Monday, June 21, 2010

The One

From a young age, I was convinced there was only one person in the world,
one person you are meant to love, one person who has been placed on this world just for you,
one person perfectly matching everything about you.

This stemmed mostly from repeated viewings of Disney classics. These include, but are not limited to: Aladdin, Snow White, Thumbelina, The Swan Princess, The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast. Beliefs that lead to thoughts of ultimate happiness, neverending bliss, fantastical memories and happy endings. Princes who were perfect in every way, who did everything for you and who made your life happy no matter the cost they had to pay. Evil monsters who needed to be slayed by your one and only. Dragons and dwarves, elves and fairies, Narnia and Hogwarts.

I hate to admit it. I really do.
It's like... learning that that present waiting for you on Christmas morning was not Santa Claus,
but bought for you by who else? Your parents.
Sorry if I ruined Christmas for you. You'll get over it. I did.
Or even better,
coming to the consensus on your 20th birthday, and your Hogwarts letter is not 9 years delayed, but is never going to arrive by way of Owl delivered-post.
I know, I'm still saddened.

(Now that I think about it, my day will most probably be spent watching classic Disney movies. That, or Harry Potter for the ump-teenth time this month.)

Anyways,
Love.
I think these films reiterate that this so called "love" exists to fruitfully, so perfectly and so divine that it was the one thing we were meant to live for. That once we found it, we could live happy without pain, without sacrifice and without sorrow.
Most importantly, how do you know it you've met... "the one?"

It's taken me years to discover the truth.
This belief, though highly romantic, is incredibly bleak and pessimistic.
What happens if we never find the one?

Most of my revelation came from the evaluation of the other important people in my life.
Not to say in any means that I am polygamous or committed to multiple men, I'm simply referring to my few friends whom I spend hours talking to one the phone about Glee or Harry Potter. I'm referring to my sister, who listened to all my whining about men and still gives me advice after all these years. I'm referring to my classmate whom I come crying to about all the medical possibilities or psychological help that I may need. Even my mother, who annoyingly gets upset if I return at 9pm from a day with my boyfriend.

How about them? Do we not love them?

People say there's different kinds of love. It may be true? But I implore you to think about this.. Are all loves equal? I'm pretty sure if I lost my best friend, it would still hurt as much as my boyfriend breaking up with me. I really think it's all one thing.

And I really think that there's no single person meant for us, there are multiple people that we can love. In every place, we love someone.

So what about love?
I used to think love was just happiness.
Then I used to think love was about kissing.
Then sex?
Then I used to think love was about being with someone all the time.
About holding hands. About getting nervous before dates.

I'm pretty sure I've found it, and while it might include these things, there's so much more.
It's about giving up the last bite of your favorite dessert because they want it too. It's about loving all the things that we find annoying about them. It's about sacrificing 20 swipes for them just because you love eating pancakes with them. It's about driving 2o extra minutes in a dying car everyday just to spend 6 hours of the day with them. It's about staying with them while they're abroad, getting an education or fighting for our nation, it's about waking up next to them every morning. It's about fighting and crying, but then telling them I love you despite all the harsh exchanges. It's about promise.

A promise is all it really is.
With your family, a promise to provide and support in all affairs, financial and personal.
With your friend, a promise to listen and provide comfort.
With your significant, a promise to embrace and live forever right next to you.
With yourself, a promise to be true to everything you stand for.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

On Advising

Here I lay, flat on a Twin XL Bed, lined with two sheets. Beside me, a box of tissues accumulating into a small pile dampened with tears. The walls are bare and white, and the room is empty, save for me, the campus furniture, and a fruit cup to last me the night.

I am reminded of exactly one year ago. I was...
excited by the new job and its prospects,
sad in the ending of my first year in college,
worried about the entrance in a new relationship over the summer,
yet tickled by the thought of my new boyfriend,
nervous about what the summer at home would be like,
anxious and impatient for my floor, and my residents.

It's funny how during my previous schooling, I loved the arrival of summer.
This only made me nervous.

Flash forward to September 4.

I moved in to Morrill Tower,
in a rush, unpacked all my clothes, which I had stuffed in a rather large hockey bag,
and placed every item in its rightful location.
One hour later, I was skipping to the Fisher School of Business, excited by the very thought that Chris was no longer 3 hours away, but minutes.
That very first day, we spent eight hours, lying in this same bed, talking,
just. talking.

This year, this year has been the journey of a lifetime,
and as I sit here, sorry, lay here,
I can't help but think of
1. What I expected from this job,
2. What I received.

2 weeks of training could never have prepared me for what I would go through,
yes, I knew policy, yes I learned about drugs and suicide, yes I learned about enhancing student life and creating community,
but what I,
what I got was not solely a community on a single floor, or free residency, or a nice single room,
no, I got something much much much better.

I think it began Autumn quarter.
My residents scared me, 57:1 ratio was intimidating, and to know all 57 names was a challenge I felt impossible. It was incredibly difficult to see myself as a role model. To take my opinion of myself, and to envision that I was a role model. As far as I knew, I had nothing to offer, but a pretty face and a nice smile.

I struggled to match each name with each face. Not to mention having the courage to walk into every room and just start conversations with people who were taller, skinnier, prettier, more athletic, more intellectual, more attractive that I am.
To them, i was the person to get them in trouble, I was the eyes of the university,
the authority figure to poke fun at and play pranks on.
To me, I was just one person they would go to if they needed.

I took the first ones for granted. I was surprised they approached me with their issues, and I heard it all, I heard it all from suicide, to homosexuality, to girls, to sex, to materiality, to slasher films and vampire obsessions. It didn't occur to me that they came to me because they wanted to, because they trusted me and I was a loyal ear.

The arrival of winter quarter brought with it thoughts I had never encountered before. I felt punished, like I was life's pitiful playtoy.
I had small bites that appeared every night, which worried me not only because something was happening to me, but because as the weeks wore on, the bites got worse.
Then I found out they weren't bites. Chris didn't have them, so what were they?
They erupted every night, behind my knees, my inner thighs, my arms, my neck, my stomach, my back, and they would start with one small circular red bump, and become clumps of swollen red skin that stained my entire inner thigh.
What was happening to me?
I would cry in the showers, scrubbing at my skin hoping the itching would stop, hoping the swelling would go back down, turning the temperature higher to burn it off.
And for some reason, Chris still found me as pretty as ever. He'd sit with me, and keep me calm, keep my mind off of the pain and off the thoughts that loomed repeatedly in my head.

Each morning I would wake up next to him,
but I would not realize it. Waking up meant a whole new day I had to face, and I didn't want to face it. Waking up would mean I would have to go to class, I would have to do work, I would have to face all my tasks, I would have to be awake.

So I missed a few classes. As I missed class, I would work on my assignment to turn in on time. And finally, I would turn it it, but witness the judgmental views of my classmates and my teacher... my imagination roared, "I wonder why she missed class?" "What's wrong with her?" "Does she do her own work..."

I failed the class.

I remember receiving the email and feeling as if my life weren't worth it. As if I were less than the dust bunnies on the floor beneath my bed. As if there were no point to living.
And I could see it, I could see images, not only images, but desires,
desires to walk out in front of a truck, just so that I wouldn't have to face life.
Blessed, I am so blessed that Chris sat with me, not knowing anything that just happened, but clutched my shaking body as my tears soaked his shorts.
For him, and for him only did I reject my desire to commit suicide. But my my was I so close.

Walking into my room the next morning, I heard the crunch of paper beneath my feet.
A hate letter from an anonymous resident of mine.
Was it ever going to end? Was this torture? Is someone finding this funny?





Why am I a role model?
Is there anything to me, anything to my existence?
By living, am I enhancing somebody's life?





I cried so many nights. Each morning my eyes were bloodshot, my lids puffy, and my nails bitten so low it hurt to put pressure.
The letter was right. I didn't deserve this job, I was no good, and I didn't do shit for my residents.

And somehow I found some unknown strength. To this day, I don't know what that motivation was, but I found it. No, not a person, not my design path or my family, or friends, not even Chris.
I hate to say it, but I think it was God.
I accepted my responsibility for my failure, I spoke to my residents to better the situation, and sought a doctor regarding the hives.

Here I am, the last left on the floor,
smiling at the friends I made, at the impressions I had left on the people of the 16th floor.
Despite all the tears and the late nights, despite the thoughts and the letter,
I'm alive, and I'm a different person.
I have made friends from residents,
I have made purpose from my trials,
I have passed my classes,
I have secured my position for next year,
I have made impressions on the other RA's,
and I am deeply in love with the man I will spend the rest of my life with.


Here's to 2010-2011 and a new Katrina.