Thursday, April 25, 2013

Adventure #25: Adventures of a Flunking Honor Student

This will most likely be my last post on this blog. Last spring, after evaluating this blog, I felt that twenty-five adventures would be a satisfactory number, a good landmark to wrap up on.

Essence Artistry
http://picessence.smugmug.com/
I originally intended to end this blog by December when I was officially a college graduate, but that last semester was too hectic for me. So, I'm posting this piece today, the day of my convocation (which I am not attending and am fine with; I am busy with other things and do not want to travel to it). I'm ending for several reasons. For one, I am a graduate and will no longer occupationally be a formal student. I am entering the professional world. Further, while flunking as an honor student may be an entertaining and fitting tag for the time of experimentation and accelerated self-discovery, success is more tolerable in the workplace. Also, I do not know if I will have time for this blog as I embark on other life journeys.

You may have noticed that most years I added ten posts (funny enough, this was never planned), but last year I had seven posts. I did not feel like posting much during that period. A person incredibly dear to me passed away. Once that happened, I spent the rest of the year broken until I graduated. Now, in this new year, I find myself seeking connections in whatever ways possible (usually in music and fictional characters) and had often unashamedly shared them on Facebook. I seem to be building myself again, and recognizing these connections and facets of myself and my interests is an attempt to take all the emotional pieces of what's left and establish them into something functional. I sense a reformation into someone new, whomever that may be. I am excited to see what comes of it.

I have been grateful for this blog and for the release and expression it has been for the last two years (Interesting Note: Originally I named the blog "Confessions of a Flunking Honor Student," so my first "adventure" was titled "Confession #1;" by the time I posted my second "adventure," I felt that "adventure" would be better for the blog). It has been a useful pasttime for me to put down my thoughts in an organized, tangible fashion (the internet isn't exactly tangible but close enough).

I now see that I could have taken this blog in a totally different direction, one more suitable for its title (what a fine time to finally being seeing this!). I could have posted funny stories about flunking and disappointment. I shared some, but I see that would have been a fun blog. Regardless, I took the blog in a direction that makes my mother laugh, because she thinks most of my posts sound fairly scholarly and thought-provoking, despite the supposed "flunking" theme.

I have been able to express different facets of myself and share them with others. Thank you for all that have read, for the few who have left comments on them, and for the many who have discussed my posts with me in person. I am glad we have been able to grow together and discover ourselves through each other.

The things I have learned aren't limited to what I have written. I mostly have tried to include the meat of what I had to say to condence post length and to remain private that which would be inappropriate to delve too deeply into or reveal. I do not know if I will continue with another blog. I will just have to see where life takes me and what of it I want to share and in what form I'd like to share it. I will leave this blog open for people to look at, if they so desire. Who knows?--maybe I will come back to it if the time is right (maybe during graduate school!...if I attend).

Below, I have linked my adventures. If any titles interest you, feel free to check them out. After all, they have been published for your reading. There's no telling what you may learn about me or yourself or may be entertained by or may be introduced to from them:

Adventure #24: Living Internationally/We're All in This Together
Adventure #23: You've Been Sexed!
Adventure #22: "Both Sides Now"
Adventure #21: I Had a Younger Brother in Kindergarten, even if My Parents Didn't Know

Adventure #20: It'll All Work Out
Adventure #19: Being Brave
Adventure #18: Too Immature for Kindergarten
Adventure #17: Silver Linings Playbook

Adventure #16: I'm Like a Barbie--Small, Beautiful, and Easy to Undress
Adventure #15: eBay Selling My 5th Grade Crush
Adventure #14: Good [Time of Day]
Adventure #13: Meeting the "Pop Perfection" of Darren Hayes

Adventure #12: (Social) Rules: Throw Them Out
Adventure #11: My Art IS Me
Adventure #10: Hey, There, "Friend." What's the Definition of a Friend?
Adventure #9: Decision vs. Circumstance (or Control vs. Chaos)

Adventure #8: Nothin' But Nettie
Adventure #7: Notes on My Study on People's Interests
Adventure #6: Keepin' It Real
Adventure #5: Check It!

Adventure #4: The Little Prince Personality
Adventure #3: Arrested for BUI
Adventure #2: Yo, Ga...Or How to See God (and Elves) and Be Happy
Adventure #1: Dumbing Down for the World

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Adventure #24: Living Internationally/We're All in This Together

Petra, Jordan
I was born in Spain and spent my first three years of school in Saudi Arabia, during which time I traveled to about fifteen other countries. It's not as incredible an international life as other people I've met, but it is a lot more experience than most people I meet. I used to think living overseas did not have much influence on me, that I just came from a background similar to everyone else, but as I get to know other people deeper than the surface and watch my peers develop, I see that it has had an incredible impact on my views (and my siblings' views) of the world. (It was during some of my formulative years. Why shouldn't I notice residual influence?) Or, at least, I imagine living internationally had some effect. Perhaps, what I perceive as effect was really just shaped by other experience or is more from my personality.

Basically, I understand there is difference in the world: different people, different lifestyles, different needed occupations, different issues, differences in everything. These differences should be explored, celebrated, appreciated, and experienced. There is endless opportunity regardless of appearance, class, gender fulfillment, sex, demeanor, power, opinions, social standing, race, religion, creeds, and yada yada whatever else. In truth, whenever any of these are an issue, I feel like, "Honestly? This is a problem? We're not stepping forward? This is honestly something we have to address?" *exasperated sigh* I feel held back by it.

I also feel the same when people take unnecessary offense at things. From my own experience, it seems healthy to laugh lightly at yourself and at others (with sensitivity). We're here together. Why not enjoy each other and our differences? Why be so grim? That is, of course, NOT to say that we should take at the expense of others. But I don't see why so many people take offense at things without seeing the intention behind it. Most of time, (this is just my experience; can we just add a disclaimer that this is all from just my experience? Let's do) no harm is meant from jokes and misinformed practices are just that: misinformed. So why take offense and slap something with a crude or perverse sticker when you haven't even done your own footwork to find out what someone truly means behind it or why it may make you feel uncomfortable? And if they do mean offense, then move on from them and what happened, because it's not worth your attention, even to use your energy in being "offended!" Or, maybe be respectfully open and honest about why you find it offensive. Maybe they'll listen and be respectful in return. Maybe they'll understand and you'll make friends instead of enemies. (*Angelic "Ahhh!"*)  Who knew?! And now you don't have to be a naggy offended pussy pants. Okay, I'm bored of talking about the point of this paragraph (because, "Honestly? This is a problem...?" Catch my drift?).

Sydney Opera House, Australia
Now, besides these social issues that I find odd to even have existence, there is a great big world out there. Go get it. Go see it! It's beautiful! Don't be confined to whatever drudgery rules your life. Live.your.life! You're only here for only so long. Why not make every breath count? Yes, not everyone can afford to run off to a foreign land, but there are exciting things wherever you live to look at and experience. Tourists from all over the world come to see it. Why shouldn't you? It's in your own backyard. Live knowing the possibilities and potential there is in the world, even if your world feels small. Something that has LONG aggravated myself and my family is when people in our communities become so fixated on an issue that they lose the big picture and don't even realize they are doing it. They live in such a small world that they allow themselves to become distracted with jealousies, prejudices, and politics. There is not time for that! It's not helping anyone. It certainly is not healthy or uplifting to feel those things. Celebrate differences! Respect yourself without shame or apology or defense, and enjoy each other. We're all in this together.

We are all here on this planet together. We are a global community. There are people in every country hoping worthy things, dreaming worthy goals, joined in worthy causes--all living in the way they know how, in the way available to them. We're all just here together. So, we should learn from one another and be willing to stretch beyond our comfort zone. Why should we cheat ourselves from any life experience that we're unsure of? There's no way of telling what progress it may hand us that we did not foresee.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Adventure #23: You've Been Sexed!

This past year, I have been informally studying the differences between art created by men and women. And honestly, there is a difference significant enough that I have been able to blindly tell the sex of the screenwriter or playwright when I’m watching a film or play.

In general, the male focus deals with the actual problem or the intellect behind the problem, rather than the feelings about the problem or rather than having the main complication being the feelings behind a problem, as is the common focus for females. Also, the male presentation of a story to an audience is directly presented, rather than indirectly or passively as with a female storyteller. Males present what is happening, while females project feelings. So, personally, this is a bit of a disconnect for me, since I tend to be drawn to the emotions of female art, though I am still male in the manner of my own writings.

Consequently, I feel that stories are best created by the sex of the story’s protagonist. My first awakening to the gendering behind the creation of art came winter of last year when I watched the 1995 film adaption of Sense and Sensibility. I was completely taken by the story and this production particularly and realized that perhaps it was so good—held true to itself and stable in its own right of portrayal; we often see art as “good” when we recognize its truth or, at least, the truth we understand—because the script was written by a woman (actress/screenwriter Emma Thompson won the Academy Award and Golden Globe for the screenplay). Further, the original story was penned by romance novelist Jane Austen. Both of these mediums, the script and novel, are written by women about women. Who better than a woman to know what it’s like to be a woman?

Try as some men do, they can never really know enough to best capture the female experience. Such experience cannot be envisioned through observation. Men and women’s biology are completely different, making their life experience and bodily reactions and functions separate from each other. There are too many hormonal, physiological, etc. differences that make it impossible for someone of the opposite sex to completely know what it is like to be that sex, whether socially, emotionally, or whatnot. Hence, I conclude that men are best suited making male stories and women female stories (and then we all should enjoy and respect them).

Granted, occasionally, stories of an opposite sex protagonist than its creator can come across well, but never do they completely escape the lens of their own sex. This appears the case with the Harry Potter series. At first, I was stumped at how the portrayal of the boy wizard was so catching when it was created by Jo Rowling, a woman, but then I thought back on the narration and realized a motherly attitude towards the protagonist. The narration comes from the perspective of a mother. The motherliness, of course, is not forward, but I can sense the care and concern of a mother behind the way the story is told. Perhaps, this is one reason why the books have been so endearing to the masses. They can subconsciously sense that motherly concern for the character, his friends, and his story and adopt that view and care, or they may find a comfort in the motherly sensory that is there. It makes sense, though. Rowling is a mother herself and was a poverty-stricken single mother concerned about her child’s welfare when the story came to her. Had the books been written by a man, the story would have been laid out with more ego: Harry would have been made to appear more heroic, wowza-boy, which may have been accepted, but can you see it being accepted much if that attitude came from a woman? The reason for this: a female would have been feigning masculine ego towards a boy. She would have more luck passing a feminine ego, like that of a mother. This may be bothersome to many feminists, but think about it. Would you have really accepted a story portrayal that does not come from truth? Harry Potter would have lost its charm. It works with its given narration of motherly concern and appreciation.

Other exploration I’ve had was watching 13 Going on 30 for the first time a year ago. The story is honest to a womanly experience, but I recognized humor that seemed male originated. After the movie, I discovered it was written by a woman and a man, Cathy Yuspa and Josh Goldsmith. My guess is that a woman came up with much of the storyline/situation and a man came along to add humor.

The Other Guys’ script ran like two males bantering. Yes, the entire movie is two males bantering, but the script apparently was written the same, since it is by two males, Adam McKay and Chris Henchy. Even further, the humor is very male, especially with the masculinity-questioning aspects of the police captain working a second job at Bed, Bath, & Beyond and naïvely quoting lyrics from female R&B group TLC.

TV series Downton Abbey (written by Julian Fellowes) comes across as male with much of the story’s concern being about what is the problem and what they are going to do about it. Had it been written by a woman, the characters’ feelings and emotions about the problems and situations would be explored deeper and would become the show’s focus. As it is, for me, the show is very cut-and-dry and hard to get into for a while. Seemingly, the feelings aroused from the show are for the audience to impose and to fill-in-the-blank where feeling is not provided in the script.

When I watched Eat Pray Love, I could feel the story events running well and accurate in portrayal. Of course, the film is based on a woman’s autobiographical book. However, with this adapted script I felt everything presented to me directly. It was all laid out flat to me. It felt masculine but was done with sympathy towards the femininity of the story. My guess was that a feminine male wrote the script. Interestingly, it was directed and mostly written by Ryan Murphy, a homosexual male, and co-written by Jennifer Salt. I have not studied an occurrence like this beyond this example, but it suggests an idea that sexual orientation does not alter the sexed focus of the art, understandably, since the person is already male or female and are subject to that biological experience and function.

In the play Holiday by Philip Barry there are possible hints of Johnny being in love with Linda though he is engaged to her sister Julia, but these hints can all be passed as common decencies and are not enough to really catch the audience’s attention. It is not clear until Johnny and Linda are left alone and are led to a kiss. A female creator would have made the focus Johnny’s feelings behind the complication of where he puts his love, while the actual story is the struggle of where he puts his love, making the hints escapable. The female is more indirect, while the male is more defined.

I am sure many of these kind of qualities cross over into other artful creations. There are definitely many more aspects and personality that go into the creation of a story besides one’s sex, especially modernly when gender lines are blurred. But it is certainly telling if it can be deciphered from just perusing the manner in which something is written. It is something for artists to consider when they are creating and probably for audiences to look for in art and in their own lives of sex identity and gender identity.


Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Adventure #22: "Both Sides Now"

In mid-January, something magical happened. I discovered the song “Both Sides Now,” penned by the legendary Joni Mitchell. I came across it while exploring the music of Carly Rae Jepsen, who covers it on her EP Curiosity. I can’t remember when such lyrics have hit me so incredibly, as I have found nearly every cover striking.
Of course, I’m not the only one to have such an impacted experience from the song. The song's themes are universal through many different phases of life, making it connectable for legions of people. To end each chorus with, "I really don't know clouds/love/life at all," reaffirms the natural, stirring fear of what is unknown and unsure. Its destructuring is striking to the listener, as they recognize the misalignment of illusion and reality. My own mother had surreal moments as she watched me obsess over the song. She, too, is deeply touched every time she hears it, but her original craze dates back to when Judy Collins released the first commercial record of it in 1967 (her recording went on to win the Best Folk Recording Grammy). Joni Mitchell released her own version of the song soon after it was a hit for Judy and a seemingly endless list of covers by touched artists followed.
When I discovered this incredible song, I felt astonished that something so wonderful had been kept from me like a secret. And when I realized how many people had covered it, I felt really ignorant for having just found it. (But, come to think of it, I'm not so sure it would have hit me so hard had I discovered it earlier than I did. It was actually PERFECT timing for when I came across it. Had I known it earlier, I would have liked it but not found it so striking, I think.) Joni’s re-recording of her song in 2000 earned her a Grammy nomination for Best Female Vocal Pop Performance. I prefer her original 1969 recording, however. All covers are remarkable, but besides Judy and Carly’s versions, I especially like versions by:
           -Mindy Gledhill                    -Sharon Cuneta
           -Melanie C                          -Unni Wilhemsen
           -Pat Martino                        -The Swingle Singers
           -Hayley Westenra                -The Idea of North
Susan Boyle, Harpers Bizarre, Frank Sinatra, Willie Nelson, and Anne Murray also do notable renditions.
Perhaps, it was the limiting winter snow that made me find even the first verse applicable. Still, I feel like I’ve journeyed the entire song and that it expresses incredibly personal truths in its gorgeous and fitting (octave and a half) melody. Most times, when I sing the song to myself, I weep through the second and third verses. I have been there through each lyric. It is a song of my heart.


Thursday, March 28, 2013

Adventure #21: I Had a Younger Brother in Kindergarten, even if My Parents Didn’t Know

I have always had an active imagination and have enjoyed creating stories, even in Kindergarten, apparently. Recently, I remembered a conversation in Kindergarten when the French teacher’s aide sat me down to ask what I had drawn and written in my journal:


Me: I said, “I play games with Davíd and my little brother.”
Aide: Is David your older brother?
Me: His name is Davíd.
Aide: Oh, sorry. Is Davíd your older brother?
Me: Yes.
Aide: And you have a younger brother and have lots of fun with him?
Me: (Looking away) …Yes.
Aide: Babies can be so much fun, can’t they?
Me: …Yes.
Aide: How old is he?
Me: …A baby.
Aide: Is he eighteen months?
Me: …Yes.
Aide: Do his diapers stink?
Me: He doesn’t wear diapers, but I wish he did, then I could give him a bottle and change his diaper.
Aide: I think your mommy would change him.
Me: No, I would want to change him.
Aide: …Okay. What kind of games do you like to play with him?
Me: Stuffed animals. Hi-Ho Cheerio. Knockout. Mouse Trap.
Aide: You play all these with your younger brother?
Me: And with Davíd, sometimes.
Aide: …What’s your younger brother’s name?
Me:…Um…Robert.

This continued for a while. Eventually, there was an open house with our parents, and my teacher became so excited to see my parents. They had a conversation like this:

Teacher: Misses Inman, Jonathan’s mother! It’s so good to finally meet you. Where is your baby?
Mom: …My baby?
Sleep Well Little Friend wasn't a Cabbage Patch Kid, but he was similar to this
Teacher: Jonathan writes all the time about the fun he has with his little brother.
Mom: …He does?
Teacher: Yes, so I’m surprised to see him not with you tonight.
Mom: He’s never had a little brother.
Teacher: Really? Are you sure?
Mom: Uh, yeah!
Teacher: Well, of course you would be.
Mom: What kind of things does he do with this “little brother?”
Teacher: Well, they play games together.
Mom: (Laughing) That’s his doll!
Teacher: What?
Mom: He is talking about his doll. He has a little boy doll he’s named Sleep Well Little Friend. He must have been writing his doll as his little brother.

She was right. I always knew that the little boy in the pictures I was drawing was my doll, but I thought I would try to make others believe I had a younger brother, because I wanted one.

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Adventure #20: It'll All Work Out

I.LOVE.CHILDREN! They are the joy of life! I have been an uncle since I was eight and have been around each of my nieces and nephew enough to have a personal relationship with them all. I have spent time with kids! I don't know that a life without children would be worth living. In fact, I strongly considered going into Early Childhood Education to eventually teach kindergarten, but whenever it came to mind, I felt like I should remain a theatre major. And especially now that I've graduated and am unemployed, I've often wondered if I chose the correct field to study, especially considering how much joy children bring and that even in my family they might not always be accessible, depending on where I live.

With my youngest niece on a sleigh ride in December 2012
Overall, getting to know myself better through my college years, I see that being a teacher would not keep my attention, because I pick up new interests quickly. I would do it for a year, say, "That was fun. Whew. Bring in the next batch," and then decide halfway through my second year that I wanted to do something totally unrelated to my field....and honestly, I would probably try acting.

As it is, I still get my fill of children by being an uncle and think I much more enjoy being with children related to me than with other people's kids. (There's a sense of more freedom in disciplining them within the shared  family values. And their bodily issues are much more comfortable, being familiar.) I hope to eventually be a father.

Even beyond thatfor three Sundays last month, I attended the nursery in a church ward with some friends who were the nursery leaders, and for the other Sunday of the month, I accompanied my mother to her Sunday School class of eight-year-olds. It helped me see that even if it is not part of my career to interact with children, opportunities can be provided to fulfill that for me. What a glorious thing! It has been a great comfort to me, and I have felt confirmations that I made the right decisions in my education. You know, ideally, I think it would be great to work on a children's show, a (good quality) television show for children, like Mister Roger's Neighborhood, Blue's Clues, or Sesame Street. Even if I wasn't with children on the show, I'm sure the environment would be something I could thrive in. It would be such a treat! I'm not too sure how long I could stay in one place at one time, but who knows? What's important is that I feel like there's possibilities and that it'll all work out.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Adventure #19: Being Brave

I wrote this personal essay for my Creative Writing course last March (turned it in a year ago yesterday, actually). I did NOT want to write it, but it burned to be written (I even wrote an alternate essay about something else, but all my peers preferred this one, so I stuck with it). Then, I felt like I should post it on here but didn't want to. Now, a year has passed, and through it all, I have still had that impression to post it, so I finally am. So YOU BETTER READ IT!

*********************************************************

I never really thought I was different. Getting my blood drawn was routine, and a finger prick or a needle in my arm was never anything to be afraid of, though the kids in my fourth grade class often discussed horror stories of getting even a shot. But, knowing nothing else, children accept the circumstances they are given, as I did with getting my blood counts. I do not even remember if I knew for what reason my blood was periodically taken.

Davíd (brother, 12), Me (9), Ilene (sister, 22), and Ashley (niece, 19 months)
in February 1998 at Natural Bridge Wildlife Ranch near San Antonio, Texas
Eventually I would learn I was a patient of the lifelong disease Diamond Blackfan Anemia (named after the doctors who discovered it; not intentionally meant to sound dark)—lifelong because it is a genetic mutation and there is no cure. Only 600 to 700 people in the world have this disease, which will cause the bone marrow to produce no or little amounts of red blood cells. It has been known as a crib death, since the ultimate result of a waning red cell count is cardiac arrest and death. Patients are most commonly treated with blood transfusions and/or steroids, a miracle drug that stimulates the bone marrow to produce red cells, though how or why it does this is unknown. The nature of the disease is often unpredictable. On occasion, a patient’s anemia may go into remission that they may live healthily, free of transfusions and steroids.

Apparently, I was exceptional, though. When I returned to Santa Rosa Children’s Hospital in San Antonio for the first time in four years, having recently moved back to the San Antonio area, everyone knew me, even those who were new since I had last been there. They knew my story. I was one of those who lived, treatment free, on my own, with the blood disorder in remission. I had not been on steroids or had a blood transfusion for years and, thereby, was taller than a twelve year old girl also with Diamond Blackfan that was at Doctor Briton’s office the same day as me. This remission is what made me known and a commonly discussed case among the Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center. After all, I had just spent three years in Saudi Arabia, in which we had needed special permission for me to live there, where emergency medical attention would be even more difficult to come by than it already was. Many within the hospital department and those who knew me when I was very little found me an inspiration and would reverently express that.

As I came to understand these things, I took pride in it. I commonly prided in my facts. That is what I was known for—the one who traveled the world and always knew the right answers in my classes. I was never gifted with many abilities, as athletics or other talents. I played piano, because I had had lessons. Besides that, I did not do very much but was known for knowing stuff. If I were to get any attention or to be known by anyone, I would have to rely on the facts about me and the facts I knew.

Also, I was not very good-looking, I had determined. What I saw in the mirror and in pictures was unimpressive, unlike some of the other boys my age. There were often girls crushing on them. I had never heard of any girls crushing on me or of any other validation that I may be good-looking, so I resorted to believing that I was ugly and would not grow to be handsome like my older brothers. The only physical definition I had was being tiny, fairly short and thin. I was born small but also received the stunted growth that came from steroid and blood transfusion treatments. I enjoyed being small and thought it was ideal, though I often perceived disfavor from others about my size, but still, they would know me for my tininess. I figured that it at least got me some attention.

***

With my seventh grade awards in May 2001, Age 12
Over three years later one Sunday, I sat in my family’s hot minivan passenger seat with the door open, waiting for my family to come out of the church building, so we could go home. Celia Blaine [names changed] came out with Paul Abrey. He carried her baby to his car, but she approached me. She was a tall woman, very thin. I had always thought she looked like a model and had somewhat of a crush on this married woman who was more than twice my age, but I often wished for her sweet attention, as well as other people’s attention or praise—a sign of value from them.

I knew I would not get very good attention from my appearance. The older I got the scrappier or homelier I looked. I perceived I needed to show off my thin frame by moving lightly and feathery, and that, in turn, led me to feel insignificant, though I was only trying to give that quality notice.

Now, I was doped on steroids, and my body had honked up in size. This body bore no comfort, while it faced the effects of the steroid: water retention, weight gain, change in hair and eye color, stunted growth, stretch marks, and many other side effects of the drug. At times I could not operate. For instance, gas would be trapped so hard inside me, my chest would feel like it would explode; or, my indigestion so great my insides felt like they would implode. My body did not feel like my own.

My eating tripled, because I always felt hungry. I never reached satiety. Before I understood this effect of the steroid, the only reason I would stop eating was because I could not fit another parcel of food inside of me.

My personality changed, too. I was irritable about every thing that was even slightly out of place. This increase in stress made sleeping difficult and gave me headaches and migraines.

I did not recognize myself and was uncomfortable with the drastic changes in my bodily function and appearance. Others did not recognize me either. Some people would not look at me anymore. Had they stopped seeing me? Few would talk to me previously, and now even fewer did. I became the smart kid who suddenly got FAT in a month. Some would unsympathetically tease me, particularly about my abnormally chubby cheeks. But, after all, junior high is not when a lot of people are the most understanding. Still, as a preteen often contemplating the point of anything in life, I found these interactions not the least bit encouraging.

As Celia approached me, I sat up, expecting her to give me a message for my mother, who, at the time, was the leader of the women’s organization for our church ward. I was used to being a messenger regarding her business.

She hugged me. “You are so brave,” she said quietly and left.

***

As I look back on that day with Celia, she amazes me. I remember her as a quiet person. It did not strike me at that age, but now as an adult, I sense irony in her message, in that she probably braved to hug me and to say those words.

November 2012, Age 24
Still, that was one of the kindest things that anyone did for me during that time. I did not feel brave, but it made me realize I could be, more than I was being. I did not feel as alone, and I felt like there were people watching out for me. I could brave through my condition, despite how I felt about myself or how I felt others saw me. If anything, I could brave through my condition for others.

Now, ten and a half years since I received steroid treatment, eleven years since I received a blood transfusion, I walk across a university campus to meet a friend to discuss a personal essay I wrote for one of my classes. I did not wish to write about my topic, but it burned within me to be written. It is something that has usually made my body involuntarily shake when I discuss it. I rarely bring it up, unless I feel it is appropriate, but I never shy away from it when it is brought up.

That essay led me to investigate my blood disorder further. As I have scrolled through websites and Facebook pages and groups, I find pictures of patients posted by loved ones. They are all seeking hope. Many of those pictured are no longer living. Some only lived to the age of four, others eighteen. It is not easy to face.

In the past, I investigated these sites but eventually banned myself from further viewing, because my body would shake and they would lead to tears from recognizing the result of fellow patients and, perhaps, from a silent fear of the same for myself.

There was even a discussion board of parents with an infected child in my area wishing to reach out to others that may be experiencing the same disease. Others responded, although they were not near these parents. I did not participate. I did not want to face this with them, though I could have met them in person, as was their hope. Was I being selfish? I could hardly face looking at pictures of other patients, let alone comfortably recount my own story. Perhaps, it would have been good to meet them, but I was not brave enough.

Now, as I see those who are struggling more than I have had to and those who have passed on, I know I have been given this time. I have been granted it—not that I am more deserving than others. I sometimes wonder why I am given this. But I have it. I must use it. It should not be spent moping about what I feel I lack or in dispute with or fear of others. This is life. Every breath is a gift. I have the opportunity to live. I am here.

I attend a university where people are kind to me. My peers know me for my kindness and my humor. They enjoy my personality and smile when they see me, as I smile back.

May 2011, Age 22
Often, I am told how good-looking I am. “Cute” is the most common word used. Anytime I perform a scene for my film acting class, my professor raves about how good I look on film.

And in this, I am grateful. Being considered good-looking can be especially beneficial in landing a job in my line of work as an actor, but beyond that and getting ready for my day, I hardly think about appearance, though I assume value in tidiness, as I have all my life. I find more to life than how I look, physically and in action.

I love people knowing my personality and find great reward in that. Rarely do I discuss facts about me, having felt like a museum exhibit in the past—something to see, learn about, and then move on from. Very few people know of my international birth or world travels, and even fewer know about my blood disorder. I desire them to be honest and unbiased with me and treat me as they would anyone else, without affected favor, respect, or disregard based on these facets of me. It is not that I hide these things about me. I am open to speak of them when appropriate. I prefer people to know the current operation of me and I them.

We all have our pasts, but life is now, and we do not know how long we will have it. Now is what we are given, even if it requires being brave. 

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Adventure #18: Too Immature for Kindergarten

Once upon an eon ago, school officials thought I'd be too young to start Kindergarten, because my birthday was in mid-summer. They said I was plenty intelligent, even remarkably more intelligent than my older peers, but I just didn't seem as mature as my peers, having little interest in life skills activities, while making uninterpretable drawings and writing in all caps.

WELL, SHOOT! My mom already taught me how to hold scissors; I NEVER liked coloring, not even in the church nursery, and still, to this day, can't color in the lines; and I mostly picked up letter shapes from studying a computer keyboard. I could write in lower case, but the whole testing thing made me nervous, so I reverted to what I thought they might want, because it seemed more official. According to them, I'm probably smart enough for my college degree but still wouldn't be mature enough to join Kindergarten.

My mom still considered my wishes and asked if I wanted to go to Kindergarten. I said yes but didn't tell her it was only because I wanted to ride a school bus.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Adventure #17: Silver Linings Playbook

*I write this post because I am screaming for you to SEE THIS MOVIE*

A few weeks ago I went with a friend to see Silver Linings Playbook and fell MADLY IN LOVE with it! It was one of those experiences that reaffirmed truth and hope to me and made me believe in the cinema (I believe! Can I get an amen?!). I was totally blown away by the story and the character depth. It will definitely be a film I add to my library. After all, it is a romantic comedy(-drama) with a male protagonist. I tend to be strongly drawn to those.

I admired how it showed how everyone has a quirk about them that makes them a non-normal individual (yeah, yeah; what is normal, anyway? There. I said it. Now some other freak yuppie won't have to). Everyone seemed to have some leanings toward some kind of mental illness or social disability. Pat's father had OCD tendencies; Pat's mother was an enabler; Pat had bipolar disorder; Tiffany had a sex addiction caused by immense grief (perhaps, complicated grief); Veronica (Tiffany's sister) was a controlling perfectionist; Ronnie (Veronica's husband) had anger issues caused by Veronica's control; and so forth. The film (and book, I'm sure) helps show how people with mental illness (though few of the characters have "mental illness" stamped on their legal records) are still people and that they (I use the term they loosely) aren't other worldly beings that get locked up in a "looney bin." They are really still just a part of us. The film helps separate that mental detachment we have in the us vs. them idea. The movie reached out to show that even those without a certified "mental illness" still practice behaviors with signs and markings of a mental illness. We all have a little bit o' crazy in us.

Consequently, I felt that we shouldn't be put off by these signs within ourselves and others. We are all parts of a whole, and we don't need to shame ourselves from whatever little tendencies we may have. We don't need to let them rule us, but we shouldn't put ourselves down for whatever facets of ourselves we think are weird. Not one person has something about them that is not weird. We should still strive to be our best and conquer whatever challenges we face, as Pat does, despite the social pressures he is under by being termed mentally ill (and the pressures of his issues). It is a story of hope and of the natural drive to better oneself.

Personally, (yes, a little personal time; let's get personal) I connected with just about all the characters on some level, but I particularly loved Tiffany. Having struggled with complicated grief myself, I totally could see her motivation in everything she did. .... I could go deeper, but let's not get that personal...I did say "a little personal time," after all.

I recommend it to anyone over the age of 15, because that would be old enough to really appreciate it.
(Yes, it is rated R, so waiting until someone is 17 is understandable ;-)  I know I have a lot of friends who are R-rated sensitive, as they should be (and as I usually am), but if you have questions about content, read about it on IMDB. I really did not feel like there was very much for an adult to honestly be concerned about. What you read on IMDB makes it sound worse than it really is. I hardly noticed much of the language, because none of it was gratuitous (neither was the other content). Any harsh language was said from a grounded place so that the character actually sounded like they earned it. After the film was over, I was surprised it was rated R, but I guess, it follows the qualifications. I was uplifted, and it was worth it! P.S. I WOULD NOT BE INCLUDING THIS PARAGRAPH UNLESS I FELT I SHOULD  *HINT*HINT*  SEE.IT! It doesn't have 92% on Rotten Tomatoes for nothing.)



Wednesday, February 13, 2013

That Horny Keyboard

A writing prompt from my First Year Writing course in Fall 2009:

Find something to analyze that you wouldn’t normally analyze. A lamp. A boy in the ward. A chicken nugget. What you’re analyzing doesn’t matter as much as going through the process of analyzing. Remember this process from class: break something into its constituent parts and then try and figure out how the parts work together to create a whole.


What I wrote:
This keyboard I am using must be a very horny son-of-a-gun. All it does all day is get felt all over, which must bring great satisfaction for it since it allows it to happen day in and day out. It is not a very monogamous tool. And just like every person has favorite places where they like to be touched, this keyboard must enjoy being hit on the spacebar, since it is hit so often and is large enough to always be touched. Perhaps, its drive for such interaction is insecurity. It must feel fairly confident about its number keys, since they are set off and fondled with rarely. Consequently, it must be most self-conscious about its letter keys since those are begged to be used more commonly. Further evidence of its insecurity is how it protects itself with a plastic cover, hiding its inner workings so no one can witness any deep sensitivities. It really is a very private individual that uses intimacy as a false sense of self-assurance and appraisal.

My professor commented, "This is why censorship was invented =) "