tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33190952024-02-07T00:32:27.502-06:00Indignant MindThe random musings of a very busy girl.Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.comBlogger3183125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-66549244383580836062019-06-20T20:01:00.002-05:002019-06-20T20:01:59.111-05:00UpdateRemember when I used to post daily? Looks like it's yearly now. Every year, every June, I feel the itch to put too much information about myself on the interwebs.<br />
<br />
I've been thinking I should give some sort of an update on my New Year's resolutions, seeing as it has been about six months since I made them. There were three:<br />
<br />
<ol>
<li>Learn how to bake bread</li>
<li>Meditate more</li>
<li>Find my life partner</li>
</ol>
<div>
When I originally posted these on Facebook, I got a lot of people telling me that I don't need a life partner to define myself, I should be happy being single, that the right person will find me when the right time comes. I shut them down by saying I'd been happy being single for 95% of my life; I wanted to see what the other side of the coin looks like. But more on that in a minute. We have resolutions one and two to handle first.</div>
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Bread. I make bread almost weekly. I've made bagels that turned out really well. I've made English muffins that worked, but were a little too sweet. I've made I don't even know how many loaves of this coconut oil bread that is so delicious I don't think I ever want to make another kind of bread again. I should probably learn how to make pita, but the coconut oil bread is just so good. It's good for sandwiches and dipped in soups or as toast with peanut butter or avocado on it. Seriously. I've messed with using whole wheat flour in it, and adapted it from an olive oil bread recipe in the first place. Coconut oil is better. So tasty. So easy to make. I've even made some on a Tuesday night just so I could have it with soup for lunch the next day. So I'm feeling good about resolution number one.</div>
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Meditation. Kind of fell off the wagon on that. My watch reminds me to take a minute to breathe about three times a day. I feel like I'm doing well if I do it once a day. I probably should dig in deeper and give that one some more time and effort.</div>
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Life partner. Still don't have one. Not even close.</div>
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So, getting back to what I was saying earlier. I think it's funny that I have spent nearly my whole life without a significant other, and as soon as I express an actual interest in putting in the effort to find one, people tell me I shouldn't. Trust me, I can think of a million reasons to not have a significant other. I can also think of a million reasons why I'd like to try having one, preferably while we're still young enough to enjoy each other's company. For the most part, I've ignored the people who said I should enjoy my time by myself, finding out what makes me happy. I've done plenty of that in my life, thank you, and I continue to do it daily. I want to see how the other 99% lives.</div>
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<div>
I went to a couple of speed dating events. I've decided that online dating and apps aren't really for me. Especially with all of them moving to the swipe-right-swipe-left format. I need more information than a blurry photo to decide if I want to engage with someone. I'm sorry, but I do. So I went to a couple of speed dating events, and a couple of events thrown by the speed dating company that were more along the lines of "let's get a bunch of single people together in a bar, give them name tags, and see what happens." I took one of my younger girl friends with me - I'm the old lady in my friend group - and learned what a generational gap there is in terms of current courtship rituals. She is used to online dating, but had never really been in a situation at a bar where hitting on people or being hit upon was a thing that was done. It pushed her out of her comfort zone by quite a lot. To me, it was no big deal. One thing that came out of it, though, was the impression that there is a certain kind of person who needs to be at events like those, because they can't find human companionship elsewhere. I know my friend meant that comment about a lot of the very socially awkward men we met. I also know that <i>I'm</i> the kind of person who needs to be at events like that. I'll admit, that took some of the wind out of my sails.</div>
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I caved in and re-downloaded a couple of dating apps to my phone - one based entirely on swiping, one that requires a little more info to fill out a profile. I've gone on two dates with two different men who I met from the second app. Both were perfectly fine. The first was a little intensely creepy, though mostly a nice guy. The second was a lovely date - great conversation - but neither of us has been motivated to follow up and arrange a second date, which I think means there wasn't a real spark for either of us. Which is fine. That happens.</div>
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And as much as it pains me to admit this, and to admit it publicly, I'm working with a matchmaker. The package I purchased covers six matches. She finds people who fit the criteria she and I have discussed, screens them, and if they seem like a good fit, she arranges a time and place for us to have a date. The first date I went on was probably the worst date of my life, with a man who fit none of the qualities I asked for or said were important to me. The matchmaking company, to their credit, gave me a freebie on that one, said it didn't count toward my six, and got me a different matchmaker. My new matchmaker set me up with a guy who was fine in person, but awful in the follow up text messages. And then she set me up with a guy who was lovely, but didn't feel a spark so then ghosted. And since then, I have been getting check-in emails from her every week on Friday, telling me that she didn't like any of the guys she talked to that week for me, but has some prospects who sound great on paper in the pipeline to screen next week. I've gotten that message eight weeks in a row. And I'm now forced to wonder...</div>
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Is it always this hard?</div>
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This doesn't feel normal to me, that it should be so hard and take so long and so much effort to find someone who even wants to go on a second date with me, much less someone who wants to share his life with me. Or am I crazy and it is this hard for everyone?</div>
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Now, I'm not including people who have been divorced in this category, or people in long-term relationships who've never gotten married. Marriage isn't necessarily the end goal. And even if a partnership broke up, there was a partnership there at one point or another. </div>
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I also know that there have been a few people in my past who have had crushes, or even very deep feelings for me, but who have chosen to not pursue those feelings for one reason or another. While I treasure those people and honor those feelings, the end result from where I am sitting is that I have never had a full partnership with anyone for longer than a month or two (if a relationship can be considered a full partnership when you're only two months in). Is that normal?</div>
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I also find it interesting that people think I have never wanted a partner or never wanted to start my own family, have my own kids. I've always wanted those things. I've not wanted to settle for a partner who did not make me feel good about myself or our future together, which is why I often didn't date the same person for a very long time. And when one is single because it is better than the other options at hand, of course one is going to make the best of it. There is a lot about being single that is amazing and that I truly do enjoy. But to not find anyone, in nearly 42 years, who wants to fully invest in my life and let me fully invest in his? No one?</div>
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That feels strange to me.</div>
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So on resolution number three, I am feeling disheartened, disappointed, isolated, misunderstood, and very alone. I know I have my family - my mom is not my life partner, though. I know I have my friends - they all have life partners of their own, and I treasure my time with them, but I'm still an outsider in all of those relationships. And I know in my heart of hearts, that the older I get, the less likely I am to find someone, the less likely I am to be able to have the family I dreamed of starting when I was a little girl. Yes, I know I could adopt - if I suddenly become independently wealthy. Yes, I know I could meet someone awesome when I'm 70, so we have ten or fifteen years of health issues to go through together before we die. Neither of these is comforting thoughts to me. I'm not sure what would be comforting. Unless I retreat to my bubble of strength in solitude. Which I don't really want to do anymore. </div>
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Maybe just send out some positive energy in my direction?</div>
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Thank you.</div>
Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-43647515780046120322018-06-09T11:32:00.000-05:002018-06-09T18:49:20.856-05:00Depression is Not LogicalThis is going to be a difficult post to write, and likely a difficult one to read. Fair warning. I won't hold it against you if you stop reading now.<br />
<br />
There has been a lot in the news lately about people committing suicide. There have been a lot of suicides this year, as there are every year. And every time someone takes their own life, the battle cry seems to be, "Why didn't they just reach out?" Frank Turner wrote a song for one of his friends who took his own life, called "A Song for Josh” that starts out "Why didn't you call? My phone's always on." And honestly, as much as I love Frank Turner (I would follow that man to the ends of the earth), I hate him for asking that question. It feels like a logical question to ask - if you're hurting, why don't you get help? I get that. The thing is this:<br />
<br />
Depression is not logical.<br />
<br />
I know this from personal experience. I have battled depression since I was about fourteen years old, off and on. Each time it's on is different than the other times it's been on. Each time it turns off, it's because of something different. The one thread that I can find that ties each bout of depression together, that I learned in my most recent experience with it, is that it is never logical. So trying to fight it by drawing logical conclusions doesn't really work. It's like trying to have an ethical discussion with a psychopath - if you're not both coming from the place that murder is a bad thing, you're not going to be able to find much common ground in the course of a conversation about the death penalty.<br />
<br />
My most recent bout was bad. Worse than it has been in a decade? And while I know that some of the people around me noticed that something was a bit off, I don't know that any of them knew that I was trying to pick the least inconvenient day for me to die. So why didn't I reach out? Why didn't I call someone and talk about it? Bear with me on this because it's not going to sound logical to those of you who believe in logic, who are not struggling with depression. But like I said, depression is not logical.<br />
<br />
My depression manifested this time as a sense of complete disconnectedness. I felt as though I couldn't hold a thought in my head. The idea of trying to memorize my lines for the play I'm in was extraordinarily daunting because I couldn't find the train of thought in the words. My cat, typically my best friend and my favorite part of every day, looked just like any other cat to me - he wasn't my companion anymore, he was a strange cat sharing my living space. My friends would be talking about their lives, their problems, their joys and dramas, and all I could think was that none of it really matters in the long run because most of what we were talking about would change in a day anyway so why bother getting invested? I felt disconnected from my body, as I was trying to take really good care of it - eating right, exercising regularly - but it continued to be the same lump of flesh and hair and fat and bone that it has always been. I was disconnected from my own sexuality, having no drive or desire to try to connect with other human beings, nor any drive or desire to be attractive. The idea of me being at all attractive was laughable at best. I thought about trying to make myself more comfortable in my own space, but realized that it probably wasn't worth it to buy an actual bed because I wouldn't be around long enough to get a worthwhile return on investment out of it.<br />
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That was the thought that scared me. The complete and utter surrender of the desire to make future plans. I thought about all of the things I had/have going on - projects at work, the play that I'm in, concert tickets I had purchased a long time ago - and I started thinking through when they would all be over so that I could make my exit from this life without leaving anyone in the lurch, so to speak. Trying to find the least inconvenient day to die, so that hopefully it wouldn't be too much of a fuss for the people around me.<br />
<br />
Now, this was not the first time in my life I have wished that I could just stop existing. I spent most of high school in that place, some of college, and the thoughts come back from time to time as whispers of "what if you just cross the road anyway, even though that car is coming really fast?" And when I'm not in a full-on depression, I can keep those thoughts at bay. I've gotten used to these dark little thoughts that exist in my brain and I lovingly put them into a little box that gets filed away in a drawer. They are part of who I am. And in this last bout, I pulled out some of my normal tricks to try to help pack the thoughts away - reminding myself that my mother would be devastated if I took my life. Reminding myself that my cat would be left with no one to care for him, and really confused as to why his person wasn't around anymore. Reminding myself that I do have friends who love me.<br />
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But the illogical side of this depression countered with the fact that someone else would take care of Owen if something happened to me.<br />
<br />
The illogical side of this depression reminded me of how many family members we've lost in the past few years and that despite their losses, my mother is still alive and well. Meaning she would probably survive my loss, too.<br />
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At this point in my depression, I had friends inviting me out to do things, be social, hang out, and I politely declined the offers knowing that I was not in a good mindset to be hanging out with other people. Nobody wants to go out for a casual night of drinks and dancing with someone who knows for a fact that nothing matters, no one cares, and the only thing left to do is wait to die.<br />
<br />
So why didn't I reach out?<br />
<br />
First of all, if you can tell me how to start a conversation with, "So, I'm thinking I might not be alive anymore in about a month," without causing a panic, I'm all ears. If you can tell me how to segue to that part of the conversation while you're out for margaritas with your friends, I'm all ears. Allie Brosh makes some points in her <a href="http://hyperboleandahalf.blogspot.com/2013/05/depression-part-two.html" target="_blank">Depression #2</a> post that resonate really strongly with me about how these sorts of conversations tend to turn into the depressed person comforting the person to whom they reached out for help in the first place. People, in general, are not prepared to deal with it when a loved one comes to us and says, rather out of the blue, "I want to be dead." I know when I have told some people about my depressions in the past, it hasn't gone well. So I don't reach out to them in these moments because I know that my pain and my disconnectedness hurts them and a) I don't want to hurt them and b) I don't have the means to comfort them in those moments after I have just hurt them.<br />
<br />
So what about talking to someone who isn't quite so invested?<br />
<br />
I told a friend (not a super close friend, but a friend nonetheless) about two months ago, after my great aunt passed away in her sleep, that while I was sad that she was gone, I also found myself jealous that she was able to just stop existing. I had wished for that so many times myself, I was jealous that she was able to do it. For a bit more context, this friend and I had been talking about the general funks we were in, the lack of motivation we had, the tiredness we felt in life and dealing with things, so it wasn't an out of the blue comment - it flowed naturally in the course of the conversation. We also talked in that conversation about how this particular friend is typically not well received when being emotionally vulnerable with other people. So I tried being emotionally vulnerable to show that our friendship could have that. Since that conversation, I have not seen this person, despite inviting them to hang out a few times. We've talked a little bit via text, but in very short sentences and short replies, becoming less and less frequent.<br />
<br />
I went to a therapist once, many years ago during another bout of depression when I thought I should get some help. I prefaced the conversation with the therapist with the fact that my grandmother died of depression and dementia, as the anti-depressants she had been on for decades eventually started eating her brain, so I had no desire to be medicated, and specifically no desire to take Lithium. She let me talk for about 30 minutes, and then spent the second 30 minutes of my session trying to get me to agree to start taking Lithium.<br />
<br />
So my experiences with reaching out for help have not yielded positive results. I know of at least one instance with each of my dearest friends when I called in a moment of crisis and either got voice mail, or interrupted a dinner or something, and they asked if they could call me back, or something along those lines. Which is NOT THEIR FAULT. I'm not blaming them for having lives and living them. Please, if you're reading this and you think I'm angry or hurt because you had to call me back, please know that I know that there are things in your life that have to take precedence and I do not begrudge you those things in the slightest. But in the illogical brain space of depression, when you have convinced yourself that the world will keep turning and everyone will be okay eventually, even if you remove yourself from the world, the promise of a return phone call at a later date does little to allay those thoughts.<br />
<br />
Today, I am okay. My depression broke about two weeks ago. I felt it break, the way a fever breaks, and I wanted to spend that day laughing and crying for the relief of being able to think about the future again. I'm not fully "healed" - there's still a lot of scar tissue - and I don't know that I ever will be. Depression, like many diseases, is something that can be managed, but it never really goes away. I think, with this post, I wanted to try to share some insight into why people don't always reach out. Into why telling your depressed loved ones that you love them isn't always going to be the magical cure-all we all wish it could be. Into why I stopped hanging out with my friends for a couple of months and why I hope those friendships are not damaged beyond repair, but why I am having a hard time finding the right way to apologize for not hanging out. Depression is not logical. I can't pinpoint exactly what started this one, and I think the day I got out of it was the day I made a tiny bit of incremental progress on a project at work that felt, on that day, like a huge win. I don't know what is going to break each of my depressions, any more than I know what is going to kick them off. If I did, I'd avoid going through another one for the rest of my life.<br />
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Depression is not logical. It sounds easy to say "get help" when someone is depressed, but it's not always that simple. Please know that. And please don't give up on those of us who are hanging on by a thread if we need to find other ways to keep holding on.Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-82511545912229333032017-10-22T11:33:00.001-05:002017-10-22T11:33:53.839-05:00A Culture of NumbnessI find myself frustrated by other people lately, which is not a place I like to reside. Might sound funny, coming from an introvert, but I find I need to have some faith in other people in order to get through the day. I am happiest when I can believe the best about people, and humanity in general.<br />
<br />
So I've been thinking about what is causing my frustration, because I don't want to just write people off, either specific people or humanity in general. I feel like that is the easy way out of the situation, and then it hit me. That's the problem. Everyone wants the easy way out of the situation so that they don't have to deal with anything, and this is what is driving me nuts.<br />
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Humans are a funny lot. For the most part, we all want to be accepted, we all want to be loved, and we all want to be happy. The thing is, life is not made up of tulips and butterflies and unicorns all of the time. Shitty things happen. We get sad. We get depressed. We feel worthless. Other people are mean to us. We let other people take our personal power because we forget that we have any personal power. And no, those are not fun experiences - trust me, I say this from experience, it is not fun to be sad or depressed or worthless or powerless. I completely understand the desire to want to feel something other than any of those things. I've been guilty of trying to find the easy way out of those feelings myself. I eat for comfort. I close myself up in my room and wall myself off from the world. I disengage. And I call it "self-care," but really, they are palliative measures. They don't actually fix anything, but they allow me to feel better in the short term, when what I really need to be doing is focusing on the long term. Fixing the problems, not putting band-aids on top of band-aids.<br />
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This sort of came to a head for me this weekend, when someone else's ineptitude and lack of common sense messed up a project I have been working on for about a month, and I am the one tasked with straightening out the situation. I came to a couple of very important conclusions about myself, which are going to sound stupid because they are things we've all known all along, but I think they are worth reiterating:<br />
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1. I am ridiculously smart.<br />
2. I am ridiculously capable.<br />
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I know that I would have reacted to the situation in question by putting into use my problem solving skills, asking questions, and using logic to draw conclusions. Whereas the person who was in the situation defaulted to today's oh so popular attitude of "I can't even" and disengaged.<br />
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I don't want to disengage anymore.<br />
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I like feeling things, even crappy things, because it is the length and breadth of my emotional depth that proves I am alive.<br />
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Not to mention, I'm an actor. I need to have huge emotional depth.<br />
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So the things is this. I understand that there are people out there who have actual physical, emotional, or spiritual conditions that make "I can't even" a legitimate reason for them to not do things. For someone who is visually impaired, "I can't even see what you're referencing" is a perfectly legitimate statement. I get that. I'm not taking issue with that. For me, though, since I do not have such impairments, I'm going to stop using "I can't even." Because I can even. And I do even. And I choose to even. And I am also choosing to hold those who are capable of doing things, but are choosing to not do those things because they require a bit more effort than what said person is accustomed to, responsible for their non-actions.<br />
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I'm tired of "I can't even" being the popular battle cry of our nation. I would say "I can't even with I can't even," but that's not a true statement. I can deal with it. I am going to deal with it by not participating in the rampant disengagement, by choosing to live a life full of emotion instead of seeking a constant comfortable state of numbness, and by encouraging those who I know are capable to stay engaged by creating a safe and supportive environment wherein they can feel the good, the bad, and the ugly without judgement.<br />
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I can even.<br />
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Let's do this.Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-27954931542284562992017-06-18T20:34:00.000-05:002017-06-18T20:34:06.915-05:0040 Before 40We spend a lot of time making lists of things we still want to do with our lives. You can find I don't even know how many articles about 30 Things to do Before You Turn 30, or 30 Books to Read Before you Turn 30, or 30 Countries to Visit Before you Turn 30 or whatever. You name it, there is a listicle telling what you need to do before that magical day when you turn 30.<br />
<br />
Well, I'm about to leave my thirties for the next rather arbitrary adventure, and I'll be honest here, I've been having a bit of a rough go of it lately. Things were looking a bit grim and scary, and it was looking like I was going to kick off my fourth decade with nary a penny to my name, in desperate need of both a vacation and some new underwear. Thankfully, a lot of the things that were scary and grim sorted themselves out so I am okay for the time being (though always looking for opportunities for improvement). But I haven't quite gotten out of the funk of it. When I look at those lists of things I was supposed to have done by now, there is a lot I still have left to do.<br />
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So I think I need to look at it another way. Here is a list of 40 things I did before I turned 40, in no particular order, so I have it. So I know my life has not been wasted or misspent. So I know I have good stories to tell.<br />
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<ol>
<li>I played Hamlet.</li>
<li>I played King Lear.</li>
<li>I was in a play for two years straight (<i>Floss!</i>).</li>
<li>I starred in more than one movie.</li>
<li>I saw the Cubs win the World Series.</li>
<li>I caught Sam Mendes' attention with my very odd laugh.</li>
<li>I traveled to Australia by myself.</li>
<li>I traveled through Europe by myself.</li>
<li>I traveled through Europe with friends.</li>
<li>I saw the Grand Canyon and Mount Rushmore.</li>
<li>I fell in love.</li>
<li>I rode a camel.</li>
<li>I was sold for 80 camels while in Morocco.</li>
<li>I headlined the Elbo Room in Chicago playing songs I wrote with a band I put together.</li>
<li>I took second place in the Cabaret Division at the American Lindy Hop Championships with the Chicago Shag Team.</li>
<li>I got arrested for underage dancing.</li>
<li>I played my violin from memory in church when my pages were out of order.</li>
<li>I got cast in three plays within a month of moving to New York.</li>
<li>I moved to New York.</li>
<li>I made life-long friends.</li>
<li>I gave an epic best man speech at my best friend's wedding.</li>
<li>I met Frank Turner.</li>
<li>I spent a summer in Los Angeles.</li>
<li>I went to Comic Con. Twice.</li>
<li>I bought a car by myself.</li>
<li>I raised the sweetest of all possible sweet cats.</li>
<li>I built hats.</li>
<li>I got my first Shakespearean tattoo done by a lovely Polish man in Dublin, Ireland.</li>
<li>I made a dress out of paper clips and ribbon, and one out of playing cards.</li>
<li>I saw David Tennant play Richard II, saw David Bowie play <i>Fashion</i>, saw Moby, saw Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova (together and individually), saw Oingo Boingo, saw Tim Curry in <i>Spamalot</i>, saw <i>Once</i> in London.</li>
<li>I played all of the women in <i>As You Like It</i> (except Rosalind) at the same time.</li>
<li>I turned my year-long experiment with veganism into a 15-year (and counting) lifestyle change.</li>
<li>I broke someone's heart.</li>
<li>I got my heart broken.</li>
<li>I went into the ring at a capea. </li>
<li>I voted for the first African American president of the United States. Twice.</li>
<li>I wrote and directed a musical for children.</li>
<li>I did a touring puppet show.</li>
<li>I faced my fears of speaking in public and singing in public and interacting with other humans so that I could become and actor and a musician whose videos and music have been seen and heard around the world.</li>
<li>I made people laugh.</li>
</ol>
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Most of this stuff is not the kind of stuff that anyone else would look at and think anything of. It's not a resume that will land me in a hall of fame or win me awards. But I have done a lot with my life - this is by no means an exhaustive list. I'm not done with it, but I haven't been sitting around doing nothing. And considering that I started my life so scared of everything and so painfully shy, the fact that I am who I am now is pretty remarkable.</div>
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I'm not going to make a list of the next forty things I have to do before I turn 80. I'm going to see where my life takes me and hope for the best.</div>
Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-16516709720883978582017-03-08T11:53:00.000-06:002017-03-08T11:53:57.658-06:00As a Woman...Happy International Women's Day!<br />
<br />
To be honest, being a woman sucks.<br />
<br />
Yes, there are perks - we are allowed to have emotions, we are capable of creating life (a lot of us, anyway), we can multi-task, we get to wear bright colors. But in general, being a woman sucks. As a woman, I have been told to smile more, but not too much or it will be taken as suggestive, and not at the wrong people or it is an invitation for them to do whatever they want to me. I have been told that I'm too pretty to be considered average, but not pretty enough to be allowed to do a lot of the work as an actor I would love to do (i.e. I'm not lead actor material; I can only ever be the fat sidekick or the mom). I have been told that having an education and being intelligent is the key to opening whatever door I want, but when actually applying to jobs in the workplace, I should not include the fact that I am a member of Mensa on my resume because my particular intelligence is too intimidating. I have been told that my happiness is important to others, but when I express any sort of displeasure, I'm told to take the emotion out of it, get over it, and look at things logically. I can use logic and reason to explain why I am perfect for any number of roles, jobs, relationships, opportunities, but am consistently passed over because someone else isn't feeling it, or thinks I don't look right, or feels that someone else deserves the opportunity more than I. I have been told by many men that I am a dear, close, valued friend, as they covertly take in my physique, seeing me for my shape, recognizing how I make them feel, not listening to what I have to say, or aware of how they make me feel. In short, I am too pretty and not pretty enough; too smart and not smart enough; too qualified and not qualified enough; too logical and not logical enough; too empathetic and not empathetic enough; too old and not old enough; too helpful and not helpful enough; I fit perfectly but not well enough.<br />
<br />
With all of these messages coming at me from friends, employers, the media, fellow artists, I am left with the question of what the fuck do you want? Who the hell am I supposed to be?<br />
<br />
Because I can tell you who I am. I am a musician who has written songs that have helped people across the country (and even in other countries) through tough times in their lives. I am an artist who can make people laugh and cry and think. I am an actor who will fight like hell to be given the opportunity to play the roles I am most suited for regardless of whether or not that character was originally imagined with boobs. I am a friend who listens and supports and empathizes. I am a stage mom with more stage children than I can count, though I don't have any biological children of my own and likely never will. I am a woman who has traveled three continents on her own. I am the person people turn to when they need to get stuff done. I am the person people reach out to when they need a sympathetic or empathetic ear. I am a loving companion human to the most adorable cat in the world. I am an introvert who has learned how to put on an extrovert mask so I can function in your world so you don't have to try to understand mine. I am the person who will find passion for the things I need to do, even if they are not the things I want to do, so that I can support myself without inconveniencing others. I am the woman who persists. Because as women, that is what we do. We persist.<br />
<br />
Being a woman is hard. It takes a lot of courage, a lot of strength, a lot of energy, and a lot of resolve. In return, around the world, women are blamed for and held responsible for the sexual urges of men; women are persecuted and sold into slavery; women are treated as lesser, told that they are lesser; women are marginalized and paid less than men for the doing same jobs; and women continue to have to fight for basic rights like access to healthcare and the right to make their own choices - rights nobody would even consider revoking for men. And when we stand up for ourselves, we are told that we are ugly, unwanted, unloveable, threatening, pushy, bitchy, crazy, and whiny. But at least we can buy pink phones.<br />
<br />
To all of the brave, beautiful, brilliant people in my life who identify as women (even just some of the time), I love you and I have your back. I stayed home and wore red today in the hopes that doing so will have some small impact, will make someone think about what their life would be if I was not in it. For some, there will likely be no change. Hopefully a few noticed and would prefer a world with me in it. Hopefully a lot noticed a lack of women today, and would prefer a world with women in it and will work a little bit harder to make being a woman not suck so much.<br />
<br />
Happy International Women's Day.<br />
<br />
Let's shoot for International Women's Year.Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-5723329457487214832017-02-19T21:05:00.000-06:002017-02-19T21:05:26.580-06:00CourageI've been thinking about courage a lot lately, because I know a lot of people who have been talking about it - doing courageous things, sharing times when they were courageous, honoring others who have been courageous, thanking those who gave them courage. And the thought that keeps going through my head in response to all of this is that it takes an incredible amount of courage to be me.<br />
<br />
Now, before anybody jumps down my throat, I think it takes a lot of courage to be a lot of people, especially in today's political climate. I'm not just talking about the protestors, either, the people out in the streets standing up for what they believe is right. I think it must take an extraordinary amount of courage for Betsy DaVos to get out of bed in the morning and go in to do a job an entire country knows she is not qualified to do. I'm not saying she gets bonus points for doing it, as I am part of that country full of people who knows she is not qualified for the position she was given; I'm saying it takes courage for her to show up and try and fail so consistently. So I'm not trying to toot my own horn by saying I'm courageous. I know a lot of other people are, too, and probably in bigger ways than I am. But it still takes a lot of courage to be me.<br />
<br />
I was listening to some people talk about courageous moments in their life not too long ago, so of course I started thinking about courageous moments in mine. One woman talked about growing up with a name that everyone made fun of. I can absolutely relate to that. As she was talking, I started to think about what I would talk about had I been asked to talk about courage, and I found myself stuck with too many options.<br />
<ul>
<li>My first date, I asked him out.</li>
<li>I asked out my date to prom.</li>
<li>The first time I went to a movie by myself was on homecoming night of my senior year of high school.</li>
<li>I stepped into the ring at a capea and got run over by the bull.</li>
<li>I asked my mom to teach me how to play the guitar because singing in front of people terrifies me.</li>
<li>I have said "I love you" to two men who did not say it back.</li>
<li>I traveled Europe on my own.</li>
<li>I traveled Australia on my own.</li>
<li>I moved 800 miles away from my friends and family to pursue the impossible dream.</li>
<li>I wake up every morning knowing that my pursuit of that dream has made me a failure and a disappointment in the eyes of some of my family members.</li>
<li>I am an actor who has been turned down by so many productions, I can't even count them anymore.</li>
<li>I took myself to the emergency room after I fainted (a couple of days later, but still) to get myself checked out.</li>
<li>I learned how to roller skate in my mid-thirties to be in a play, and ultimately broke my ankle on stage during said play, but finished the performances anyway, as best I could.</li>
<li>I opened <i>King Lear</i> on the night my uncle died, grieving him on stage because that was the only place I could grieve him.</li>
<li>I fought to play King Lear. I fought to play Hamlet. I continue to fight to play the roles I am meant to play, regardless of the gender for which they were written.</li>
<li>I shaved my head for a storefront theatre production that got the worst review of any show I have ever been in.</li>
<li>I entered into one of the most fulfilling friendships of my life with a woman I had never met in person, but talked to on fan message boards for a musician we both like.</li>
<li>I played the entire middle section of a choral piece on the violin from memory because my pages were out of order.</li>
<li>I bought a car by myself.</li>
<li>I wake up most mornings feeling physically repulsive and like most people would prefer that I wasn't there.</li>
</ul>
<div>
I don't get bonus points for any of this, and I don't deserve bonus points for any of it. I know a lot of people have been through much, much worse. But I can tell you that all of these little, daily acts of courage (like me going to the park today to play music outside) are exhausting. And I'm tired.</div>
<div>
<br /></div>
<div>
At the moment, on top of everything else, I am experiencing the death of a dream. A dream that should be so simple, a dream that so many people have and so many people achieve. A dream that everyone in my family has achieved, but I know I never will. In saying that, I know the response is that I am still young, that there is still time, that I could still achieve it. But I know, in my heart of hearts that I won't. I have tried. I have pursued it since I was about four years old from every angle I could think of. It fueled so much of my youth, so many conversations, so much drama, so many friendships. I know now, though, that it wasn't the right dream for me. Logically, I know that. But it hurts when a dream dies. No matter how much you know you need to let it go, it hurts when a dream dies.</div>
<div>
<br /></div>
<div>
So at the moment, it is taking even more courage than usual to be me. And it is making me very tired. I am trying to distract myself with the things that I love - theatre, music, my cat, Doctor Who, baseball. But at the end of the day, I'm in mourning, and probably will be for a little while longer.</div>
<div>
<br /></div>
<div>
So here is one more act of courage. My <a href="http://www.seturlington.com/" target="_blank">brilliant and talented friend</a> took some amazing photos of me about a month ago. We spent an afternoon shuffling through jewelry and lighting and make up and accessories, and the work she did is truly gorgeous. She took a few pictures of my newest tattoo (one that I got with a friend waiting in the wings, but no hand to squeeze). They are gorgeous, but I know that this one in particular might be a bit shocking for some people to see because they've not seen that much of me before. I think it is important to share it, in part to share her beautiful work. But also to show that beauty does not have to be an 18-year-old who is a size two. And also to remind myself that my existence is still valid, knowing that this dream will not come true. I'm still worth something, because I can help create art. I can spread a body-positive message. I can be the voice that someone else needs to hear.</div>
<div>
<br /></div>
<div>
It takes a lot of courage to be me, to live every day in my skin. But you know what? I'm not dead yet.</div>
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Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-32116074852974691342016-11-03T20:43:00.002-05:002016-11-03T20:43:43.546-05:00SomedayI don't remember the exact moment when I fell in love with the Cubs. The same way a person doesn't remember learning to love their parents or learning to chew solid food. I know that logically, there must have been a time in my life when I didn't know what the Cubs were, but I don't remember that time at all. I only ever remember being a Cubs fan.<br />
<br />
I remember the little white transistor radio my mom had that only got AM stations, that she would use to listen to Cubs games. I remember Harry Caray and Steve Stone calling the games, and I remember being sad when Harry died, but relieved that he would never have to try to pronounce "Grudzielanek" or "Samardzija" backwards.<br />
<br />
I remember going to my first Cubs game with my grandmother, my mom, and my brother, and letting the magic of Wrigley Field wash over me. That magic still exists there, every day, every time I walk into the stands. That first view of the field sets everything right with the world. Time stops. We are all made equal. We are all there to enjoy our time watching baseball, eating snacks we otherwise wouldn't allow ourselves, and cheering for our boys in pinstripes.<br />
<br />
I remember my first Cubs crush on Shawon Dunston, soon to be followed by Kerry Wood, Mark DeRosa, and after a year of not allowing myself to like him because he had been with the Marlins who beat us the year before, Derrick Lee. I remember feeling a special bond with Keith Moreland because of the similarity of our last names, even though we've never met.<br />
<br />
I remember getting excited in 1984, in 2003, in 2008, and in 2015, when it looked like we might finally win it all. I remember thinking that we were the best, no matter how many errors we made, how few runs we scored, or how the stats stacked up against us. I remember being devastated each time when what looked so easy for everyone else turned out to be so hard for us.<br />
<br />
But mostly, I remember the love. I've been asked many times what the big deal is about the Cubs. They don't put on the offensive show that a lot of American League teams do, with fireworks going off for every home run. Wrigley is an old stadium, falling apart in places, that is missing the state of the art food courts and LED banners that tell us when to stand up and make noise. "It's just a baseball team." Except it's not. It is hope. It is a dream. It is a light that lets us know that no matter what happens today, there will be a tomorrow. There will be another chance. From Harry Caray to Pat Hughes, the fans are always brought into the games, welcomed as if each and every moment of each and every game could be the turning point that we've all been waiting for for 108 years. We lose, and we brush ourselves off and come back and play again. It has to take a lot of love for players like Kerry Wood and Greg Maddux to want nothing more than to come back to the Cubs to finish their careers, for men like Ernie Banks to dedicate themselves to the team and the organization long after retirement. It has to take a lot of heart to still show up to the ballpark and to still play as hard as you can every game for over a century without getting the one thing millions of people are hoping, dreaming, willing into existence - a World Series title. Because if we have the title, then maybe other people will finally listen when we say the Cubs are the best team in baseball. They always have been.<br />
<br />
For my grandmother who lived her whole life without seeing the Cubs win it all.<br />
For my mother who filled our house with baseball even before I knew what baseball was.<br />
For Harry Caray who assured us that this day would come, as sure as God made little green apples, even though he's not here to see it.<br />
For Ron Santo, who I'm sure would have had a heart attack in the booth if he had tried to call this series.<br />
For Ernie Banks, who taught us all to be kind and gracious and to keep playing no matter what.<br />
For Wood, Prior, DeRosa, Dawson, Lazzeri, Gossage, Sandberg, Maddux, Durham, Sutcliffe, Lee, Jenkins, Dunston, Dempster, Zambrano, Johnson, Barrett, Alou, Williams, Dean, Lindstrom, Zimmer, Wilson, Sutter, Boa, Smith, Moreland, Pappas, Brock, Ramirez, Kelly, Hornsby, Grace, Davis, Cey, and Brown who gave it their everything and never quite got there.<br />
For Tinker.<br />
For Evers.<br />
For Chance.<br />
<br />
This one is for you. This is your win. This is your year.<br />
<br />
Thank you.<br />
<br />
I don't remember the exact moment I fell in love with this team. I know I will never love another team in the same way. I will always be grateful that I got to see them make history, even from afar. Because if the Cubs can win the World Series, what else is possible?<br />
<br />
Everything.Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-47299935650312035812016-09-01T18:01:00.001-05:002016-09-01T18:01:43.743-05:00Seven ThirtyTwo years ago today, I drive into Brooklyn with an address and a car full of crap to start my new adventure. One year ago today, I wrote a basic recap of how things went in the first year. In my second year in New York, <div><br></div><div>• I got a promotion at work, went from supporting seven people to seven and a half to four to seven and will soon (hopefully) be just supporting three. </div><div>• I did shows in rep for the first time, which wasn't as odd as one might think, since I had done different shows at the same time before. </div><div>• I did my first Shakespearean history play, and was a guest on a YouTube show about Shakespeare.</div><div>• I went through another bout of depression that nearly kicked my ass. </div><div>• I worked really hard, and continue to work hard, to climb out of that depression and I'm proud of the progress I've made. </div><div>• I gave great auditions and was not cast; I gave great auditions and got cast; I got lambasted for being cast; I got praised for landing certain roles. </div><div>• I sang at an audition. </div><div>• I spent lots of time with friends and saw more of the city. I even saw more of New Jersey and Boston and Connecticut.</div><div><br></div><div>What I keep coming back to, though, is that in Chicago, I had a day job, did some theatre on nights and weekends, and hung out with my friends. In New York, I have a day job, I do some theatre on nights and weekends, and I hang out with friends. I am, essentially living the same life here that I did there, just with different people cast in the roles of boss, friend, and colleague. And my apartment in Chicago was much nicer (no offense to my current roommate - I love her to death - but my last place in Chicago had a dishwasher. We barely have kitchen counter space and don't have screens on the windows).</div><div><br></div><div>So what does this mean?</div><div><br></div><div>It means I'm a capable person. It means I'm a likable person. It means I know (at least to some extent) who I am. I have gotten more comfortable in my own skin out here. There's something about starting over with people who don't know your history and still being able to form connections, break down barriers, and build relationships, that gives a person a different kind of confidence. But I think it also means I need to up my game. If I'm living the same life in either place, why not live it closer to my family and closer to Wrigley Field? </div><div><br></div><div>I need something big to happen; something big to change. I said I was going to give New York three years and I intend to do that. But without some big deciding factor keeping me here...</div><div><br></div><div>Things need to change. And I know I'm the only one who can make them change. </div><div><br></div><div>So game on. </div>Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-54575970511013608982016-08-31T17:08:00.001-05:002016-08-31T17:08:08.502-05:00Seven Twenty NineTwo years ago today, I said what was probably the hardest goodbye of my life as I packed my cat and the last of my things into my car and drove away from my heartbroken mother, sobbing my eyes out. My thought was that if I didn't give the whole "living in New York" thing a try at least once in my life, at least for a little while, I would regret it. So to leave a job that made me miserable, and to go in search of my dreams, I left my apartment that I loved, my family who I adore, and my friends who are dear to me as if they were family, and I set out for Brooklyn. <div><br></div><div>Two years ago today, I think I stopped crying for real somewhere in Indiana, though I let the bouts of tears come as they needed to throughout the day. </div><div><br></div><div>Two years ago, I stopped at a hotel in Pennsylvania to give myself and my terrified cat a bit of a rest. When I stepped out to get myself some dinner, he crept out of his cat carrier and hid behind the headboard so when I got back to the room, it looked like he was gone. I nearly lost it, and then apologized profusely for stuffing pillows behind the headboard, robbing him of his hiding spot, his safe space in his world that had completely turned upside down, so that I would know where he was. </div><div><br></div><div>Two years ago today, I asked myself a millions times what the fuck I was doing. </div><div><br></div><div>Today, I woke up to my cat and snuggled with him for a few minutes before getting out of bed. He followed me through my morning routine like he always does, and I kissed his head before I left the apartment, reminding him for the umpteenth time today that I love him. </div><div><br></div><div>Today, I went to work at a job where the people value me and respect my opinion. I talked to colleagues about exciting things and challenges up ahead. I was tasked with another fun research project, and I helped welcome a new employee to the office. I didn't get everything done that needs to get done, but I did a lot. I was useful. I was helpful. I was kind and made others smile. </div><div><br></div><div>Today, the cast for the show I am starring in this December was posted. I shared the news and pictures on Facebook to a slew of likes and loves from friends and family, both in New York and elsewhere.</div><div><br></div><div>Today, one of the dearest friends I have asked if she could borrow my car for a shopping trip to Long Island. Knowing it is good for my car to be driven more than I drive her these days, I said sure. </div><div><br></div><div>Today, I am on the train back to Brooklyn after work to study Shakespeare and see if anyone wants to join me for dinner tomorrow night. </div><div><br></div><div>Today, I have asked myself a million times what the fuck am I doing. </div><div><br></div><div>My journey two years ago was split in two - one day leaving and one day arriving. For me, the anniversary of the journey should be split in two, as well. One day remembering everything it took to get me here, and one honoring what I've built. Tomorrow, I'll have more to say about where I am and where I'm going. But today, I'm missing my home and my friends and my family and the life I had in Chicago. Today, I'm thinking about what I gave up. Tomorrow, I'll be thinking about if it has been worth it. </div>Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-52942100561477644392016-05-06T11:13:00.000-05:002016-05-06T11:13:26.128-05:00SemanticsI'm not sure when it became a "thing," but I'm noticing a trend where people who, I presume, are trying to be politically correct, refer to women as "females." Probably most notably in the <i>Kimmy Schmidt</i> open titles, "Females are strong as hell." What I'm not seeing is a corresponding switch from "men" to "males." This bothers me.<br />
<br />
It's semantics, I know, but words have power and carry weight and bring certain connotations with them. I know there was a movement a while ago to get away from the word "woman" as it contains "man," and I get it. But by the same token, "movement" contains "men" and we didn't change that to "movemynt," because at a certain point it all gets silly. There are only 26 letters in the English language alphabet and to try to avoid any and all combinations of "m-e-n" and "m-a-n" gets ridiculous.<br />
<br />
What bothers me about replacing "woman" with "female" is that is takes the humanity out of the equation. "Female" is a very scientific term, used to define the member of the species capable of producing eggs and bearing children. "Woman" is the word used to describe a <i>human</i> female. The same as adult male chickens are roosters and adult female chickens are hens, adult male humans are men, and adult female humans are women. To call women "females," to me, takes away the specificity of what species we are, which is, in my opinion, even more degrading that the fact that the letters "m-a-n" exist in the word "woman."<br />
<br />
Biologically, yes, I am female. Transgender women identify as female as well. But I think all of us would like to think of ourselves as more than a set of sex organs, which is what the term "female" implies to me, and which is why I prefer the word woman. It gets even stickier when we note that men are not being called "males," implying that men are humans with complex lives and thoughts and fears and language abilities - all of the lovely things that make humans humans. We are, again, widening the gap between men and women, allowing one gender to be human and the other to be defined exclusively by its gender.<br />
<br />
Granted, this also doesn't allow for agendered individuals, as much of the English language was developed at a time when we thought of gender as more of a binary system as opposed to the spectrum we now understand it to be. But perhaps, instead of allowing men to be human, women to be sex organs, and agendered individuals to feel completely out of place, we need to develop three new words - or six new words, or twelve new words or whatever - that better describe the variations of human existence, as opposed to further alienating more than half of the population.<br />
<br />
Just a thought. From a woman.Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-48074009633598607842016-02-28T23:12:00.001-06:002016-02-28T23:12:49.351-06:00What I Learned from Tonight's Academy AwardsThey mentioned at the start of the Academy Awards this year that they were going to do things in a different order, to reflect how movies are made. According to the Academy, this is how you make a movie:<div><br></div><div>1. Write an original script. </div><div>2. If you can't find one, borrow some source material and try that instead. </div><div>3. Cast a woman to be in the background.</div><div>4. Clothe her. Preferably in period clothing. </div><div>5. Bring in a production designer and set designer so you can figure out what the movie should look like. </div><div>6. Find a make-up artist and a hair stylist for your supporting actress (who is the only performer currently attached to the project, and therefore the most important).</div><div>7. Find someone to shoot the movie. Preferably someone who knows where the most beautiful places on the planet are. </div><div>8. Have someone edit the film. Which somehow has been shot with one actor and no director, but one hell of a production team. </div><div>9. Fix and enhance the sound generated by your kickass design team, beautiful locations, and supporting actress. </div><div>10. Go back and manipulate the sounds that haven't been generated yet, but should be there so your locations and supporting actress sound even better. </div><div>11. Hire Andy Serkis. No, wait, sorry. Get a visual effects artist so nobody notices you only have one supporting actress.</div><div>12. Go back and fill in any tech gaps that might have made your filming easier. </div><div>13. Say "fuck it" and animate the whole thing instead. But keep it short because animation is hard and takes a long time. </div><div>14. Realize that it is easier to make an animated film than something live action with only one supporting actress, so make an animated feature. </div><div>15. Find a guy who might look good in the background of the movie you were originally making and cast him to fill in some of the scenes your supporting actress wasn't in. </div><div>16. Splice together your footage about making a movie with a design team and one actor (actress, excuse me) into a short documentary. </div><div>17. Try your hand at a full length documentary because you have a lot of footage of beautiful places and sound clips lying about, so why not?</div><div>18. Realize that you have enough footage of your locations and background actors to make a short film, so give that medium a go before dedicating yourself to a feature. </div><div>19. Outsource your movie to another country to see if that helps. </div><div>20. Find someone to write the music that will set the tone for your film. </div><div>21. Hire a pop star to write a song to play over your end credits. </div><div>22. Find a director. </div><div>23. Cast a leading lady. </div><div>24. Cast a leading man. </div><div>25. Find producers because bam! You have a movie! Win all the awards!</div><div><br></div><div>Now, I've not made big budget Hollywood movies, but at the very least, I know that nine times out of ten, the leading man is cast before the leading lady. And films are usually edited after the director, producers, and actors have been hired. But maybe it is my insistence on doing things a certain way that has stunted my career thus far. Maybe I'll try doing it Hollywood's way and see what happens. </div><div><br></div><div>Congrats to those who go home with little gold statues tonight! Maybe if I play along, I'll get to join you someday. </div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div><br></div>Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-30144006093056010152016-02-13T13:43:00.001-06:002016-02-13T13:43:13.170-06:00UpdateThere has been a lot on my mind lately, and a lot going on in my world, so I thought it time for an update, even if it is rather vague.<br />
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As happens often in life, the place you think you're going changes suddenly as a result of things that are not under your control. Relationships change, responsibilities changes, desires change. Generally speaking, change is good. I truly believe that. But change in one area of one's life can affect the things that one doesn't want to change in other areas and that's when things get tricky.<br />
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I feel like I've fallen off course. In some respects, it has been a gradual shift over, say, the past year, and I'm just now trying to right myself. I came to New York to pursue my artistic dreams. Some things that looked like great opportunities turned out to be the wrong opportunities for me. Some relationships that looked like they could have been beneficial turned out to be somewhat toxic. And one fantastic opportunity in my non-artistic life has started to pull me away from what I love most.<br />
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I'm taking steps to get back on track. I've been looking at what is most important to me and where I want my life to go. In a lot of ways, I feel like I started all of this way too late - what would have happened if I had come to New York in my early twenties? Where would my career be now? And that pressure has me thinking that I don't have time to fall off my path again. So I'm weeding out the relationships that are getting in the way of my goals, be they personal or professional, and I am setting out to reclaim me. Which sounds harsh, but I don't know how else to get my mojo back.<br />
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These are the things I know to be true, and the things I need to remember and remind myself on a daily basis:<br />
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I am a talented performer.<br />
I am ridiculously smart and have valuable things to say.<br />
I don't know everything, and that's okay.<br />
I am loved and valued.<br />
I am a complete human being despite my lack of a romantic partner.<br />
In order to stay balanced, I need theatre, I need tea, and I need intellectual stimulation.<br />
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And just for fun, one thing I wish other people knew to be true:<br />
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Not all vegans are gluten-free. Gluten-free does not automatically mean vegan.<br />
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Here's hoping 2016 is righted soon.<br />
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<br />Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-41272033175379551372015-12-28T17:05:00.001-06:002015-12-28T17:05:57.362-06:00Goals 2016<div><span style="font-family: 'Helvetica Neue Light', HelveticaNeue-Light, helvetica, arial, sans-serif;">Last year, I posted a list of my artistic goals for 2015 in the hopes that writing them down would help me achieve them. I did about half of them. I played my guitar out in public (at a gig, not an open mic), I performed in more than three shows that were not projects of my own making, and I landed a couple of roles that got me noticed by critics. I did not make my acting or voice over demo reels, and I haven't finished a play's worth of <i>Stop Hating Shakespeare</i> episodes yet, but you know what? That's okay. My priorities changed a bit as the year went along and that is fine. </span></div><div><br></div><div>I liked having some defined artistic goals for the year, though, so I'm going to post a few more that I'd like to focus on in 2016.</div><div><br></div><div>1. Finish two plays worth of <i>Stop Hating Shakespeare</i> episodes. I've started one play and am having fun with it, so I'd like to finish this play's worth by February or March. Which should leave me plenty of time to tackle a second play next year, too. </div><div><br></div><div>2. Perform in at least three shows that are not my own projects. I like this goal and want to recycle it from last year to remind myself to keep trying. If we're getting fancy, I'd like at least one to be contemporary and one to be Shakespeare.</div><div><br></div><div>3. Sing at an audition. I don't know that I'm ready to audition for musicals just yet, but it wouldn't hurt to prepare for it and then give it a shot. </div><div><br></div><div>4. Learn to play the accordion. Perhaps even take some lessons in order to do so. </div><div><br></div><div>5. Learn to play "To Take You Home" on the guitar. It is one of my favorite Frank Turner songs, the tabs are online, it's just a bit more complicated than I'm used to. I would like to instill in me the discipline to tackle something challenging like that and master it. </div><div><br></div><div>6. Get cast in an off-Broadway show. I'm ready for this. Just have to figure out how to make it happen. </div><div><br></div><div>Those are good for now. A couple of simpler ones that are totally in my control, a couple more challenging ones that will make me get out there in front of others. And if I can do all of them, a pretty artistically fulfilling year.</div><div><br></div><div>Happy (almost) 2016, everybody. Here's to crossing all of our goals off of our lists!</div>Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-48479558458381276072015-11-26T08:23:00.000-06:002015-11-26T08:23:00.268-06:00ThanksgivingHappy Thanksgiving!<br />
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I have a lot to be thankful for at this time in my life, so it felt only natural to come out of blogging hibernation to talk about some of it. For the past few months, I have been feeling particularly blessed, and I want to honor that for a minute. Apologies if this gets really sappy.<br />
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I am thankful for my cat. I told him this morning all of the things about him that I am thankful for - that he didn't die that first night he stayed with me when he was so sick, that he eats his food every day, that he moved to New York with me and put up with an apartment that had no windows, that he trusts me. He melts my heart every day, even when he's driving me nuts, and for his existence and companionship, I am forever grateful.<br />
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I am thankful for my family. Yes, they are 1,000 miles away, but the love and generosity and support they provide even from that far away is mind-blowing. I am including in this group family through marriage/committed relationship as well. My family is truly a quality group of people and I am so lucky to be part of that.<br />
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I am thankful for my Chicago friends, who still love me even though I moved 1,000 miles away and still include me in the little inside jokes and funny email chains. They are some of the best people I have ever known, and I treasure them, even though I don't get to see them as often as I would like.<br />
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I am thankful that my best friend has found his person and that they are going to spend the rest of their lives together.<br />
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I am thankful for my roommate and my New York friends who live upstairs. They have become so dear to me in the short time that I have known them because of their honesty and generosity and love. Had I not met them, New York would not feel like the home it is. And I'm grateful that I get to spend Thanksgiving with them, celebrating both vegan and non-vegan food.<br />
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I am thankful for my job. So beyond thankful, I don't have the words to tell you. I have found a place in New York where I can be helpful and giving, where the people around me are also helpful and ridiculously generous, and where together, we get to do things that change the conversation. Maybe not in huge, earth-shattering ways, but in smaller ways that are absolutely intended to <a href="http://ny.eater.com/2015/10/14/9517747/danny-meyer-no-tipping-restaurants" target="_blank">improve quality of life</a>. I have never had a day job make me feel so welcome, so cared for, so appreciated in my life. I had no idea such a place existed and I am thankful every day that I found it, and that they all embraced me with open arms.<br />
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I am thankful that I have found other theatre artists in New York who let me practice my craft with them. I am thankful for the conversations about Shakespeare, the bonding over geeky things, and the freedom to play and be completely vulnerable. I am thankful for all of the audience members who have come to the shows I've done, and humbled by those who, without knowing who I am, make a point of letting me know after a performance that they appreciated my work.<br />
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I am thankful for my apartment that is warm enough, my legs that always get me where I need to be, and all of the little things around me that help me remember to enjoy exactly where I am. The last minutes and lost evenings. The art and music and life that surrounds me. The tiny, fleeting moments of connection and truth.<br />
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I am thankful for my life.<br />
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I am thankful for you.<br />
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Wherever you are, whatever you are doing today, please have a safe and happy Thanksgiving.<br />
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<br />Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-34154524427942766612015-09-01T07:15:00.001-05:002015-09-01T15:42:00.865-05:00September 1 - One YearOne year ago yesterday, I said the most difficult goodbye I have ever said as I drove away from my mom and my home. I cried all the way to Indiana.<br />
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One year ago today, I drove into Brooklyn with my cat, and was greeted by a policeman who asked me why the hell I would ever move to Brooklyn. </div>
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It has been quite a year, and honestly, I am much more emotional about it today than I thought I would be and it's not even 8:00am. I've done a lot, been through a lot, learned a lot. This is not an all-inclusive list, but in the past year:</div>
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• I went from living on own to living with other people and managed to not completely implode despite some of the people being truly awful.</div>
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• I found a job where they pay me to be nice and make other people smile, though I had to spend a very long piece of time working with a truly awful woman first before I found the good job. </div>
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• I appeared in five full-length theatrical productions, playing a total of fourteen characters; one monologue festival; and two short play festivals. </div>
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• I became a member of a <a href="http://ivytheatre.com/" target="_blank">theatre company</a>.</div>
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• I sang in not only three of my five shows, but in Central Park and on my front stoop for total strangers. </div>
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• I got a mention in a New York theatre <a href="http://nytheatreguide.com/2015/06/off-off-broadway-review-as-you-like-it-at-alchemical-theatre-lab/" target="_blank">review</a>. A good mention. </div>
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• I lost my backpack when some asshat stole it out of my moving van. </div>
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• I saw shows on Broadway and off. And off-off. </div>
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• I found a decent apartment with light and windows where my cat and I can be comfortable and I can cook in the kitchen. </div>
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• I befriended some wonderful people, including my upstairs neighbors who are two of the most lovely, caring, giving, thoughtful people.</div>
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• I walked probably a thousand miles all over Manhattan. </div>
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• I went out places by myself and found people to talk to. </div>
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• I recorded a song in a studio. </div>
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• I learned that I am much stronger, more capable, smarter, and more resilient than I thought I was. </div>
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• I missed my Chicago friends and family and life more than I can say. </div>
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I wonder a bit of the life I'm building here is just like the life I had in Chicago, just elsewhere, and I'm wondering if I'm okay with that. Should I have taken the steady day job that keeps me funded instead of staying a temp so I would have more time to audition? Should I have gone to more EPAs? Should I be working harder to build a foundation to become a full time artist? </div>
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I think the reality of it is a financial question. I have to live somewhere and I have to eat so I have to do something that pays me regularly. And as far as steady jobs go, the one I have is not bad. The people are lovely and the work itself is fine. But I think in the next year, I need to make sure I don't lose sight of my theatrical goals as I grow within this non-theatrical company. </div>
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To that end, I am thrilled to announce that I will be appearing in <i>King Richard 2</i> and <i>Romeo & Juliet</i> this October/November with <a href="http://www.hamletisntdead.com/" target="_blank">Hamlet Isn't Dead</a>. And I still have my own projects churning in the back of my head. </div>
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I said when I moved out here that I would give it three years before I seriously consider the question of whether I want to spend the rest of my life in New York or if I want to go back to Chicago, or elsewhere. I'm one-third of the way through my experiment and having a lot of fun, finding a lot of value in the adventure. </div>
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But for today, I am going to feel all of the feels as I remember driving away from my mom last year on one of the hardest days of my life. Happy anniversary to me. </div>
Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-9262195422086295182015-05-29T17:07:00.001-05:002015-05-29T17:07:20.490-05:00Casual IntimacyA couple of weeks ago, I was lucky enough to see one of my favorite musicians play a free show in a little bar in Brooklyn. It was exactly what I needed just then to reinforce my faith in my badassery. I saw on Twitter that he was going to be out and about, so I emailed him to find out where. He responded within an hour and I made a plan to get to the show come hell or high water. It was a great show. He played so many of the songs I needed to hear, and it was just him with a guitar, which was lovely. Not that I don't like his band - I do, very much - but the intimacy of a solo acoustic show in a little divey hipster bar in Williamsburg...it was perfect. After the show, he was outside smoking a cigarette and talking to fans and I managed to grab him for my daily selfie. He put his arm around me, leaned into the picture, and when we went to let go, he very casually kissed the top of my head before walking away to talk to someone else. To be clear, I'm not insinuating that this meant anything. If you asked him, he wouldn't even know he had done it, in part because he was very drunk, and in part because it was as natural a motion to him as blinking. You've got your arm around a friend who is shorter than you, and when you let go, you first give a little squeeze and kiss them on the top of the head. It's an easy target and a common motion. For me, it was kind of a surreal moment. To meet this man and be treated like, I don't know what, an equal? A person? It was lovely. I know it meant nothing to him, but from my end, it was lovely. And lately, when I have been feeling stressed and sad, I just remember that one time when Frank Turner kissed the top of my head and it makes me smile. <div><br></div><div>See, the last man who I tried to date also had this habit of kissing the top of my head, or my forehead, or my cheek, when we were out and about. With him, it was a different kind of intimacy, an acknowledgment that right then, in that moment, I was his and he was happy to have me there. Yes, it had a smattering of Jeff Winger patting Annie on the head, but it was sweet. It was different from other men I've tried dating. It was, to me, an almost more intimate gesture than a "larger" display of affection would have been. And if we're being completely honest here, it might be what I miss most now that I don't see him anymore. We did not part on bad terms - it just fizzled because of insane schedules - so when I remember the nice things, they do make me ache a little bit. And what I miss most is the little stuff. The beautiful, tiny, casual intimacy that a kiss on the top of the head can be. </div><div><br></div><div>I will find the little intimacies again; it just takes time to find the right people in a new city. But if Frank Turner can kiss me on the top of the head, there has to be someone else in this city of eight million people who will, too. Right?</div><div><br></div><div><div class="separator" style="clear: both;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg5wlvNQkwMm6yNxEXYwLUTfbNxhuC47vJAQ1Ild3FnRH_XxwinkSmxb6zec4Os0fc8-WV7tSy1CtxHAljZ0hPNdhNuP1mK-tpGS89KHn4PxzMndNAsFTK_P4ztQL98JoHUYY6d/s640/blogger-image-415865991.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg5wlvNQkwMm6yNxEXYwLUTfbNxhuC47vJAQ1Ild3FnRH_XxwinkSmxb6zec4Os0fc8-WV7tSy1CtxHAljZ0hPNdhNuP1mK-tpGS89KHn4PxzMndNAsFTK_P4ztQL98JoHUYY6d/s640/blogger-image-415865991.jpg"></a></div><br></div><div><br></div>Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-35309623953964541022015-05-18T11:30:00.000-05:002015-05-18T11:30:14.093-05:00DiversityDiversity!<br />
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It's a catch word now that stands for empowerment and growth and strength and tolerance and acceptance and all of that stuff. We need diversity in the workplace! We need diversity on television! We need diversity in film!<br />
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Yes, yes we do. And we need diversity in our everyday lives, too.<br />
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Now, please don't take this the wrong way because I am a feminist and I am all about equal rights for everyone. But I do sometimes wonder if our cries for diversity actually end up segregating us more than they bring us together. For example, if I'm going to be a crusader for women's rights, I'm probably going to surround myself with other women so we can encourage and empower each other, right? And if I then decide that it is really women of color who need my support, I'm going to find a group of women of color that I can belong to and help out. And then if it turns out that I find that the rights of lesbian women of color, or transgender women of color is really what I'm passionate about, I'll seek out those groups that I can help and support. So now I'm surrounded by lesbian and/or transgender women of color who are different to me (because I'm not lesbian, transgender, or of color), which would seem to be a good thing because diversity, yay! But what about all of the non-lesbian, non-transgender, non-females in the world who also might have something to offer? Or who I might also be able to help? Or who might just be really kick-ass friends to go have a beer with sometime?<br />
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I bring this up because of a reading of a play that I went to last week on my one night off. A man who I met at a monologue festival had an actress drop out on him last minute, so he asked if I could fill in at this reading he was doing in his back yard. I agreed and went over to read a play. When I walked in, I suddenly felt very odd and it took me a minute to figure out why. It wasn't that I was in a new apartment for the first time, or that I'd not been to this guy's house before. It was that I was the only woman in the room. This is not a new experience for me - I have spent a lot of my life being outnumbered by men - but it was strange in that it has been a long time since that happened. The office I work in is mostly women. The play I'm in right now is mostly women. The theatre company I am a member of is all women. And while all of this is great because it means opportunities for women, it made the reading last week odd because I had almost forgotten what male energy felt like.<br />
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The thing is, I like men. I know a lot of men, a lot of quality men. My best friend in Chicago, my brother, my uncles, my friend's husbands...I know a lot of really great men with positive energy who are supportive and funny and generous. And I realized that by spending so much time with groups of almost exclusively women, I'm missing out on all of this great potential energy. I'm missing out on the different viewpoints offered by the male perspective. I'm missing out on diversity in my own life. I'm missing out on it to the point where it almost made me want to start dating just to introduce some more men into my life who I could see on a regular basis. Almost. I'm not that desperate. Yet.<br />
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So I guess the takeaway from this is that yes, we should be promoting diversity to make sure that everyone gets a fair shot in the grand scheme of things. But I also think that we shouldn't dive so far into our little diversity buckets that we forget how many other buckets there are. There is a lot of value to be found in exploring new buckets.Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-18066640543335432352015-04-28T10:51:00.001-05:002015-04-28T10:51:58.513-05:00I Don't KnowOne might think that as intelligent as I am that I know a lot of things about a lot of things. To some degree, one would be right. What never fails to amaze me, though, is how much I still don't know.<br />
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There are some things I don't mind not knowing. Like when I go into a rehearsal with some ideas, and the director presents other ideas that turn out to work better. I love not knowing those better ideas first, because it means I get to collaborate and learn and grow and expand my horizons.<br />
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But I don't know how to do this. I don't know how to not talk to you anymore. I don't know how to make myself not want to send you a message asking how you're doing and how your projects are coming along. I don't know how to make myself want to share my exciting news with someone other than you, or, once I have shared the news with everyone but you, to make it feel like I've told everyone I need to tell.<br />
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I also didn't know how to be in a friendship/relationship/whatever it was with someone who didn't have the time. I know how to not have time - I'm very good at not having time, which makes me very empathetic towards others who don't have time. But I don't know how to be friends with someone who doesn't have time for me or our friendship. And my need to get out of that situation is what has left me in this current one where I don't know how to deal with the fallout.<br />
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I think things were different when I lived in Chicago, too. When I was in Chicago and I had to stop having someone in my life, I was still surrounded by friends who loved me, who would commiserate and get a beer with me, who would reinforce the fact that there are those out there who deem me worthy of spending time with and on. They, whether they knew it or not, would keep me from losing sight of the fact that I know I am worth the time and energy. And while I am still friends with those people, and I am still in touch with them, it's different now that I'm a thousand miles away. Getting a beer and a hug has been replaced with a few text messages. It's lovely and appreciated, but it's not the same. So I find myself a bit lost and confused, and pissed off that I'm lost and confused because I really didn't even know you all that long, and stuck a thousand miles away from my touchstones who usually help me get a grip when I need to talk through all of this crap.<br />
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So I'm admitting here that I don't know how to do this. I'm admitting here that I probably screwed it all up because I don't know how to do this right, and that I'm probably still screwing things up by bothering to still be bothered. I'll get past it eventually. I know I will. I always do. Because I am smart and capable and funny and creative and passionate and strong as hell. And, despite the loss and confusion now, I can look back on the whole thing and say I learned some very important lessons about myself. Like maybe I could actually do this, and that there could be someone out there for whom I would want to make the time.<br />
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But in the meantime, how are you?Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-40015536019460908192015-03-12T14:18:00.000-05:002015-03-12T14:18:00.384-05:00The Little ThingsI know it's not considered cool to show emotion these days. When you start dating someone or when you're applying for a job, or hell, when you're walking down the street by yourself, you're supposed to keep your cool. Not show your hand. Maintain a poker face.<br />
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I say, screw that.<br />
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One of my favorite things about myself (that I'm pretty sure is a result of my acting training) is that I feel things and that I allow myself to feel things. Feeling things is fun. It's great to be happy, it's useful to be sad, it can be cathartic to get really angry for a short while. And I love that I'm the sort of person who lets herself be affected by things. Even the little things. Especially the little things.<br />
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There have been some seemingly minor things in my life lately that have been bringing me immense joy and I want to take a moment to acknowledge them. Mostly, they have to do with the people around me choosing to invest their time and energy in me and then letting me know that not only do they not regret the investment, but feel that they have received a significant return on investment by doing so. I know, I know, it sounds so clinical when I say it that way, but I think we're all used to the level of anonymity I like to maintain in these posts. What I mean is that I feel appreciated in my personal and professional lives at the moment, and that the simple kindness of these people letting me know I am appreciated in actions and in words moves me to tears sometimes. Usually when it would be really inappropriate to start crying. But I love that the impulse is there.<br />
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So my advice to you would be this. Find one small thing in your life that makes you happy. Put your music-listening device on shuffle and let your smile take over your face when your favorite song comes on when you weren't expecting it. Let yourself take thirty seconds in the middle of your work day to think about how you can make best friend or lover smile that day. Treat yourself to your favorite sandwich. Forget about everything else you have to do and just enjoy playing catch or tug of war with your dog for a few minutes. Find one small thing that makes you happy. And revel in that joy. Treat that small thing as if it were the most important thing in all the world. Because it is. For you, in that moment, all you have to do is feel joy.<br />
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Once you master that, you'll be amazed at how easy it is to find joy when you need it. And how easy it is to give to others, too.Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-77713164347594032212014-12-31T13:05:00.001-06:002014-12-31T13:05:32.573-06:00December 31 - ResolutionsThis time last year, I was in Cardiff, Wales, being an uber geek with my best friend. Today, I am drinking tea and watching <i>Doctor Who </i>at my mom's house, and I'll see my best friend later in the day. Some things don't change and I sometimes thank goodness that they don't. <div><br></div><div>I'm not much of one for resolutions. I've already laid out my career<span style="font-family: 'Helvetica Neue Light', HelveticaNeue-Light, helvetica, arial, sans-serif;"> goals for 2015, and I'm looking forward to getting started on them. But in addition to my career goals, I think I want to make sure to put in the effort required to maintain my existing relationships and to build new ones. I want to put in the effort required to stay physically and mentally healthy, because without my health, I won't be able to achieve my other goals. And I want to be able to keep doing the things I'm doing. I want to keep being authentic. Most of all, I want to keep creating and being a positive influence on the world around me. Not just in the coming year, but just sort of in general. So nothing big. </span></div><div><br></div><div>I hope that wherever you are, you have a safe and happy new year, and that at least some of your dreams come true in the coming year. And when they do, enjoy them. And then keep on dreaming. </div><div><br></div><div><span style="-webkit-text-size-adjust: auto; background-color: rgba(255, 255, 255, 0);">Happy New Year! And thank you for coming with me on this two-year-long blogging every day adventure. I'll be back sometime. Just not tomorrow. </span></div>Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-21761879979048090932014-12-30T09:01:00.001-06:002014-12-30T09:01:20.377-06:00December 30 - ReviewI feel like I should do a sort of Year In Review post, though it also feels a little silly to do so since I've posted every day this year so really, it's all here already. But here we go anyway. <div><br></div><div>I was in about seven plays and one film. </div><div>I completed season 1 of Just a Fling. </div><div>I read probably ten-fifteen books. </div><div>I moved 800 miles away from home. </div><div>I got a new job. </div><div>I made twenty or thirty new friends. </div><div>I learned that I am stronger than even I thought I was. </div><div>I learned that I am more capable than I thought I was. </div><div>I learned that the people who are most important to you stay in your life, regardless of geography. </div><div>I purged a lot of my stuff and learned that I really don't miss it. </div><div>I learned how to play the ukulele. </div><div>I got a second tattoo. </div><div>I saw one of my favorite musicians play two shows in one day. </div><div>I spent time in three countries on two continents. </div><div>I learned how to live with other people. Kind of. </div><div>I learned how to be more giving. </div><div>I learned to not place so much importance on stuff and ownership. </div><div>I identified some societal "norms" to which I no longer want to subscribe. </div><div>I walked I don't even know how many miles and lost about eight pounds. </div><div><br></div><div>All in all, I'd say it was a pretty good year. Big changes. Lots of growth. Yes, I was stressed out and cried a lot for a couple of months leading up to my move, but the net result has been very positive so far, and tears can be good for you every now and again. </div><div><br></div><div>So I won't be documenting 2015 quite as thoroughly, but I'm excited to see what it has in store. I'm excited to get working on my goals, and I'm excited to see what unexpected challenges and opportunities might come my way. </div><div><br></div><div>Now if only it was a smidge warmer outside so I wasn't so afraid to leave the comfort of a nice, warm bed. </div>Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-12796447679983600502014-12-29T23:00:00.001-06:002014-12-29T23:00:40.816-06:00December 29 - Transitive PropertySo, if Person A is in my karass, and Person B is in my karass, does that mean that Person A is also in Person B's karass? Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-3167621771769369002014-12-28T18:30:00.001-06:002014-12-28T18:30:52.475-06:00December 28 - 2015I feel a little bit bad that my posts the past few days have been crappy. There is a lot going on in my head; I've just not really been motivated to write about it. I'm thinking about what's next for me and what I've accomplished and the things I haven't done and goals and challenges that I could lay out for myself. And I'm thinking about all of this while I'm in my hometown, 800 miles away from the life I'm trying to build. I'm anxious to get back to building my life, but I am so treasuring my time in Chicago with my family and friends and points familiar. Chicago feels small and slow and spread out, but warm and welcoming and home-y. New York feels big and fast and strange, but exciting and full of potential. And all of this swirling around in my brain when I'm far away from being able to do much about it just has me feeling weird. <div><br></div><div>One thing that I was thinking about today, though, was this blog. I've proven that I can blog every day. Challenge met, achievement unlocked. And I now find myself in a place where I wonder if these daily posts are sapping creative energy from other outlets. Would I be writing more songs or plays or whatever if I wasn't focusing my writing energy on blogging every day? Because I have ideas for things I want to write, but having this daily brain dump, I just haven't taken the time to write the other stuff. Maybe I need to put a cork in this creative outlet so that the other ones can open up. </div><div><br></div><div>I'm not going to abandon this blog completely. I've had it too long to give it up. But I think I am going to take the pressure off of myself to write on a specific schedule. If I have something to say, I'll post. If I don't, I won't. My blog every day experiment is going to end on December 31. So let's see what other things I can create in 2015 when I'm not worried about blogging every day. </div>Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-2103618562721035902014-12-27T19:19:00.001-06:002014-12-27T19:19:40.016-06:00December 27 - New YorkAs I spent the day with my nieces (seeing them for the third time in four days which was heavenly), and I am now waiting for my friends to come meet me at out designated meeting spot, New York feels a million miles away in my distant past. It is going to be weird to go back there in a week and start again to look for projects and things with which to fill my time. Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3319095.post-72301676490995863972014-12-26T19:52:00.001-06:002014-12-26T19:52:23.124-06:00December 26 - HaikuDay after Christmas<div>New friends, good food, Doctor Who</div><div>Happy Boxing Day</div>Indignant Mindhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02534839145727141404noreply@blogger.com0