I do not journal.
I am fairly certain not journaling is the
sole sin a self-proclaimed writer can commit. But, in the interest of complete
honesty, there you have it: I am a jotter-downer, a blogger, and a list-maker mais je ne suis pas
une journal-er.
It is no surprise to all who have ears
around me that I have embraced the world of weight loss and fitness. This past
week, although I ate fairly healthily and exercised, I gained a pound. [I know,
I know, call the waaa-mbulance. But to someone who has created a plan and
weighs herself every week, on the same day, one entire pound felt like an
abysmal failure]. Not only did I feel terribly, I felt terribly about feeling
terribly in the first place. Mired in this foolish state, I decided to turn to
writing because…well, it couldn’t hurt. I proceeded to write a list of positive
occurrences from this week alone:
1) I am fitter than I was in
high school. Getting better with age trumps peaking at 17.
2) I have run the farthest I
have ever run [in my life] without stopping to walk.
3) I managed to go an entire
day without spending any money
…etc.
What I was able to deduce from this
enumeration is that while I was blindly focused on a scale’s numbers, the life I was
leading was not too shabby.
[Cue The Epiphany]
[Enter, The Daily Victories Project]
I know I am not the only person who allows
herself to become utterly transfixed by one very specific issue of the day and
lose sight of the fact that there’s actually a forest amid those trees.
Amassing a list of daily positive occurrences is as close as I will ever be to
becoming a successful journal-er and I do not want to do it alone.
Consider this an invitation, blog reader,
to join me in our daily affirmation that at least ONE event [no matter how
small] has added a modicum of positivity to our own existence.
Now, this does not have to be fitness
related or fall under a larger theme. Anything from I took a different
route to work that shaved two minutes off my commute to My son actually
brushed his teeth without my saying so to Nothing of note
occurred today but a higher power was gracious enough to wake me can find
its way to The Daily Victories Project.
If you are like me and enjoy having a
friend [or a few hundred anonymous internet viewers] to help keep you
accountable, I would love to see your #theDVP entries grace the wall of the
L.O.T. Blog Fan Page [http://www.facebook.com/lotblog]
or in the comment section of this post, for you anti-facebookers.
Let’s do this together.
Let’s go viral.
...And who knows, perhaps if we are all too
busy pinpointing our daily victories, we won’t have the time to violently
confront unarmed teenagers, plot the destruction of storied athletic
competitions or look upon each other with disdain simply because our skin tones
don’t match.
Join The Movement.
#theDVP
~carter
WordsmithToYou
Monday, July 15, 2013
Saturday, July 13, 2013
...And Miles To Go Before I Sleep
Clad in businesswoman attire and
sneakers, my heels remain tucked away in my messenger bag, situated near the
umbrella, trail mix, Nalgene, and iPad.
I am a commuter.
Once a phenomenon as foreign to me as parallel
parking, [see post dated May 3rd]
I have grown to admire the public transportation facet of my east coast way of
life. While some benefits are monetary, an element that most commuters take for
granted is the chance to engage with [and oftentimes literally bump into] those
around you. During my Los Angelena life, the world of human interaction was
stunted by metal behemoths linearly trapped on the 405. Any “bumping into” that
occurs here is expensive, if not fatal, and altogether an unenjoyable experience.
On the T, however, [or Train to you
non-Boston residents] a morning trek into the city becomes a series of
vignettes that even the most cynical of early-risers could appreciate:
Thursday morning, I ventured
underground to find an elderly guitar player whose voice [note for note and
tone for tone] is indistinguishable from Steve Perry’s [lead singer of
Journey]. At first I was hit with a mixture of surprise and intrigue, but
before my train had arrived, these emotions shifted to heart-wrenching
disappointment that this man wasn’t a
San Francisco native in the early 1970’s when Journey ached for its front man. Who dictates that his fate was
meant for the morning commuters’ enjoyment and not for sold-out arenas? I suppose destiny can be categorized as a future post of its own.
Next up, a tweenager with impeccable
posture, high-bun, pale pink tights, loose shorts and wrap-around sweater
seemed unforgivably late for her Center
Stage 3 audition, as her frantic,
doting and less well-groomed mother tried to follow her daughter’s long,
elegant strides.
This people-watching Elysium is not
simply marked by the ability to catch glimpses into the lives of others, it
forces complete strangers to occupy the same space; a microcosm of the exterior
world. Amid this congested study in human behavior, every individual’s
patience, personal spatial relations, and varying levels of courtesy are tested
for the duration of the journey. Class systems and racial homogeneity differ
from stop to stop; a frequent commuter may recognize what part of town rests
above by taking note of those entering or exiting the train car.
One easily concluded notion is that
while on the train, every commuter awaits the start of his/her day’s activities. The commute is the means by
which the above ground day can begin. But if we all remain on auto-pilot
awaiting our final stop, we miss the fact that life and activity are
happening around us.
The ballerina’s mother may not have had
time to fix her own hair or check her own appearance in the mirror, but she did
not forget a single eight-count of her daughter’s choreography which they
recited together repeatedly until their stop arrived. While I will never know
what monumental performance awaited her or how well she fared, I pray [as a
daughter who has spent years and thousands of miles away from her mother] that
this young woman remembers the most poignant moment of her day occurred as her
selfless recitation partner put the needs and dreams of her daughter before her
own. It is not the destination that matters most, kid, it is the commute. And
if you are very, very lucky, you will get to disembark the train with the same
loving person who frantically pushed others aside for you to make it there on
time.
~carter
Friday, July 5, 2013
I Refused To Buy All New Bras [Or, The Catalyst]
Almost two months ago, I decided to make some life adjustments with the hopeful [read: skeptical and anxiety inducing] intent to shed some poundage. And on this blessèd day, I vowed to get my Carrie Bradshaw/Bridget Jones hybrid persona on and write about my first milestone: the mourning of 20 pounds. Well, here it is folks: Me, 20 actual pounds down from the first day I began my new life.
I have been looking forward to writing this post partially because I knew I would write it as a fitter, trimmer me, and partially because it has been looming on my Blog Topics To Write list and I do enjoy a good red-pen cross out session, complete with victory dance and relevant musical selection [Today's Choice: Part of Me by Katy Perry].
I have always been a broad [albeit well-proportioned] gal and my consistently sunny personality has never quite been tied to my dress size. So when I began this [ever-evolving] journey, I spent the first few exercise and veggie-filled weeks trying to envision what I would look like. Now that I am on the other side, I do not feel the contentment I imagined would await me; instead, there is a veritable hunger [ironically] for more. I recognize I am just beginning to form the habits that will keep me healthy for the rest of my life and that is what makes me most excited and inspires me to take on the next leg of my weight loss marathon. I would like to make it clear that 20 pounds ago, I did not like myself any less and I will not love myself any more 20 pounds from today. I have, however, discovered a certain pride that comes with keeping myself accountable. As a burgeoning blogger, I find moments in each day to add to my never-ending list of potential topics. However, it is a consistent internal battle when coming to the conclusion of how much of myself I am willing to share. No one wants to read a blog about privileged moments stocked with bunnies and rainbows, yet, exposing insecurities and emotional hardships can seem just as unappealing when it is your life projected across the screen. So it was necessary for me to make a decision: No matter how vulnerable I may feel, write it. Luckily, the inevitable sense of dread occurs for about as long as it takes to hit the SUBMIT button.
...and then there I am, out in the open.
This is the post I promised myself I would write. I wanted to take the mystery away and prove that weight loss is not some magician's trick others have been able to master. I wanted to do real push-ups. I wanted to fit better in my clothes. I wanted to buy new clothes. But I would be damned if my own body would force me to render my cute bras obsolete...the road to healthy living and weight loss begins differently for each individual.
As a writer, the ability to create a precise and well-developed character [from nothing] has haunted every blank page I cross. And for this creator, there is a me in my head that has yet to grace the scene.
Stay tuned,
~carter
Ta-Da! |
I have been looking forward to writing this post partially because I knew I would write it as a fitter, trimmer me, and partially because it has been looming on my Blog Topics To Write list and I do enjoy a good red-pen cross out session, complete with victory dance and relevant musical selection [Today's Choice: Part of Me by Katy Perry].
I have always been a broad [albeit well-proportioned] gal and my consistently sunny personality has never quite been tied to my dress size. So when I began this [ever-evolving] journey, I spent the first few exercise and veggie-filled weeks trying to envision what I would look like. Now that I am on the other side, I do not feel the contentment I imagined would await me; instead, there is a veritable hunger [ironically] for more. I recognize I am just beginning to form the habits that will keep me healthy for the rest of my life and that is what makes me most excited and inspires me to take on the next leg of my weight loss marathon. I would like to make it clear that 20 pounds ago, I did not like myself any less and I will not love myself any more 20 pounds from today. I have, however, discovered a certain pride that comes with keeping myself accountable. As a burgeoning blogger, I find moments in each day to add to my never-ending list of potential topics. However, it is a consistent internal battle when coming to the conclusion of how much of myself I am willing to share. No one wants to read a blog about privileged moments stocked with bunnies and rainbows, yet, exposing insecurities and emotional hardships can seem just as unappealing when it is your life projected across the screen. So it was necessary for me to make a decision: No matter how vulnerable I may feel, write it. Luckily, the inevitable sense of dread occurs for about as long as it takes to hit the SUBMIT button.
...and then there I am, out in the open.
This is the post I promised myself I would write. I wanted to take the mystery away and prove that weight loss is not some magician's trick others have been able to master. I wanted to do real push-ups. I wanted to fit better in my clothes. I wanted to buy new clothes. But I would be damned if my own body would force me to render my cute bras obsolete...the road to healthy living and weight loss begins differently for each individual.
As a writer, the ability to create a precise and well-developed character [from nothing] has haunted every blank page I cross. And for this creator, there is a me in my head that has yet to grace the scene.
Stay tuned,
~carter
Monday, June 24, 2013
Like Gertrude & Ernest
…and then I found myself furiously scribbling away in Paris.
I would tote my journal along from the Luxembourg Gardens to every café my
shrinking euro stash would allow to Père
Lachaise cemetery [but mostly] to the quiet areas of the 6th arrondissement that will always be my
own.
In the heart and mind of a fifteen year old who had never
even been to sleep-away camp, this solo summer sojourn meant the world. I
planned on having Paris validate all my dreams of Paris. A place so far removed
from the culture of home that I could not help but create an alternate persona.
Someone who sauntered a little slower, savored even the most fleeting moments, and
perpetually pursed her lips between sentences. Utilizing my French speaking
skills, I spent my free time pretending I was a native parisienne, aiding tourists with directions or in taking a family photo
in front of many a monument [in the age before the “selfie”].
As profound as I attempted to be at the time, I suppose it
could be said that being fifteen anywhere in the world has its moments of
growth, realization, and coming-into-one’s-own. But since I only have my own
experiences from which to draw and since my coming-into-my-own happened to
coincide with a once in a lifetime excursion, I am going to conclude that I
discovered the sole enduring facet of my life as a teenager in Paris: I am a
writer.
Pardon me while I quote myself, but in a school paper that
year, I stated the following: Oscar Wilde
said that, “When good Americans die, they go to Paris”. He almost got it right.
I believe that when good Americans truly live, they go to Paris to find a home,
find themselves, and to find a way back. [Boy did that fifteen year old
know what’s up] But here’s the thing, to an idealist teenager, it seems every
truth will remain so indefinitely and every talent will come swiftly without
life’s inevitable intrusions. I was able to feel at home in Paris; the feel of
pen and paper did not alter simply because I was 6,000 miles away. I was able
to cultivate my creativity because I had the time and I uncovered a generative
place within myself to which I could consistently return. I became more
confident; while I may have felt a little too dark or too chubby under
the Los Angeles sun, in Paris, I was one more Ooo la la away from not making
my returning flight. [Shout out to the European men who consistently walked the
fine line between respectful and kind of odd advances] see post below for more on my views of male/female interactions.
As I was saying, life discovers a way to try and thwart you
from your desired path. I’m sure the fact that for the next seven years I was a
slave to academia and did not even want to read a menu or write a
grocery list had something to do with why my personal reading and writing took
a back seat to more pressing literacy priorities.
It took years to return to Paris-grade Me and I have you,
the L.O.T. Blog enthusiast, to thank for my rejuvenated love of doing what makes
me feel most at home. I may not be able to host all of you in my living room for
bohemian events, but this is the 21st century and the interwebs can
be our salon. We are not the Lost
Generation of our great-grandparents, but there remains a dire need to
collectively share our thoughts. There must be a place where people won’t look
at us strangely for using proper grammar and polysyllabic diction, and where
putting your delusions and ingenuity into words can be valued, praised,
criticized and re-worked. I thank you for this opportunity and invite you, just
like Gertrude and Ernest did before me, to join the conversation.
#writeon
~carter
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Excuse Me, Sirs, Who Raised You and Can They Demand a Refund?
Let me start by setting the
scene:
A man and I are walking together and a puddle is obstructing our next steps. If said individual removes any article of clothing to allow me a smoother puddle transition, I will giggle at him and his sodden outerwear. While you are appreciated, hypothetical person, your archaic gestures could use some updating.
This is not a post bemoaning the absence of chivalry. Chivalry is alive and kicking for those who expect it and choose their mates accordingly.
This is also not a post enumerating how the boyfriends and husbands of the world could do a better job at being more boyfriend-y or husband-y because quite frankly, ladies, these are the men you have chosen. I would assume you enjoyed something about the factory model so do not complain when they do not change.
This is, instead, a post about the 21st century men whose mating rituals leave something to be desired.
Every bipedal female has experienced it. A catcall here, a car honk there and [for we dazzling urbanites] the occasional, clichéd, construction man hoot-n-holler. Sure, there is a time and a place to feel like a piece of ass, like when you are leaving the gym in your sweatiest sweat pants and someone still manages to find you attractive; that’s perfectly acceptable. Barring this very specific instance, however, women [on average] do not enjoy being treated or gazed upon like juicy burgers to voracious individuals. Flattery is not evoked. Hearts are not aflutter. And your chances of procreating with a woman steadfast in the knowledge of her self worth continues to diminish the moment disrespect masks itself as interest. There are only so many “Hey Baby”, “Let me talk to you for a minute”, “Can I holler”, “So, you got a man?”, and inebriated interactions one can take before she realizes no one has any idea what they’re doing anymore.
As someone without a husband or a son, I am making a pretty bold statement when I say: I believe mothers need to start demanding more of their male progeny. A man with a strong role model [male or female] will recognize that “having game’” is an ephemeral notion that is entirely dependent on current fads. Possessing the characteristics of a gentleman, however, will always be in style. While we are not expecting your best dinner jacket to line the intersection after a rainfall, similar sentiments such as concern, respect, and self-giving are pretty en vogue regardless of the century.
It has been my dream to [one day] produce enough cultivated, driven, and compassionate male heirs to aid my Alma Mater’s ailing football program [GO BOSTON COLLEGE EAGLES!]. And while I am only somewhat joking, the truth is, I am excited by the possibility of producing strong-willed and strong-minded men who truly comprehend what “being cool” is: I will nurture men who will dress well, men who will look every person in the eye when they are speaking or being spoken to, men who disagree without being disagreeable, men who are proud of their flaws and work each day to contribute positively to the lives around them, and men who understand that their mother demanded to be loved respectfully and did not stop searching for their father until she found it. Strength is gender neutral. A real man has the strength of a woman who reared him and the strength of the woman standing beside him to thank for his ability to have swag [whatever that is] through the ages. And no matter how audible and deliberate the whistling or hollering, a real woman has the strength to keep walking.
A man and I are walking together and a puddle is obstructing our next steps. If said individual removes any article of clothing to allow me a smoother puddle transition, I will giggle at him and his sodden outerwear. While you are appreciated, hypothetical person, your archaic gestures could use some updating.
This is not a post bemoaning the absence of chivalry. Chivalry is alive and kicking for those who expect it and choose their mates accordingly.
This is also not a post enumerating how the boyfriends and husbands of the world could do a better job at being more boyfriend-y or husband-y because quite frankly, ladies, these are the men you have chosen. I would assume you enjoyed something about the factory model so do not complain when they do not change.
This is, instead, a post about the 21st century men whose mating rituals leave something to be desired.
Every bipedal female has experienced it. A catcall here, a car honk there and [for we dazzling urbanites] the occasional, clichéd, construction man hoot-n-holler. Sure, there is a time and a place to feel like a piece of ass, like when you are leaving the gym in your sweatiest sweat pants and someone still manages to find you attractive; that’s perfectly acceptable. Barring this very specific instance, however, women [on average] do not enjoy being treated or gazed upon like juicy burgers to voracious individuals. Flattery is not evoked. Hearts are not aflutter. And your chances of procreating with a woman steadfast in the knowledge of her self worth continues to diminish the moment disrespect masks itself as interest. There are only so many “Hey Baby”, “Let me talk to you for a minute”, “Can I holler”, “So, you got a man?”, and inebriated interactions one can take before she realizes no one has any idea what they’re doing anymore.
As someone without a husband or a son, I am making a pretty bold statement when I say: I believe mothers need to start demanding more of their male progeny. A man with a strong role model [male or female] will recognize that “having game’” is an ephemeral notion that is entirely dependent on current fads. Possessing the characteristics of a gentleman, however, will always be in style. While we are not expecting your best dinner jacket to line the intersection after a rainfall, similar sentiments such as concern, respect, and self-giving are pretty en vogue regardless of the century.
It has been my dream to [one day] produce enough cultivated, driven, and compassionate male heirs to aid my Alma Mater’s ailing football program [GO BOSTON COLLEGE EAGLES!]. And while I am only somewhat joking, the truth is, I am excited by the possibility of producing strong-willed and strong-minded men who truly comprehend what “being cool” is: I will nurture men who will dress well, men who will look every person in the eye when they are speaking or being spoken to, men who disagree without being disagreeable, men who are proud of their flaws and work each day to contribute positively to the lives around them, and men who understand that their mother demanded to be loved respectfully and did not stop searching for their father until she found it. Strength is gender neutral. A real man has the strength of a woman who reared him and the strength of the woman standing beside him to thank for his ability to have swag [whatever that is] through the ages. And no matter how audible and deliberate the whistling or hollering, a real woman has the strength to keep walking.
~carter
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Under Construction
Between the
ages of 9 & 12, I managed to both break and sprain my right ankle. The
break was clearly a backyard accident but the culpability of the sprain lies
entirely on the head of that gargantuan sixth grade girl charging me as I tried
to defend the hoop. She didn't get the basket and I didn't get to finish my
season.
16 years (of
ballet performances, volleyball games, personal training sessions,
walking/dancing in heels, before school kickball games, treadmills, running
after children, hopscotching and down right existing) later, I was told
yesterday, I am missing an entire ligament that connects my ankle to the rest of
me.
Sure, my ankle
cracks, creaks, aches from time to time and hangs a little funny when I've got
my feet up, but missing a ligament sounds kind of serious. Like when a trainer
tells you she is surprised you can do
everything you can kind of serious. As it turns out, my body [wonder that
it is] has discovered a way to protect itself by overcompensating in some ways
[tightening my Achilles tendon] to render and entire ligament unnecessary for
more than a decade and [hopefully] ages to come.
Self-healed…far
from perfect… but completely functional.
We, as humans,
spend a lot of time assessing the figurative damages and scars events can leave
in their wake. Ankles are fortunate enough to get casts and splints while
broken hearts, spirits and promises never quite get the physical therapy they
deserve. Aside from the trite notion that hardships build character, it turns out,
without lacerations [of both the figurative and literal kind] we would
never fully comprehend the joys of how freaking cool it is to depend on
yourself. We are constructed to survive; we were not created to depend on
external aid for our protection. No ligament? No problem. A victim of
infidelity? You will discover a way to love you
more than he did and survive to tell the tale of that guy you knew once.
Don’t get me
wrong, trusting in your own will and welcoming the unpleasant brings along its
own set of challenges...mostly in the form of what is left behind. Just as I
might be able to tell you when rain is on the horizon by my gait, an individual
who has been disrespected one too many times may take much more convincing that
the person confessing his love is genuine. When we are ruptured, we cannot
expect healing to return us to what normalcy once meant. Instead, we must have
faith that rejuvenation will take us to a place we could have never predicted.
We are undeniably works in progress.
Walking Under Construction signs preparing for
the next great project to give us a reason to uncover our strengths.
I do not
advocate underestimating the strength of a sixth grader charging for a basket
nor do I advocate actively seeking relationships which only mean to cause you harm.
However, I do recognize the value of a certain self-respect, which only manifests,
as the bottom seems to let out from beneath our lowest moments. Because when
you are the only one left, you start depending on the right person. Trust
yourself to heal, rejuvenate, accept, move past, and ultimately re-enter the
game.
~carter
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Your Life Will Be Enriched and Simultaneously Ruined By Social Media: A Letter From The Future
Dear Child Of The 1980’s –
In what may feel like eons but is instead just a few short
years hence, shit is about to get real. A phenomenon known as social media will pervade the
consciousness of the world you find familiar now. It will have the ability to
force every human closer in distance yet leagues apart in anything resembling
genuine emotion. For instance, someone you have never met [nor will you ever have
the displeasure of meeting] will discover a way to find you both
intolerable and repulsive simply because you look content with your own life in
a few photographs visible to the masses. Without warning, anything from enjoying
a relaxing vacation to dating that guy becomes a silent competition no one has
told you that you’ve entered. No matter how much you may think you are simply
living your life, you are consistently moments shy of losing some ubiquitous
and universally accepted foot-race towards Lord knows what: Seeming happier, thinner, or more in love
than the next person? The truth is, Reagan or Daddy Bush Era Child, even as
we upload photos and update statuses, those of us living in these uncertain
times are vastly uncertain of why these daily actions are such necessities.
Sure, we could say we do it to stay connected with that
friend who moved away in third grade, or to remove the creepiness of stalking
celebrities [because if they shout it from instagram/foursquare/twitter, it’s
fair game to know their whereabouts] but this voice from the future has a
sneaking suspicion that while each of us may rattle off a disparate rationale
for our obsession with virtual “likes”, it is the need to foster relationships
without actually fostering a relationship that motivates us. In the same
fashion that children born in this era will play “tennis”, “dance”, and “kick a
ball” on a virtual screen rather than do any of these actual activities in
three dimensional form, friends [as
well as the derivatives, friended, unfriended and to friend] become loosely associated with the definition of friend that you might come to understand
in your youth.
My advice to you is to enjoy the distance while you can. No
matter how annoyed you are at that girl [two rows over] who keeps making fun of
your Lisa Frank Trapper Keeper, trust me, one day you will be longing to engage
in an argument over something tangible. Rest easy that with the advent of
social media, you will never have to lose tabs on your best friend from ballet
class [even if you do not speak to her for the next fifteen years and she gets married, this thing called
Facebook will put her maiden name in a shaded gray color to make her accessible
to old friends like you]. And whatever you do, do not become that 21st
century individual who has nothing better to do than flounder in
her hatred of the happiness of others. Worst comes to worst, just click
elsewhere, because anonymity within your animosity is an angry person’s sole companion
in this brave new world.
Good Luck,
carter [of 2013]
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