Randomness of Routine
Today, I have been thinking about how quickly routine changes. It has been just about two months since I joined the blogging community and it is hard to remember what my life was like without "beastmomma." I have become part of an extended web family and there are people who I know only through their words. It makes me feel hopeful about the world in which we live to know that there are others who are grappling with how to live well in the niches that they are carving for themselves.
It has been a week almost three weeks since I joined the online dating community. So far it has brought out my obsessiveness, but also a confident side of me that is not afraid to ask really hard questions. One advantage of not meeting someone face to face first is that your physical attraction for them does not get in the way of figuring out the fundamental question, as posed by India Arie, "can you be a part of my life?"
This month marks the six month anniversary of my job and living here in Durham. It is starting to feel like home in the sense that when I am in a different city, I look for landmarks from here. One of things I am learning from this experience is how to take pieces of my past to help me be fully present in this moment. The friends I have are mostly from college and other parts of my life. We are writing the next chapter of our friendship that is marked by a job that could become a career, by deciding if I am going to return to school, and grappling with the pressure and wish to find a partner.
I love when you look at people that are part of your routine and you cannot imagine your life without them in it. The relief that comes when you figure out that you can share more of your complicated self and still be accepted. When new people come into my life, I often do a dance of not wanting to be too clingy or needy or feeling scared that I am going to frighten them off by being "too much." In spite of this protocol jingle, miraculously new connections are built and my world expands. Some changes are obvious and get processed as such like moving, changing jobs, starting school and others are more subtle how you spend your time, what and who you share with, and how you define yourself.








Reader Comments (7)
Life should not be a burden. I like to think of it as interactive. Things may not happen when we want them to, but I have never been burned by the rhythm of life. There is an art or zen of learning to trust the universe and when something unexpected happens, learn to embrace it and ride along for the sheer joy of the ride itself. Does that make sense?