Things I Love Thursday

It’s another beautiful Thursday of another beautiful week, and these are the things that have been sustaining my heart:

♥ Finding strawberries that actually taste like strawberries. Did my world just turn upside-down? Nope, that whoosh was the sound of me eating the whole box in one sitting. Mm, mm!

♥ Opening the notes that my Speakeasy volunteers left me. Totally heartwarming and now posted in a row across the top of my desk so I can see them whenever I want.

♥ When the wind blows, it snows cherry blossom petals. The drifts of sakura lacing the ground.

♥ Doing crosswords, particularly the daily one in the 24H (a free newspaper, for those of you outside Vancouver).

♥ The glow of ink as I press a highlighter across a white page. Yellow is my favourite.

♥ I’ve been gazing at the full moon for the last few nights and thinking how wonderfully full it is, how entire without hesitation.

positively present is a lovely blog that one of my best friends pointed me towards, which posts thoughtful, inspirational and comforting messages almost every day.

♥ Best of all, seeing my oldest friend yesterday. We traversed Pacific Centre, Granville Island and UBC. I can’t recall the number of times we got distracted by something and forgot our previous topic of conversation, moving right on to something else. With some people, the important thing is not so much the content of conversation, but the fact that the talking is happening; it doesn’t matter if we haven’t been in regular touch lately, but we’re still able to pick up where we left off, and it doesn’t feel like much time has passed at all. Sometimes it shocks me to think that we’ve known each other we were five and have been friends for well over half our lives now — and then I’m fiercely glad for it.

Also, she bought me bubbles. Hehehehe. ♥

Any Toisan speakers out there?

This is a long shot, but I’d really like to know:

How do you say ‘sesame seed paste’ in Toisan?

Things I Love Thursday

You’ve got to look for the things you love when you’re in the midst of exams and papers you really don’t:

♥ The skit my friends and I did for our FNLG final presentation at the Musqueam community potluck last Thursday was a success — everything went smoothly and people laughed in all the right places.

♥ The Speakeasy year-end event went off splendidly last Friday, much to my relief and delight. The food was good, there was plenty of fine entertainment, and the company was marvellous. But I knew that last bit was going to be true anyway.

♥ The ohanami (cherry blossom viewing) picnic my Japanese friend organised last Saturday. We enjoyed ourselves down the avenue of cherry trees just outside Vanier, on Lower Mall.

Sakura trees on Lower Mall, UBC

Anne's White Way of Delight, transported to UBC

The above snapshot was taken a few days before the actual picnic, which proved a grey, but fortunately dry, day.

cherry blossoms

We didn’t realise this until we finished, but we were sitting right under a bird’s nest — no wonder there was an angry crow who kept cawing at us! My apologies, Mama Crow.

♥ Listening to an awesome, mood-lifting playlist I just compiled, while studying. (The first time I’ve put a playlist together. Shocking, I know.)

♥ The delights of a well-stocked fridge and pantry. After whining about getting groceries, I rediscovered the joy of having food at hand. Especially tortilla chips and salsa. Mmm, salsa!

♥ Playing the piano in the Marine Drive ballroom on mornings when the sun is shining and I can see the blue and green world outside.

♥ This cover of Bon Iver’s ‘Skinny Love’ done by the talented fourteen-year-old Birdy:

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aNzCDt2eidg]

And most excitedly…

My best friend from home is coming to town next week! I have exactly a day to convince her to relocate to Vancouver. Any suggestions on where I can take her?

Also, recommended vegan dining spots are greatly appreciated as I’m not in the least bit vegan, but would like some places to go where we can eat together!

Knock, knock

I know who’s there; I’ve looked through the peephole. But I don’t open the door, because I’m busy with exams and papers, and they should know that. They can hear me rattling away in here, with the occasional wail of ‘I’m so tired!’ At times like that, they leave me in peace — but they don’t go, oh no. They’re sitting right there on the doorstep of my mind, waiting for moments like these when it’s temporarily quiet within, and then the knocking begins again.

It’s not that I don’t want to let these thoughts in — I do. I want to give each and every one of them the time and attention they deserve, as a proper hostess should, but I’m afraid I haven’t got enough to spare, not for all of them at once.

I’m afraid opening the door a crack will let the whole lot in, and that’ll be the end of my GPA as I know it.

(I’d really like to know when I started caring about my GPA so much. It’s not as if it reciprocates.)

But my visitors are accumulating and I think I should let one of them in. Just one, for now. Maybe if they know that each of them will enter in time, they won’t try to ram the door?

My first guest brings with her a smile and a memory that has me smiling away, too, at least at first:

About a month ago, I was sitting in one of my classes just loving the lecture that was happening before me. I was so very pleased with myself for taking this class to begin with; it was exactly what I’ve wanted for four years.

For four years. Isn’t that a long time to wait? something whispered inside me.

And that quickly, I couldn’t let go of the thought: I could have spent the last four years doing the things I really care about.

Let me throw in a couple of caveats here to explain what I mean: my life is not one long story of doing things I don’t care about. As a general rule, my UBC experiences and my degree are in areas I love. There are plenty of things I wouldn’t change, and I think one day I’ll have to write it all out, to explain the other side of the story, of why I did what I did.

But this side of the story is the one that says why I didn’t do the things I care about. This isn’t a matter of ‘I wish I’d found this sooner’, which depends on luck, but a matter of not doing the things I knew I cared about all along. Oh, I had my reasons. We all have our reasons. Sometimes these are legitimate, like financial, y’know. When we get right down to it, though, mine were all to do with fear: with being too afraid of potential failure to dare to try.

What did I really have to lose, though? Watching my dreams crash and burn, I suppose. No one voluntarily signs up for that. Except I have now lost four years’ worth of time I could have spent working hard at what I like doing, at building up my own skills, at really changing and improving and shaping myself to be what I wanted to be. And while just trying your best doesn’t always mean that things work out, I’m now feeling the edge of the cliche (or rather, its absence), of being able to say, ‘At least I tried.’

This kind of miserable thought triggers other miserable ones, such as thinking of all the things I haven’t done in the past few years that I was so intent upon in my first eager, hopeful year:

  • I haven’t written or painted or played the piano nearly as much as I wanted to — heck, I haven’t touched a paintbrush in almost six years, even though this was one of the things that made me deeply happy once upon a time.
  • I haven’t explored Vancouver nearly as much as I wanted to, despite my best intentions.
  • I haven’t gone dancing.
  • I haven’t gone to poetry slams at Cafe Deux Soleils.
  • I’ve yet to make a trip to the UBC Farmers’ Market in the summer.
  • I haven’t walked along the beach, haven’t gone biking frequently, haven’t gone swimming, haven’t sat and read on Granville Island, just listening to the music, all summer long.
  • I haven’t read all the books accumulating on my shelves.
  • I haven’t become an amazing cook or baker; I still don’t know how to make my mother’s dumplings.
  • I haven’t been brave, haven’t taken risks or pushed myself out of my comfort zone nearly enough times to even register on my mental radar.
  • I haven’t become the person that I wanted to be by the time I’m 21. I’m not even 21 anymore.

This isn’t generally an exercise I encourage anyone to do, by the way. It makes you sad. But I really wish I had thought a little more about what I wanted to achieve while I was in university before I got here — not a detailed list to follow stubbornly, because that doesn’t allow for the change that inevitably happens, but some general articulation of what I would like.

I’ve thought about making this list for the time I hit my next milestone age of 30, but that’s a whole lot trickier… How do I plan things that I want, like a family and a career, when one is not entirely within my control and I don’t even know what I want the other to look like?

The older I get, the younger and less sure of myself I feel. All the clear-cut plans I had in first year have dissipated and I’m now evasive when asked what I want to do. I don’t know what I want to do.

I wonder what the future holds for me. It's terrifying, honestly.

Or how. How will I combine and/or balance what I want with what I need? How do I pay my rent and feed myself and buy some new clothes to replace the ones I’m always mending now, and still be happy doing what I do? Aren’t these the questions facing most graduates, anyway?

I still want to do that list of things I haven’t done, to feel a little less bad about myself a year from now, when I’ll be graduating and there really won’t be another chance to change my Vancouver story.

I also want to not be thirty years old and looking back at the last decade of my life, wishing I’d taken the risk to do the things I care about, after all.

You know it’s exam season when…

… the mundane details of life become inordinately interesting.

A cube has six sides. Translated into several little potato cubes sitting in my pan, waiting to become perfectly golden on all six sides, equalled to a 25-minute-long transformation into (admittedly delicious) home fries. Note to self, should I ever do this again: dice the potato a little larger next time. Fewer cubes to turn over FTW!

… study breaks occur for increasingly odd reasons.

Among the growing pile of papers and books and general litter of my exam season room, reminiscent of my childhood pet hamsters’ interior decorating preferences, it is possible to find me in one corner obsessively folding and tucking away plastic shopping bags for future use. I mean, I need to feel in control of some area of my life, no?

… you see students carrying desk lamps around with them.

Today is not the first day I’ve seen more than one person bring their personal lamp to a common study space with the clear intention of studying throughout the day and well into the night.

Now that, ladies and gents, is dedication.

… the prospect of going outside induces fist-shaking.

I love the sun. It’s supposed to be sunny tomorrow. I have to drop off a final assignment, pick up library books, drop off receipts for reimbursement purposes and buy groceries — all necessary, important activities that I nevertheless resent doing because they cut into my study time.

Says the girl who is blogging instead of going to bed. Oh, Hypocrisy, you sit on my right shoulder.

(Procrastination sits on the left.)