I am on my way to start a new life.
It is January of what I have declared "CLEAN SLATE '98!" I am 27. I quit my dream job — teaching high school Drama — after failing "to work smarter, not harder" and setting the stage on fire during a performance of a stage adaptation of Ovid's Metamorphosis. (There is a longer story about lights too close to an old fire-retardant curtain, Juno's final speech, and a gym teacher who lost his mind, but I digress.)
Shattered, I moved from Indianapolis, Indiana, to Bellingham, Washington, to start graduate school at the farthest point in the contiguous United States from where my dream had died.
The journey to Bellingham took the better part of a week. We drove through January snow and ice, spending 4 nights in Bismarck, North Dakota, living between a Holiday Inn, a Kmart, and a Perkin's.
I arrived in Bellingham. In the first 8 weeks, two-thirds of my stuff never arrived, my car was totaled, my teaching license did not transfer, I got fired from my job scheduling appointments at a pediatrics practice, and my cats got fleas. Watching Titanic in the theatre at the mall was my only release.
Do you ever think of yourself as absolutely screwed? What was I thinking? Moving across the country, in the worst weather, without a job or support system within 2300 miles. I sometimes ask myself, especially when I feel screwed, "What is mine to learn from this experience?" That experience taught me the value of being all in. I had no choice but to be steel and delight. By steel and delight, I mean I had to create the experience I sought. To find delight especially when my back is against a wall. To spend more time getting on with it than asking myself how I got here. To kick life's tires and take what I was being given for a test drive, even if it meant the wheels might fall off. I had to embrace change, in all its chaos and possibility and delight.
I so appreciate and honor your description of being all in with steel AND delight. Yes. That lands. I'm celebrating the leaning in to it all rather than wishing it away. I needed that today. Thank you.
Way to go! Steel and delight...and a field of tulips (amazing). Learning this at 27 is an accomplishment and will serve you well as you're making that move from hate to create! I love the name of your project...may we support each other in awakening and nudge each other when we're inclined to drift off to sleep🌷🌷🌷