Throw Away the Calendar from Last Year
Sunday, December 31, 2006

The days have caught up with us and once again it's time to celebrate the beginning of forgetting to put the correct date on checks and papers for a couple weeks. The new year is really just an excuse to put up a new calendar, be really loud late at night and not have your neighbors complain, and get really drunk; millions of people will spend tomorrow morning at work with a hangover. But hey, any excuse to get drunk is, to many, the best excuse of all, and if you can do it with party-hats - why the hell not.

I have yet to spend a New Years getting shit-faced, partying with friends, screaming and making lots of noise when the clock turns. Three years ago I was sick with the flu and a high fever - couldn't go out, though I was awake at midnight. Two years ago I had my wisdom teeth out - I got to go out for a bit, but I was draggy and loopy on vicodin. Last year I was in good health, but all we did was play poker ("Oh hey, it's midnight. Happy New Years, everyone.") - I think I made pancakes or waffles in the morning, I don't remember. This year? The demon-strep sort of ruined my entire week, and all I'll be doing tonight is sitting at my computer sipping apple juice. It's debatable if I'll be awake at midnight. I'm sort of hoping next year I can break the chain and have the party-hat excuse.

I guess the one thing New Year's Eve does, more than any day other than maybe a birthday, is make you really look-in-the-face the fact that it has been exactly one year since the last time you were forced to do so by the nature of the day. Because everyone else around you is also doing it, you find yourself asking, "So, how did I just waste an entire other year of my life? What did I gain from 365 days?" And this year more than any has been the most important, impacting, life-changing yet - as every year following this will probably earn itself the right to be, because that's the nature of life moving on and growing older.

I started the year playing poker. I started the year incredibly in love. I started the year living in the moment, because the moment would be gone and a thousand miles away in one month. I was excited, I thought I knew exactly what I was doing with my life, and while I knew it was all going to be unexpected and new and exciting I held onto this stupid notion, that I'm still having difficulty completely shaking, that I was far more in control of what happened in my life than any person ever has the scope or experience or influence to be.

I made the decision last year to do something entirely for me. I put myself way above anyone and made the decision that I wanted to experience something different. I wanted to step away as the person I had spent two years figuring out I was and stretch beyond that somewhere completely alien to me, to see what else that person that I was so happy with could become. In 48 hours I went from sleeping in a bed I knew, with a person I loved, to standing in a city in another country, completely, undeniably alone. It almost seems unreal, now, it's been almost a year since I was standing in New Zealand for the first time - wide-eyed and excited and scared. I left New Zealand in such a different light from the way I arrived.

I spent my birthday as alone as I had ever spent it before. Happy 19th. I pretty much vowed, from that day, that I would never spend another birthday without doing something birthday-worthy and with as many people I could muster. The first month in New Zealand was overwhelming and felt hopeless and alone; and one month exactly to the day, I found a place to live. Mere days later I had a job. I still hold to the ideal notion that the world has a way of putting things into place almost perfectly for the people who don't give up on believing in the world; that's pretty much what started that notion.

In 2006 I learned that I have the ability to sell myself wonderfully - interviewers, beware, I'm a top salesperson and my product is me. I learned that the jobs I had and will have in life weren't dumb luck, I'm just damn good at applying myself and find it easy to pick up something new and do well at just about anything I want to do. Even the jobs I don't want to do, I can still milk out like a superstar. I learned telemarketing just about sucks, always, no matter what, but I also learned sales - watch out world, because I know what you're selling and I know when you're selling it. I saw three of my favorite people in the world perform live and it was one of the most enjoyable moments of my life. I learned how much I hate being unemployed and applying myself to nothing. I learned how much I hate the fucking, endless, drippy-droppy rain. I hit a low point of my life, and in another country, for crissakes. My first serious relationship ended; I lost one of the best friends I've ever had in my entire life, and though I'm over the relationship, I'd be lying if I didn't say that still doesn't hurt like hell sometimes. I gave up on New Zealand because it wasn't worth it anymore to be so listless and unmotivated; I need to get away from the hole I'd dug myself and go down a different path. So, back to The States. Airports proved once again to be worthy of the hate I have for them. I marveled in a new ten dollar bill. I realized that despite not being a drinker, I did miss the ability to actually purchase alcohol. I got back and was still depressed because I was still stuck somewhere I didn't really want to be. I plunged into the deep-end, head first, because I once again just needed to get out, and I moved to Denver.

And so far, it's been the best decision of my life. I like my apartment. I love my job (another of those life-putting-itself-into-place moments on that one). I love the people I've met through work. I love that I live close to a couple of my best friends. I can drive five minutes down the road and know it's likely Jordan will be around to talk to. I'll be starting school again in just weeks, and after two years I'm excited and nervous to get back into it. My life has roller-coastered from January to December, taking a long and fast dive in the middle of the year, and has now started once again on the up-swing, and I'm hoping the ride continues to rise or at very least plateaus in the coming months. I'm happy where I am right now. Well, relatively speaking, since I'm still not thrilled I'm sitting by myself on New Years Eve still recovering from being horribly ill. All I can hope for now is that things will keep getting better.

Too much bad happened in 2006 that seriously muddied up the waters, but it was definitely a month of some serious introspection and growing, which is sometimes more valuable than just having a jolly-good time all year round.

Without this year: I wouldn't have discovered I'm as interested in photography as I am. I couldn't say that I at least tried, which is a lot more than a lot of people could ever do in their lives. I wouldn't have grown up and learned more about life in a way I needed to. I'd have three less holes in my body. I wouldn't have one the most gorgeous tattoos to grace human-flesh proudly on my body. I'd have missed out on meeting a very good friend. I'd be missing that many more laughs and WTF memories. I'd have missed some fantastic music.

All in all 2006 has left me feeling stronger, more confident, more beautiful, as a canvas for great artwork, someone I'm proud and happy to be. I'm trying to relax, take life more as it's handed to me and as I work for it, rather than thinking I know what's going to come if I follow points x, y and z. There's always room for criticism and improvement, but hey, I'm doing about as well as I should hope to be.

It'll be interesting, to say the least, to look at it all again next year. And damn, there's some stuff I'm looking forward to immensely already in store for 2007, and that's always a good sign.

Hope everyone is having a party-hat excused good time!

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In Need of Something Going Better
Friday, December 29, 2006

It took me five minutes to remember today was Friday. Time has slipped away into a snowy blur of discomfort and disjointed sleep. 2 hours... 30 minutes... 5 hours... what time is it? I slept too much because it's all my body wanted me to do and every time I woke up I was dry-throated and disoriented. I miss home - Denver, home, not really any more or less than I thought I would. I think I miss it more right now because not being able to be there means one more day I'm tediously recovering from being too sick and one more day there's once again too much snow - everywhere, too much snow. A word to the wise, when finding oneself with a sore throat? If that sore throat lasts more than a couple days and if it's mainly located in one area? Get it checked out as soon as humanly possible: do not pass go; do not collect 200 dollars. I waited too long, and a throat infection got much worse before it got any better. I had one of those cartoon-gigantic shots stuck into my hip. I've been unable to swallow, which got me dehydrated. I've been unable to eat, which made me nauseous in combination with the antibiotics. I've been unable to speak, and am still struggling with that, which is incredibly irritating and borderline pathetic-amusing all at the same time. I'm slowly on the uphill, but it's going to be a long and painful climb and there's quite honestly no end in sight, because it feels like sleep erases the progress that was done and in the morning I'm forced to start all over again - like a modern day, bacteria-infected Sisyphus.

I'm bored, really. The things I want to watch, the things I could pass my time with, are all mostly in Denver. I have a gnawing urge to listen to the Dresden Dolls and pour my thoughts out onto paper - I would kill for a blank sketchbook at the moment. I'm hoping my body and mind doesn't yet again totally give out on me and I can hold onto this surge of creative feeling and apply it to something, somehow, in the span of the day. Curse the last few day's lost productivity, or I'd probably have it and a better idea of a new camera in my hands right about now. My biggest worry right now is that I won't be doing any better by even Sunday, and not only will that mean I'll have seen none of my friends, but also that I never had time to go out with my dad and look for the digital SLR I'm only grasping at with my hopes and fancies.

I'm craving pizza and nachos and a whole variety of things I'd probably find difficulty in swallowing. Curse the active imagination of a stomach. Curse the slow progress of antibiotics I should have started sooner. Curse the snow for refusing to cease here or in Denver, as it's only adding to my bat-shit stir-crazy.

2007 now seems more like an escape from the worst week to end a year, ever, fingers crossed too much of this doesn't splash over into next year.

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White Christmas
Tuesday, December 26, 2006

I spent years of my life, the majority of my childhood and those as a teenager, wishing and hoping like so any others that this year there will be a White Christmas , please, oh, please. It was like praying to Santa, because (and I couldn't have been the only one) I know when I was six, I thought Santa was like God-of-Christmas-time. Given, I have never for a day in my life believed in God (as the capital-G version, in any sense, but that topic is for another day), so Santa was pretty much the head-honcho of universal power and awe, and of course if he brought the entire world presents in a night, HE was the one who had to have controlled the snow on Christmas.

But looking back, unless it's tucked away in some unimpressive corner of mind, because there's no doubt that it would have been melt-away-quick unimpressive had it happened, I don't remember a single White Christmas when I was growing up - when it really mattered. And anyway, snow in New Mexico (and trust it hasn't failed to start doing this this year) melts away fairly quickly, leaving only some icy patches on roads that were never plowed well enough and the muddy dregs of the storm on the sides of hills that never get sunlight to melt them.

This year, though, the first year I've really considered myself an adult, for all intensive purposes (or, intents and purposes, depending on where you're from) , been out on my own supporting myself and starting to learn what it really means to be doing so; the first year in which not a single ounce of me really cared to deal with a White Christmas? Of course we don't just get the makings of a White Christmas, we get a fucking blizzard. The words White Christmas mean a whole different world of shit (read: "I have to drive in this ____.") when you're an adult and there's been a blizzard. It means the risk of running out of windshield-wiper fluid (haven't done yet); getting your car stuck in the snow and ice (done); brief moment of panic when your car goes over some especially bad and unexpected ice (done); jack-asses driving badly as usual, but moreso now that there's less room to excuse their jack-assery (totally done); traffic jams from hell (an icy, icy hell - done); and on and so forth. And boy did I get to drive in it. To work and from work and then all the way to New Mexico to spend Christmas with my mom and dad, in their respective houses.

But I suppose, considering I managed it all safely, it's not so bad, and I am certainly thankful to be spending time with my parents as opposed to being alone in my apartment. Moreso because I've also picked up strep throat or some other fun throat infection, and am on a roller coaster of being alright, just slightly uncomfortable and painful to wanting to cry my throat is in so much pain and my body just hurts. The background annoying fever doesn't help the situation, but at least it means my body is, in fact, fighting this, though I'll still probably need antibiotics. I'm still not enough of an adult to not want my mom or dad when I really feel like crap.

What a week this has been, and the next will be.

I certainly have a new outlook on the snow after all of this. Aside from the fact that building snow men is probably one of the most fun times a person can have, I've decided I'm really just not a fan of it. It's cold and wet and makes life more hazardous and irritating, and it only really looks pretty for the first day, and sometimes just the first hours, until everyone drives in it and stomps around in it and then it's all just gray-brown and slushy. It's sort of ironic, I guess, that I wanted to move to Colorado as much as I did. I'm a mountain-rat, at heart, I really am, and that's why (among other things) I moved up, but it has never been because of snow or winter-sports (I've never skied or snowboarded a day in my life) IN the mountains.

Here's to Spring coming early this year.

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"Welcome to the afterlife; here's your comicbook."
Saturday, December 23, 2006

I've been thinking about what an array of colors and emotions and speech bubbles the comic of our lives would be every single day we live. From drab, almost lifeless grays to the indescribable color of the way that love feels, or the way youthful silliness does. The colors would be warm, those last two, wouldn't you think? But that's where color and feeling can be deceptive - that's why feeling can't be explained with color. Love can be red and white and golden and bright, but the color could scare you if you saw black and blue and bruised-purple, or confuse you if you saw earth browns and tans and greens; that doesn't mean it isn't the color of love, you just have to step back and understand that color-feeling isn't based on stereotype and badly-written stories, color-feeling is like life: limitless in its vibrancy and palette.

Youthful silliness is another good example: youth seems light, bright, finger-paint primaries; yellows, pinks and bright blues; pastels, chocolate, sunshine. Silliness is rainbow-balloons and crayons, bright-snot-green and trees painted purple. But tonight, for me, it wasn't. Tonight the color of my youthful silliness was black and brown and gray and street-lamp orange; the red of a lit cigarette and the tan of a bunny-rabbit sitting in the snow patiently as we (meaning I) held a conversation. Color floods the world we know and completely torrents emotions as we know them, because no one really feels in color - but maybe we should. How would the world be different if more people thought in color? How would emotions change if we realized what color they were? How would colors change if we all realized that bright yellow doesn't always mean sunshine and baby-ducks and tulips?

I sat in my car for five minutes screaming fuck at the top of my lungs because I got myself stuck in the snow and was late to work. My body ached because of a typical, not-much-you-can-do winter virus and sleeping badly. I felt unmotivated and tired at work; though I do love my job, everyone just has those days.

I drank steamed soy milk and had a happy tummy. I received a whole little bag full of my favorite candy from my Secret Santa. I was happy to see I've still got a friend I'd feel horrible to lose. I talked to my dad and he made everything okay, the way he often has a knack to do.

And it all lead me to thinking about color-feelings, a term I probably didn't make up before anyone, but did tonight for my own convenience. I wish, when I die, there isn't some Heaven or Hell or unknowable afterlife waiting for me. I'd just like to be handed the comic-version of my life, and to know I was right and see that the pages are all colored in the ways I thought they should be - not sadness-blue, or happiness-yellow, but in every color imaginable in places we never really thought they would appear.

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