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Posts Tagged ‘self discovery’

  1. The Definition of You

    August 9, 2009 by Blondette

    How many times have you been asked to describe yourself? Whether it be in a social networking profile, a dating site, a job interview, a date, a test, or a crappy ice-breaking session.

    Choose. Choice. What you are. Who you are. What you do.

    It all adds up to the definition of you.

    I define myself by work. Cats. Alone. Funny. Blonde.

    You’re given a certain number of words or characters to describe yourself-

    For example here’s my “definition of me” on Twitter:
    Fruitcake with Nice Frosting; Internet Marketer, Former-Vegan, Cat Owner; Blogger


  2. Everything I Know About Being a Domestic Goddess I Learned from My Friends

    July 18, 2009 by Blondette

    Right, I’m not a natural when it comes to cleaning and keeping my home in a state of domestic bliss. My priorities have never been with housekeeping and chores. For some, they cannot rest until everything is put away or washed. Eh. As long as I have a path and a place to park my ass, I’m good. Or so I thought.

    My friends have all taught me bits of how to keep house. I learned some from my parents, but most of what I do now, was done with a little help from my friends.

    One, I’m a packrat. OMG. I’ve gotten better about this and learned that one must assess things in the following way: Is this something I’d miss if I threw it away or gave it away? Have I used this in the past month? Do I need it? Is it replaceable?

    Two, I work a lot. And truth be told, when I get home from work I really don’t feel like cleaning.

    From Tara, I learned to embrace compartmentalization, aka use of boxes and bags.

    From April, I learned that she’s way better at organizing my cleaning supplies than I’ll ever be. April helped me clean and organize my kitchen before Thanksgiving last year and she helped me clean out and organize my desk. She dove right in, threw shit out, and grouped things in logical sense.

    From Tammi, I learned how to complete the laundry process.  Let me clarify. For me, doing laundry has always involved digging out the items I care about from a pile of everything dirty and clean (because the clean stuff ends up mixed in with the dirty, thus making it dirty again) and putting them in the washer. After they are dried, I usually either use them straight from the dryer, or I put them on my bed…where they often end up on the floor. Yes, my process did not involve actually putting the laundry away. This lead to a carpet of laundry in my bedroom and the need to shut the bedroom door if guests are over. Slightly inconvenient if you know what I mean.

    My brother, Brian, re-organized my kitchen cabinets (by the way, I’ve been spelling that word incorrectly for years) for me. Yep.

    What I learned about cleaning: it really doesn’t take that much time. It’s when you let it pile up and get backlogged that it takes a lot of time and effort. Well, son of a bitch. You’d think that alone would motivate me. Right? HAHAHAHA. Oh dear.

    This is not to say I’m completely incompetent when it comes to housekeeping. I’m actually quite detail-oriented in most of my life and great at things like bill-paying and budgeting. I’m also great with furniture re-organization and moving. In fact, moving my furniture usually motivates me to clean. It clears my chi and brings a bit of zen. When I do clean, it’s usually not half-assed. Part of being a perfectionist is the mentality of all or nothing. I don’t usually like to do things unless I know I’ll succeed.

    So, here’s to working on my habits and becoming a domestic goddess…in training.


  3. My Mood on Target

    July 15, 2009 by Blondette

    When I don’t know how I feel, I go to Target. It allows me to wander around and process.  I gave a neighborhood bonus points last week while scouting homes because of its proximity to Target. In fact, I can be quoted as saying, “few things make me happier than Target.” Okay, so you may be thinking I’m crazy and have no life because I wander around Target when I get restless or confused by what I’m feeling or when I’m just bored. I also can’t walk in for actual shopping without looking at areas that are not on my list.

    I like Target. I like browsing. I like being somewhere other than my apartment. Wandering around Target with nothing more than ideas or moodiness just lets me see what could be. It allows me to visualize and have tangibility to my ideas.

    Some people go to parks, museums, the gym, or do housework (yeah, that one baffles me too.) For me, I’m always looking for some sort of emotional connection to what I’m doing. That connection can come from intellectual stimulation, creative stimulation, or physical stimulation. (ha. that’s NOT what I meant you dirty, dirty readers. oh, Hi Dad!) Target just happens to be a convenient location with lots of stuff that appeals to me.


  4. Call Me Cupcake

    June 27, 2009 by Blondette

    We all have alter egos. Last Thursday I called mine Cupcake. Here’s the backstory.

    Every quarter my company hosts an outing for the employees. It’s a nice way to get everyone out, moving, thinking, interacting, and destressed for an afternoon. One department takes the hosting and planning reigns. This quarter, for the first time ever, my department (yep, I have one) was given the hosting honor. Past outings have been to the Royals Home Opener, Powerplay KC, a KC Amazing Race (note to self: never wear cowboy boots on the day of an outing again), and a KC area scavenger hunt.

    I am now completely convinced of 2 things:  my department can make some cash on the side by opening a costume shop and we totally have the Halloween costume competition in the bag. Planning was fun and the ladies in my department totally took the initiative to get everything done, leaving me to “supervise.”

    Thus on Thursday, June 25th, we presented “Company X’s* Got Talent.” The ladies headed over to our venue early, leaving me to corral the troops. After two all pages on the intercom, I headed to the main conference room where I proceeded to stand on the conference room table and give direction. Once everyone was informed of the plan and numbered off, I lead them like little ducklings to the scene of our talent show. Let me just say, I was impressed with the creativity that came out of my fellow coworkers.

    We rewarded them with an afternoon of beverages and appetizers at the Marquee downtown. Oh yeah, and the winners got tickets to AMC.

    My role in the event was that of hostess, whereby I dubbed myself Cupcake. I was the unifying voice (ha!) My job was to be loud and funny.

    Here’s where this gets to be something I’d actually write about on my personal blog. I’m not an extrovert. I’m a performer. They are not the same thing. I still need down time, chill time, me time. I process everything at a highly internal level. I am more likely to turn inward and analyze and process than to express and seek outside contact. I still love being with just one or two people at a time. But, I got up in front of 40 people and stood on a table. I got up in front of 40 people and cracked jokes. I got up in front of 40 people and handed out awards. I worked the tables. Sober.

    And the week before, I was at a conference for 4 days where all I did was talk to people. Me.

    Of course, I left the outing around 5:30 (this is also when Michael Jackson died) and fell asleep by 7:30pm. Thus proving that it takes a lot of energy for me to be so outgoing and engaging.

    Anyway, I’m proud of myself and I’m not ashamed to say it. Where I am now, who I am now sort of blows my mind some days. I never thought I’d be here. And that gives me hope for all of the dreams that are yet unaccomplished.

    Your Hostess, Cupcake with the judges.

    Your Hostess, Cupcake with the judges.

    *you don’t need to know where I work


  5. The Truths We Face

    May 26, 2009 by Blondette

    Last night I stayed up far too late in order to finish a book. It wasn’t because I liked the book; in fact, I felt it was twice as long as it needed to be. No, I wanted resolution. An ending.

    Don’t we all want resolution? It keeps me up at night. (well duh)

    I found pieces of myself in the flawed characters of the book. The girl who was raped and couldn’t bare to be touched; or if she was, completely disconnected from her body (no, I was never raped); the alcoholic mom (I’m not a mom) who struggled to face her truth. I’m struggling with the possibility of this truth. The kids stuck in the middle. The friend who’s been through it all and just wants to help. I spent the book just wanting to yell at the characters to figure it the hell out. Say it out loud. Face it. Own it. Strangely, I’m quite good at owning and facing my flaws. I was each one of those characters. It could be why I didn’t like the book but will remember it.

    I believe in some ways I’ve been grieving. Sounds odd, but it’s true. I’ve also used things to mask reality and cope with the truths I did not want to face about myself, my life, and everything that I cannot control. I stripped myself of some of these masks.

    I think people who move a lot as children share a common trait. We all have an itch and an intense need to ponder “where next?” This restlessness keeps us on edge; always waiting for the end; always waiting for the next time we have to adapt. We wait for people to stop caring and have an ability to close part of ourselves off and walk away. It’s not because we don’t truly care; it’s because we have to protect ourselves somehow.

    We are who we are. We live our choices. We must accept our truths but must not limit ourselves by them.


  6. Memories Are Made of This

    May 4, 2009 by Blondette

    As I was driving home from knitting (where I knat knot) the idea for this post struck me. Yes, it was a force! (okay not really; it’s more like a gentle creeping thought that’s been lingering for a few weeks.)

    I can’t seem to pass a building, watch a movie, or hear a song without remembering an event or person. Usually, it’s a person. And usually, it’s a person I miss or am not as close to anymore. For example, I cannot take the exit from 152 an North Oak without thinking about: OFR, Tammi, vodka, and trivia. (bastards took away my trivia!)

    This evening it was a CVS Pharmacy that stirred me. Of all places to remind me of someone it was so not the likely candidate. But there you go.

    Let me back up for a minute too- yesterday was deja vu day (and you thought it was just “Sunday.”) I woke up and got a “wanna get coffee text.” (it’s been awhile so I was excited). That of course stirred thoughts of other times- breezy spring days, warm summer mornings, chilly autumn Saturdays filled with venti soy Pumpkin Spice lattes, books and giggles. Then I saw a dead bird by my stairs which reminded me of the time when I just kept seeing dead birds and started to get a little freaked out thinking that it had to be a sign of impending doom. When I got in the car I couldn’t flip to a radio station that wasn’t playing a song that was absolutely tied to one of two people.

    So, my whole being was pulsing with nostalgia. Has anyone ever talked about about how much nostalgia hurts? Cuz, it does. Nostalgia is not warm and fuzzy. It hurts in that maybe if my insides knot up enough they’ll form a vortex to the past and I’ll be transported back in time to when things were happy and when I didn’t know that someday I’d be thinking and feeling back to these moments wishing I could do something so crazy as feel so intensely that I erased the pain and made it all better.

    If you followed that, congratulations. And also, welcome to my brain at 11pm.

    My new quest is trying to make memories that are just about me and not tied to other people. I could say it’s me trying to assert my independence, but really, I think it’s because I want to have a few things in life that aren’t masked in the memory of others because nothing gold can stay.


  7. 3 Months and 1 Week Ago

    April 5, 2009 by Blondette

    …I gave up booze and every day I am living a dual reality. I get up, go to work, come home. (Sometimes I go to the grocery store or Target on the way.) In one world, I’m bright, capable and in control. In the other world, I’m lonely and relearning how to live. My weaknesses and mistakes have lead me somewhere that I’m afraid to leave and in which I’m afraid to be trapped.

    I’m still trying to figure out how to be this person and this is likely to be a topic for while yet (that’s my way of saying,
    “get used to it–I figure things out through writing and guess where I write?”) There are some things that I can’t help thinking had to happen (bad things-things that make me hurt everyday-yay pain! oh wait, no, pain sucks), but I also have this Buffy-like hope that doing the right thing and making amends with the world will somehow set everything right again. And yes, I’m referring to Buffy the Vampire Slayer, which I’ve been watching nearly every day on Hulu. I’m hoping her ass-kicking will help motivate me to get off of my ass. Wouldn’t it be great if I channeled all of my road rage and angsty “I’m so lonely, what have I done?” life-transition energy into something like working out? What a great idea!


  8. 10 Reasons Why Weight Watchers Works

    March 8, 2009 by Blondette

    My debut journey with Weight Watchers occurred at age 16. As a teenage girl with a crush, I was pretty sure the root of all of my problems was my weight. (fyi, in 1997 the clothes for fat girls weren’t what they are now.)

    Earlier this year, I signed up for a  free trial of Weight Watchers Online. If after one week I decided it was not the path for me, well, then I could cancel and not lose any money. It turns out that I found myself content to count points instead of calories.

    So here’s why Weight Watchers works:

    1. It give you guidelines and provides structure. It outlines how many points you get per day, allows extra points during the week, gives you a place to track and if you are honest and follow it, you will lose weight.
    2. It’s realistic. Weekly points are given to allow you to enjoy outings, holidays, and just plain indulge once in a while. I use the weekly points sparingly most weeks because I’m not exercising yet, and I want to make sure I maintain maximum weight loss results, but it’s darn nice to have those extra points built in so I can have pizza for dinner on a night I got home late, was tired, and was just really craving pizza. They also understand that you might over-indulge and encourage you to get right back on track.
    3. It’s scalable. Again, the weekly points help you, it’s something you build on and keep changing because it teaches you, and Weight Watchers themselves continue to innovate. You can also access the site and your tracker from your cell phone which is handy for keeping yourself accountable and on track.
    4. It’s easier to count points than calories. Many foods are stored in the database, and those that are not are easy to create and save as favorites for repeated use. Once you master this (and trust me, it takes about a day) you learn how to mentally track. I used to get so stressed trying to do the mental calorie math. Smaller numbers are just easier to process.
    5. It provides a record. They say one of the best ways to lose weight is to keep a food journal. Well, using the online tracker does it for you! It even gives you a place to write a daily note so you can go back and see how you were feeling and what you ate.
    6. It gives you positive reinforcement. Whether you are part of the meetings or participate in the online forums, it gives you a chance to connect with others who are sharing your experience. (even if all you do is read the threads.)
    7. It disciplines you. Mini candy bars add up. As does pizza every night. If you have to record what you eat and face up to the fact that the frozen custard you just ate has 21 points (and your daily point allowance is 27) you are much more careful about how many of those custards you eat. (good thing on which to use weekly points if you really must have that custard!)
    8. It forces you to be evaluate yourself and your habits. When are you eating? early in the day, late at night, when you’re happy, when you’re sad? What are you eating? chips, candy, veggies?  How are you eating? quickly, on the go, in the car, at your desk, in front of the tv, at a table?
    9. It reinforces a healthy body image and lifestyle. You have to be able to live day after day for years with the habits you start in Weight Watchers. The program encourages healthy eating habits and exercise.
    10. It sets you up to succeed by giving you control. Based on the 9 points above, it sets you up to actually lose weight without depriving yourself. You get to choose what you eat- it won’t force you to eat tuna if you hate it (*raises hand*) or tell you not to eat ice cream or chocolate. It gives you that buying power.

    I’ve been on the plan for over a month and lost somewhere in the vicinity of 10 pounds. (The exact number is not known due to a scale change in the first 2 weeks.) The Weight Watchers plan works for me because of the 10 things listed above; maybe it will do the same for you.

    Next topics: my favorite foods  and helpful tips for weighing yourself.


  9. A Very Naked World+

    March 6, 2009 by Blondette

    Everyone should wander around naked. As I was driving to work this morning I realized I am my biggest obstacle. Some people smoke, some people lie, some people just don’t eat right and exercise enough in the right combination. In this country, lovely wonderful country of my origin, we have a fixation with a standard of appearance and obesity. It’s an interesting paradox isn’t it? The more we advance our abilities and message about being healthy, the more we notice how fat we are.

    Let me back up. Over a month ago, for some unknown reason (okay I know the reason and I just don’t want to tell you) I started classing up my look–meaning, I started wearing makeup, attempting some sort of hair fixing, and wearing decent outfits not consisting of sweatshirts and old man cardigans.

    Interestingly enough, I felt better about myself. Even on a day off of the “look” I put on makeup and used–get this–the blow dryer on my hair. I looked less lazy! I love my old man cardigans; they are scholarly and warm (and have nice pockets for tissues) but it sure does feel good to put on a nice shirt and a corduroy jacket every once in a while.

    So, let’s circle back to my first statement: everyone should wander around naked. We should not fear our bodies. We should not fear other people seeing our bodies. That’s what I say. I know I’m not perfect, but there are some nice things about me. And hey, the fewer clothes you wear, the less laundry you have to do! So, take it off!


  10. But I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For

    March 6, 2009 by Blondette

    While holding a paperback at Target, skimming the first chapter of what is best termed “chick-lit” (not to be mistaken for Chicklets the delightful square sugary shove as many in your mouth as possible and chew for approximately 5 minutes before the flavor is gone gum) I for a few moments, disconnected from myself. But where have I been?

    I keep trying to find pretty words and explain everything, but why? Do you really need to read though my convuluted, unhealthy thought process? The simple truth of the matter is I had a couple of bad experiences in December that caused me to hate myself and lose some friends and I’ve been dealing with those feelings all year. On top of work, wisdom teeth, Weight Watchers, and getting sick repeatedly, I’ve been trying to get to my Denouement.

    I’m conflicted with wanting my friends back (if they will have me, which is a BIG if) and wondering if it will lead me right back to where I was last year and derail my current life corrections quest.

    I would say that I’m living in a bit of fear of making mistakes and taking other people with me. In essence, I’m afraid of myself and hurting people again.

    I didn’t write about 2008 during its waning moments; in fact, I will call 2008 a year of lessons that I did not want to learn. It was a year where I found out more about myself than I’m comfortable knowing; a mirror too true to deny any longer. The seven deadly sins, the ten commandments, the golden rule- all tested in 2008.

    I’ve tried to reconcile what I think I know about myself and what I have seen of myself. The end of 2008 was what I would call my moment of “rock bottom.” Haven’t I done this before? Is this going to keep happening?

    At 28, I cannot relate to my peers. Normalcy so long sought, still unattained. When I lose the ability to relate, I become a fuzzy whisper of myself. I lose my sense of belonging and status.

    Instead, I connect most fully with that which is not real; books, television, movies, everything a mirage. A wooden puppet wants most what it cannot have, humanity.

    I learned that I do not face up to my own anger. I never have. I let it burn.

    Lately, my dreams give me a hope and sadness that I cannot shake until long after my morning coffee. To see me at work during the day, humming and keying formulas into spreadsheets you’d think I was someone else.

    To gently ruin one’s own life is actually quite easy. It is as easy as a bottle of vodka. I am one of those people who has trouble with moderation. I become someone I hate, untrue to my core and wicked in my turn. I abuse in an effort to hide, calm, and exhilarate.

    We can not take back that which we have done.

    There are things we’d never think ourselves capable of, but we are all flawed. We are all human. We are not as good as we think.

    For most of 2008, I knew I was not living as I wanted to live- there are plenty of posts on this lovely blog detailing the goals and dreams I have. What you don’t see are the posts that never made it past draft status that were written following any of the stumbles I’d taken.

    Shame is an interesting ally. Now in 2009, I’ve undertaken healthier initiatives as I work my way back to not just good physical health, but good mental health. I’m working on feeling worthwhile and forgiving myself–it’s not working so great right now.

    The title of this post is a song by U2. I can’t help but remember a chain of emails between friends where several people talked about how much they hated the band U2 and then there was much quoting of lyrics (not just U2). Why do I remember it, and why can’t I go back? Would I go back?

    I look at how I’ve matured in certain areas of my life: fiscal responsibility, work responsibility, but yet, I went backward in other areas of life. I regressed socially and interpersonally.

    I don’t think I even know the answers to my questions. I keep writing and trying to figure out what I think and feel about everything and how to write it in a way that does not garner feelings of hostility in my readers. Instead, I hope they will read and understand where I’ve been, where I’m going, and why things have changed.