milestone of mine. We once saw each other every day, but those days are gone. Seeing her there mattered the world to me. I'll never forget it.

The orbits can align again, for a time. 

We do get some say in where our orbits steer us.

So hold tightly to each other while you're here, and you're together. Enjoy the now. Don't worry that it feels like it's slipping away too fast; you can't help that.

It's doesn't have to be the beginning of the end. But perhaps, it's actually the end of some beginning. 

Different can still be good, but it'll rarely be the same sort of good. It'll be a new, usually unanticipated sort of good. Prepare to make effort to stay in touch. Don't let sporadic contact dishearten you for long. Send a text. Write the note. Make the drive. Book the travel. Walk together. Tell them when something makes you smile because it reminds you of them. Send a text again.

There's just nothing like old friends.

"Every new beginning comes from some other beginning's end" -Semisonic, 'Closing Time'

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4.11.2025

peaking

We love the defying-the-odds stories, stories of second and third chances.

The true stories of athletes craftily finding ways to still compete (here, here, & here, for example). 
 
The true story of professional ballerina Wendy Whelan, who brilliantly kept on performing years past the typical age of ballerinas.
Or the true story of pro boxer George Foreman. He lost his boxing championship to Muhammad Ali at his peak physical condition of 25 years old...
then retired soon after, totally left the profession for 10 years...

 


Not just athletes, of course.

There's the true story of singer Mavis Staples, all of 71 years old when she won her inaugural Grammy ... even though she'd received her first Grammy nomination four (!!) decades earlier. 
I could go on with more examples. 

There's a reason we gravitate to these stories. It encourages us to hear examples of triumph with people who succeeded, despite not being at what we might presume is their peak condition.

For me, these true stories relieve me. I hope they relieve you as well.
 
They remind me that should an opportunity come my way, and even if I KNOW I'm not at my best, there still could be a way to work it out. It's a relief to remember that I can still have off days. 
 
You can have off days as well. Doesn't mean all is lost.

We don't know when our chances will come with whatever God would have us pursuing.

And yes, of course: we should try to make much of whatever chances we're given. But it's false to believe that we're gonna blow it unless we're at our absolute best.

Real-life examples remind us this isn't true. Real-life examples from ancient times and places remind us this isn't true.

So this is why I love stories of a near 50-year-old champ, a quinquagenarian ballerina, or a 71-year-old Grammy winner. No doubt they were not as sharp as their younger selves. 
 
Mavis's voice couldn't lilt about the higher notes like it once could. 
 
Wendy's joints required more upkeep than her 23-year-old self. 
 
Big George couldn't bounce around the boxing ring as deftly as his younger self.

They weren't at their peak. But they were still good enough for when the opportunity came. 

Whew.
 

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9.06.2024

best imposter of myself

Imposter syndrome club, at some time or another, has counted us all as members.

"I'm not good enough to be here," we mutter to ourselves about [pick the situation]. "I don't belong. I'm such a fraud, an imposter."

This could be a friend group. A class, a degree program, or a school. A club. A relationship. A team. A job. An opportunity. You name it. Friends could tell us we belong; people wiser than us can affirm that we're up to the challenge ahead of us. People that know us, and love us, can bellow into our faces all day long these assertions.

But still, these positive reinforcements clang off our self-imposed armor of suck like jump shots off the backboard.

How do we step around this self-doubt?

I propose some ways to bypass this imposter syndrome (in other words, these are some ways that've helped me).

Bypass Way #1: Let's face facts. We suck ... at assessing ourselves when it comes to certain things.

This should not be news to you, or to me. Sort of how we can't tell when we have a piece of food stuck between our front teeth, but others can notice right away.

Sometimes, we need to admit that others can offer us a fairer assessment about ourselves than we can. Not just anyone else, but wise people who love us, want us to succeed, and who wish us well. We gotta recognize that their input is more accurate than our self-perception. In other words, we suck at fairly assessing ourselves. We gotta doubt our doubts.

Bypass Way #2: Let's re-frame imitating and pretending. 

What's so wrong with imitating, pretending to be something we're not quite?

Hear me out.

As little kids, we felt zero qualms about imitating, and playing pretend. We pretended we were doctors, musicians, fashion designers, scientists, construction workers, professional athletes, or soldiers. 

What all did you pretend to be? 

Our playgrounds, stages, and imaginations held court to so many instances of us pretending to be someone we weren't. 

You've done this. I have too.

Who hasn't stood in front of a mirror, holding a comb, and pretended to to be a famous singer?

But somewhere along the way, we got this idea that if we're watching and imitating others to a degree, we must be fake. We must be imposters. But we didn't always regard imitating and copying this way. 

I tell you this to remind you that imitating isn't always bad. It's often good and wise. 

A chef learns how to expertly cut vegetables by watching someone else do it first. A carpenter learns how to expertly use equipment by first apprenticing and watching someone else work. We all imitate. You're only really aware that you do this, and don't give much thought to if anyone else does. Imitating doesn't make you an imposter. There's wisdom in following an example.

Bypass Way #3: It's not a one-time fix. Imposter syndrome isn't something we overcome once, and that's that. A mentor taught me to think of battling imposter syndrome as akin to pulling weeds. Weeds never, ever go away for good. But weeds can be uprooted and thrown out to allow good plants to flourish. The more we fight the feeling of being an imposter, the easier the fight gets.

So pretty please, try these bypasses when you feel something like an imposter, a fraud ... when you feel like you don't belong.

Trust the words of loved ones as much (if not more) than you trust your own thoughts.

Remember everyone's long history of imitating, and how much we've grown by copying wise examples in our lives.

And keep after those weeds.

It gets easier.

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10.13.2023

where we belong

What becomes home? 

One of my favorite lyrics from any Bob Dylan song comes in 'Mississippi', a tune he wrote later in his career (Sheryl Crow also did a great cover). The song shambles and shuffles along, jammed full of evocative imagery. But then it drops this line: "You can always come back, but you can't come back all the way"

I love that lyric. Profound brevity. It captures an entire truth in 13 words.

The entire truth is this: some eras and places in life get so intertwined into us -- who we were when we were there, and whenever we resided there -- that when we leave, it's as though a bell rings and something changes, never to change back.

And of course, no one can unring a bell. 

What we call 'home' will change. 

Pragmatically speaking, I can still walk the halls of my high school. But of course, it wouldn't be the same as when I -- as a teen -- hustled from my locker to class, or to lunch, or to the bus. It was a home for me then, but that time is long time gone. I can always come back, but I can't come back all the way.

Where becomes home? We feel at home sometimes in life, uprooted during other times. If we stand in any place for enough time, we can't help but allow home roots to creep into the soil beneath us. We instinctively want to make a home out of wherever we are.

Depending on who, how, and where we were before college, college can quickly feel like a home -- where we can be ourselves (or a prototype of us), a foretaste of what's ahead. We find places. We live eras. We bond with people who love us as we are, even when we don't know who we are. We catch glimpses of what adulting can bring.

While senior year usually marks the peak high school experience, I'm convinced the college peak version of this is the junior undergrad year.

College senior year feels something like a concert encore: it's beautiful and often fun, and a joy. But everyone's also reaching for their car keys, thinking about getting out of the venue, and what's next. The show's almost over. 

By senior year, people get reasonably distracted by the array and approaching deadlines of possible next steps: graduation, looking for a job, figuring out a relationship, graduate school, year of service, marriage, now what?, maybe moving to a new city. It's not to say senior year can't be marvelous. It certainly can be! It just takes a lot of time to live in the moment. The senior year seldom affords that kind of time. But junior year -- that's a sweeter spot.

So to those who aren't sure where home is since coming to college, that's not just you. Home can be hard to find, and that's normal. The feeling of exile spreads through more human hearts than we might think. College tastes like that bizarre appetizer of some what comes next. Parts of the appetizer will make you believe you've arrived home. You may not be home, but you could be stealing glances of your future. How invigorating!

Home can be where you're from. It can also be more than that. It's a refreshingly elastic term. You don't always need the clear sense of where home is. Sometimes home finds you.

Your hometown could be called a home (if that's what you want). Yet while you're in college, going back to that place will feel like you somehow can't go back all the way. It'll be missing people and the faces of your peers. Something's different.

Can't unring the bell.


"So we are always of good courage. We know that while we are at home in the body we are away from the Lord, for we walk by faith, not by sight." -2 Corinthians 5:6-7

Songs About Home 

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9.29.2023

boys don't cry (such a lie)

"In the clearing stands a boxer
And a fighter by his trade
And he carries the reminders
Of every glove that laid him down
Or cut him till he cried out
In his anger and his shame
'I am leaving, I am leaving' 
But the fighter still remains" -'The Boxer', Simon & Garfunkel

-----
Anyone can listen in; this one's for the fellas--

The ones quietly pushing against apathy, pushing against emotional muting, pushing against a hangover, pushing against their fathers or mothers (or both), pushing against the withering self-talk, pushing against overcorrection. Pushing against porn and its lies, pushing against checking out. Pushing against themselves sometimes.

Pushing against G!d.

Pushing for a break in the fog. How can it look to express emotional turmoil, as a man? Want to be authentic, do not want to inadvertently add to any cesspools of 'toxic' masculinity. Pushing for a way through. Squinting toward the horizon, hoping for some lived-in guideposts of what masculinity means, without that adjective 'toxic' in front of it.

[Before I say anything else, lemme say this: warnings about 'toxic' masculinity are entirely proper, wise, and warranted. Misogyny cannot ever be an answer. The fallout of sin taints everything -- in some way, for now -- about this world (Romans 8:20-22), including how we relate to one another.]

So some ink needs spilling about masculinity, not just as 'masculinity has to not be this', but 'a meaning of masculinity should include this [insert ideal].' Embodying masculinity has to reach beyond describing what it is not.

Just some observations about sloggging through emotional turmoil as a man:

1) Non-toxic doesn't equal healthy. As much as I love me some Cheetos -- and the snack does meet the FDA-approved standard of 'non-toxic' -- that doesn't mean my health would flourish via a steady intake of the enriched corn meal, garishly orange cheese seasoning, and maltodextrin.
So if you aim to be non-toxic with your masculinity, that's laudable! It's a swell start. Thankfully, there's more to it than that.

2) As many times as a torpedo sinks the cartoon-macho facade of the emotionless, stoic, never cries and never feels pain (except for kicks to the groin) masculinity, the image consistently washes ashore like a live grenade, ready to inflict pain.
We cognitively sense this facade doesn't work. It slowly corrodes from within. But where (and how) to start piecing together alternative ways to relate? Where can one feel safe enough to clumsily emote?

For me, my wariness to torpedo that facade stemmed from this: Once I blew it up, I had no idea what would take its place. At least with the facade, I felt some predictability (this wasn't actually true, but until I had an equally compelling narrative to counter this one, it was easiest to believe).

What did help me: observing up-close how other men dealt with this stuff. Wiser men, older men. Safe men who rooted for me, counseled me, laughed with me, didn't agree with me about everything, heard me through the rough emotional first drafts.

Choosing to spend time around other men showed me how they navigated emotional turmoil without either exploding, or stuffing it a million miles down into their chest. I could learn some by imitating these intriguing ways to relate. And by imitating, I could gain some confidence to continue onward. This still helps me.

2) Speaking of older men: a word on your father, or a father figure in your life. He may seem impossible to connect with, but he's walked some of these paths. Don't write him off prematurely. There's more there than meets your present understanding. It can be a frustrating, yet rewarding, exercise to unearth the long-ago person and lessons inside of him. It'll take you some time to do this.
3) Therapy can help. I've benefitted a ton in my life from talking my stuff out with a professional. Pragmatically speaking, it's meant that I don't assume the dual roles of participant and moderator to my internal nonstop dialogue. I can talk stuff out, and someone else -- professionally trained! -- can moderate, can assist to figure out how the puzzle in my mind might fit together.
If you need a more pragmatic reason in support of therapy: it's undoubtedly more budget-friendly in the long run than not going to therapy. If you're sometimes willing to drive 15-20 minutes out of the way to fill up on gas that's just 5-10 cents cheaper, then this mindset also applies for therapy > no therapy.

4) The end goal is not to show emotions just like the women in your life show them. So if you're concerned that emoting will make you appear more feminine, nah. It will expand your notions and range of how masculinity can and does express itself.
5) That being said, odds are quite good you have strong, wise women in your life that you trust (I don't only mean girlfriends, or potential future girlfriends. I mean friends. Co-workers). This is a gift from God. Of course you can learn much from their example, their counsel, their friendship, their observations, their ways of relating, their stories. In the Old Testament book of Proverbs, wisdom is depicted as a caring, street-smart, strong, supportive 'she'. That's not a typo.
6) You possess these capabilities already. So it's not like adding an external software update onto your hard drive. It's more like discovering some tools you already own buried in the bottom of your closet, figuring out their intended purpose, and how to use them well.
I do not write as someone who's figured this stuff out. HARDLY. But I write as someone who's been some of where you are, has tripped headlong on many exposed tree roots of similar trails, and knows something of the purposeful, resolute stepping needed to make headway.

So find the trails nearby that await your walking on them. It's near time to dump the puzzle pieces out onto the table; time to start to try to make sense of the larger picture. The fighter still remains.


(Thx J.N. for the prompt!)

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1.20.2023

reflections on Heather's passing

As a kid, I presumed that people I went to school with, we'd all grow old to some agreed-upon ancient age -- an uninterrupted timeline.

Heather and I performed together in many plays through junior high and high school. That's how we met, and became friends. She handled a variety of roles: farcical invisible person in one play -- coming-of-age newlywed named Emily in 'Our Town' -- prophetess in another short story

Heather oozed an easy clarity and simplicity on the stage. Offstage, she was friendly, cheerful, buoyant. A warm, welcoming presence in the high school hallways. She volunteered as a manager for the varsity football team. She spoke at graduation.

As they always seem to say, her future shone brightly. I lost track of her after graduating.

Two years later: I was at college. My high school friend Anne lived in the same res hall I did. She called one Tuesday evening. She asked if I'd heard any news from home. I said I had not. She told me to come up to her room right away.

When I got there, I saw Anne's facial expression as flat -- though she knew she had to share something horrible -- and forced.

Heather. Our friend Heather was dead.

Dead from a highway car accident while driving home from college. A truck driver had fallen asleep, crossed the median, and hit her car.

Anne's voice sounded to me like she was talking while underwater -- this extra ambient noise flooded my ears while my eyes welled with tears. The news made me feel sad, tired, cranky, like I didn't want to eat -- and incredulous with disbelief. "What? How??!? Who -- OUR Heather? Are you sure?!? WHAT??!?" We sat there, crying, running out of what to say without repeating ourselves. 

Heather was the first person I knew who'd died this young.

Of course, we share connection to the people  from our high schools, our elementary schools, our middle schools. That common bond means something different for everyone, but it means something.

It's an awkward sort of grace to muck through the shared struggle of growing up. It helps to do so around others. We grow accustomed to the faces that comprise this backdrop, these months and years spent hustling to and from our lockers, forever speed-walking to get to our next class, or to lunch, or to practice, before the bell rang.

A part of me  hoped the world should at least slow down a bit -- as a small gesture of respect -- to honor this awesome person now gone from our sight. The world did no such thing.

My school assignments never stopped. Deadlines still loomed. Laundry kept piling up. We all still moved through the days of life too fast, not cherishing enough all the blessings before us.

Friends of mine said awkward stuff, trying to console me. I'm sure many of you have experienced this. At the time, I remember feeling supremely frustrated with their fumbling ineptitude. In retrospect, I not near as frustrated. They were trying.

Young, familiar faces filled the funeral service, which was at our high school. I wanted to be there, and also wanted to be anywhere else.

These years later, it still feels unfair.

It feels unfair that Heather's smile doesn't get to gradually collect the creases of age and life that we see in each other's faces at reunions. Sure, it still pains to be reminded of her absence, but it hurts differently than before. I also smile at recalling those slapdash plays we performed in so long ago. Good times, and some cool memories. Some pain remains, but the memories bring some grace too.

My pastor often says that to be sad is an act of sanity. It's proportional to feel sad about sad things. This makes sense to me, and relieves me. I haven't found a way to get over the sadness of losing Heather. And yet, we've had to unhurriedly learn to live with it.

To this day, a memorial marker for her stands at the entrance to my high school's football field. 

Heather's unfairly forever 19 years old.

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10.28.2022

mood :: mixtape

 "The heart of man plans his way, but the Lord establishes his steps." -Proverbs 16:9

 

Moving from one life stage to the next life stage should have clearer boundaries than it does. If I had my way, it'd be like the silence between two songs on a well-crafted mixtape.

But that's not how it usually goes.

Changing of life stages seems more like listening to the radio or Spotify playlist. Songs sort of crossfade together, but the songs rarely share the same key, tempo, or backbeat. So the crossfade sounds clunky, jarring, disjointed.

In my younger years, I'd craft many a mixtape for friends, crushes, acquaintances. If I included a song recorded from the radio, I wanted the entire song without a radio person's voice (a similar annoyance is when the GPS voice talks over your favorite part of a song to inform you of your next turn in two miles).

So for crafting a song running order, that brief space of silence did my mixtapes much good. No voice intrusions, no crossfade.

A tiny bit of silent space to demarcate life stages would also do some good. But that's not usually how it goes.

-Before graduating from high school, most seniors have figured out post-high school plans -- which is a crossfading one life stage with another.

-If you're shopping for new clothes at a store in public, you're required (by law) to shop while wearing clothes you already own. No one shows up to the store in their birthday suit (what else can be said about this?? -- some life crossfades are a net benefit for EVERYONE).
-You never know (at the time) when is the first time you make conversation with a lifelong friend. 

-When graduating college, the crossfade can start so early. What's the next step? Landing a job, graduate school, internship, year or two of volunteering. Something. The ceremony almost feels anticlimactic; a blast of dissonant trumpets amidst the crossfade of the rest of life.

And with each stage, the paths of beloved friends, which for many years have walked side-by-side, now chart different courses ... oh so gradually. It can be a mixture of excitement at what's coming next, and slow-motion heartache at the good that slowly fades out of sight.

There's many ways to look at how life moves from one season to the next. One way is that you're forever fashioning for yourself a mixtape, quite the playlist ... and you're doing so while living your daily, ordinary life.

Sometimes the transitions from one song to the next glide so seamlessly, and you think 'wow, that was smooth ... I am awesome. I've got life figured out.' Sometimes the crossfade between songs sounds raw, messy and abrupt, because that's also life, and you're going through it.

Some songs get added to the mixtape by someone else ... because it's a collaborative sorta endeavor, after all. 

Some songs will always break a piece of your heart.

Many songs cycle back though the playlist again, finding new energy in different life stages. 

Some songs only sound good when you hear them alone, driving at night in the summertime. 

Some songs will revive your spirit, again and again.

Many songs will appear once on your playlist, and they stick to that one life stage: a marker forever frozen to a time, a place, a person, an event.

Some songs you'll forget even made it onto the list. 

Many songs you'll never forget, but until you hear them again after a long time, you'll forget how good they really sound.

Some songs endure, and age well with you.

Hmmm ... maybe just maybe, as much as it annoys me at times, crossfades help.

Maybe just maybe -- as much as I'd wish to have all my life mixtape songs tidy, easily labeled and crisply demarcated -- that's just not how it usually plays out.

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8.26.2022

new (no, everything isn't awesome)

Some new stuff I like, some new stuff I don't like. 
 
That's true for for most people. New doesn't always mean better, but it does almost always mean different.

New music from your favorite artist? Like.
New food allergy? Don't like.
New, free shirt? We like.
New, free haircut? We might not like.
New life path? We might like.
New anxieties that come with new life path? We might not like.
New razor for shaving? We like.
New skin scrapes because we got used to our dull razor? We don't like.
 
Starting college? We like. 
Figuring out new routine, starting new friendships? We don't like.

No one says their first year of high school is the best. No one says the first weeks at a new job are the best. No one says the first few days of a new workout are the best days. 
 
Quite the opposite. 

The social inertia of keeping up appearances wants you (and I) to pretend that 'new' is only awesome.

But let's be real:

'NEW' can feel wearying. 
 
'NEW' often includes feeling lonely. 'NEW' will leave us feeling behind the curve at times. 
 
'NEW' will interfere with a decent night's sleep. 'NEW' will cause us to doubt we belong. 'NEW' will make us miss what's familiar.
 
'NEW' will feel constricting at times. 'NEW' will tempt us to compare what we feel inside to how others appear on their outsides. 

So, let's remember this: we do like (some) new, but we always like new stuff more once we're more used to it.
 
It takes time. Give it time.

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