Friday, December 31, 2010

2010 - A Year In Review:

First song of 2010: Konstantine by Something Corporate

January:

The year started with me at home for my first break from Mizzou. I was working at Cassanos and hanging out mostly with the people that I worked with. When it came time to prepare getting moved back into the dorms, I took my biological dad with me in a hope of bonding. I dyed my hair from dark, dirty blonde to a light blonde color. I watched my cousin, Bretta, graduate from High School and got the special privilege of taking photos for her. When I returned to college, I was glad to be with my friends again. I bought my first moleskine notebook and began pouring my heart into it. I spent a lot of time at the Underground Cafe writing with NaNoWriMo kids. I broke my phone and got a new one. I spent a lot of time playing Mario Kart. I saw Avatar and had girls nights. I also started working at kgb in an attempt to get some extra cash. I spent some time with my mother, great grandmother, and grandma for their birthdays. I went to the library and bought a new bookbag.

February:

In February, I started writing a very short lived writing project with a friend of mine. I hung out with Jessica and Kee. I didn't get to enjoy the Super Bowl as I normally would do to bad weather. I dyed my hair purple just for the hell of it. I became close to a girl named Grace. I had a bad idea with Jessica and decided to dye my hair black. I started a new solo project that lasted a few weeks before I stopped writing. I went home spontaneously for a few hours, only to return in time for the Masquerade Ball. Jessica bought Kanye and I fell in love with the little guy. I played Apples to Apples with my friends in NaNoWriMo. I spent a couple abnormally warm days at the park. I spent a lot of time at the Underground Cafe. I went to a Murder Mystery dinner.

March:

In March I started my orientation for Big Brothers, Big Sisters. I planned my trip to Chicago. I went to the midnight premiere of Alice In Wonderland along with half of my dorm, I swear. I spent more time with the people I loved at the Underground. I bought my guinea pig, Lady GaGa. I started watching Gilmore Girls with Becky and ended up watching so much tv. I turned 19, and celebrated with a French midterm and a trip home for Spring Break.

April:

I don't remember too much of April, not really. Or at least, not the first half. I remember trying to mentally prepare myself and my family for me getting my tattoo - my Mom wasn't exactly pleased. In the end of April, Arts Advocates got a graffiti event together. I got my tattoo on April 23rd and celebrated my one year of being free of self-harm.

May:

I started off May by finishing off my Freshman year of college. I celebrated by completing 1/7th of the Mizzou Seven. I jumped in Brady Fountain with Jessica. After I moved out of my dorm, I picked up Ruth from the airport and a couple days later we swooped off to Chicago. I spent the day in Chicago with her and then went to see Something Corporate at Bamboozle Chicago. I met Jules, and stayed at her house before coming back and spending a day in St. Louis with Jessica after dropping Ruth off at the airport. Then, I got to see Cede graduate from high school

June:

I spent June at the pool. I started taking my little cousins down to the pool and even photographed a couple of the events. I also started taking a summer class at MACC. I spent a lot of time whisking back and forth to St. Louis to see Jessica and Kee, forming a friendship with Jessica that I hadn't thought possible at first.

July:

I started off July by seeing The Young Veins in Columbia. Then, Jessica came up to spend the weekend with me for the 4th of July. I had the intent to take her downtown, but for the most part, we just hung out at my house. After that, I lost my Grandma Howard to a heart attack. A week after that, Nanny was in the hospital for a while, and Mamaw was taken to the E.R. Then, Grandpa was in the hospital. Overall, July was the worst month of the year.

August:

In August, I started preparing to go back to school. I got to go spend time with Jess and go to see Something Corporate for the second time. I quit working at Cassano's. I went back to school in the middle of the month and immediately got whisked away in the hustle and bustle of being with friends and everything. I took on the duties of a Community Leader and Co-President of Arts Advocates. I got to meet a lot of cool new people and help them transition to being a college student.

September:

In September, I randomly decided to dye my hair brown. So I did that, Jessica dyed her hair red, and we straightened Becky's hair. I also took Becky to St. Louis to see Gold Motel. In September, I also started to slip back into depression. I started going to counseling at the MU counseling center.

October:

October was mostly spent in the hustle of Mizzou Homecoming. It's a pretty big deal, and Becky took most of the work, but it was still a lot of work for everyone. I started preparing for Halloween, as well as NaNoWriMo. Even though I'd spent a lot of time in counseling, it still wasn't enough. I ended up calling my mom and having her take me home before anything bad happened, which got me put back on medication. I also went to a football game with my parents on Halloween, only to come back and go to the NaNoWriMo kick-off party.

November:

NaNoWriMo started and I spent a lot of time with the people that do that. I went to write-ins every week and kept typing away at a story I didn't like in the slightest. I wasn't necessarily happy, but the medicine seemed to keep my mind off everything. I went with Jess to go see Jack's Mannequin. I started sleeping too much and could barely function. I went home for a week for Thanksgiving, which turned out to be the perfect break. I got to spend time with my family and see the people I love. I also went to a Mizzou Game with my best friend Jessica.

December:

In December, I finished up my semester with grades that I wasn't too proud of, but am at least happy that I made it through the semester without dropping out, and have the intentions of going back. A couple days before the end of the semester, Jessica fell and broke her leg, causing me to spend three days in the hospital with her. Despite that, I still did great on my finals. I came home and ended up spending a lot of time watching Gilmore Girls and playing the Sims. I got to spend time with my family for Christmas and it ended up being the only time that I've never gone to my dad's for Christmas (which was awesome). Then, Jessica came up to spend New Years with me. And here we are.

Last Song of 2010: Dark Blue - Jack's Mannequin

Friday, October 29, 2010

you won't ever get too far from me:

My mind is a rush of every bad thing I've ever said to you. Every time I haven't answered your phone calls or when I've let a text go unanswered because I just didn't know what to say. I'm also replaying every bad thing you've ever said to me, or every time you've wrote about me in your blog that hasn't been exactly positive. For example..
"you are the most unoriginal person I have ever met, full of lies and pleas and you are so ungrateful, every pretend 'I'm sorry,' that you mumble is worthless. you have no idea what creativity is, and if i thought I was bad..."
I don't know exactly where everything went wrong. In May, we were laughing and carrying on like you were the only thing that mattered. By July, you didn't know that my life was falling apart. In October, you didn't know that I wanted little more than to take my own life.

I haven't exactly told you everything that's been going on in my life, and I can't expect you to know, either. But at the same time, you've yet to reach out and ask about me. You've yet to take the time. Sure, you were there for me last week when I considered going in the hospital, but you weren't here for the whole decay of my mental functioning. You didn't know I was in therapy or that my medicine wasn't working until it was almost too late.

"We didn't drift apart. YOU pushed us apart. I'm not planning on having any future contact with you, because you're going to be this way for the rest of your life. And I'm not going to wait for the day that you decide your friends are worth caring about."

You're not the best friend you used to be, and I'm not saying I'm any better. I think I gave up on wanting you to be my best friend a long time ago. I'm done trying. But the truth is, you pushed me away for years before I pushed back. So don't blame me for all of this, it's your fault as much as it is mine.

I'll grieve over this. Because as much as our friendship has decayed over the last couple of months, you've been my best friend since I was six years old, and that kind of love doesn't just go away. I miss you like hell, already. But I don't miss who you are today, I miss the friend you used to be. I won't ever get that back, but the memories are not something I'm giving up.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Part Three:

I would like to take a moment to thank every single soul who has been there - whether physically or emotionally - for me over the last few days. You all are my champions, my heroes, my driving force in this emotional battle to stay alive. To fight this awful depression that's gone on inside me for long enough. I've been alone and falling for far too long, and I want to feel okay again. I want to just feel as though there is some hope in this world.

I guess there's a part of me that has hope. I feel as though things might be okay again soon, or at least, I'm on the path to get there. I talked to a doctor today. Unfortunately, not a psychiatrist, but my family doctor. For now, he put me on a prescription for Lexapro, in the hope that that'll make me feel better over the weekend, but I see an official psychiatrist on Monday at the University. Hopefully, that psychiatrist will get me on a prescription that will work.

(Disclaimer: I in no way intend to make it sound as though anti-depressants and pills are the answer to my problems. I have never intended to pop a pill and make my life perfect. I know that the chemical side of things are only a part of the problem - a large part, but a part none the less. I know that I am on a long path to recovery, and that nothing is going to change overnight.)

But the thing is, I have hope. I am in no way stable, nor should I be left alone for any extended period of time. But I'm on the road to getting there.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

10/21/10 Part: 2

There is nothing more terrifying or more painful than the idea of telling someone that you want to kill yourself. It's something different when I tell it to a blog, or to myself. It's less personal (although it's exactly the opposite) and it's easy to say that to the Internet, when nothing seems real at all. But it's a completely different thing to sit in an office of someone who is very indirectly your boss (as in, he is, but I don't' get paid for what I do in the slightest) and tell him that I very much want to die, and I'm scared that I'll actually slip and go through with it.

At first, my intention with all of this to self-admit myself to the hospital. I was going to call my mom, tell her my intentions, and then go through with it later this evening. Scott would help me get everything in order as far as work and school. However, when I called my mom to tell her, she asked me the question of "do you want to withdraw from school?". I replied no, and her next question was "Do you want me to come down there?" and I couldn't even answer before I was in a bawl of tears on my bed.

So my mom came down here, and again I found myself in Scott's office, trying to formulate a plan for what I wanted to do, and how I wanted to do it. He suggested (and my mom and I agreed) that the best plan would be for me to go through the Counseling Center and their crisis center, especially since I already have a relationship with the counselors there. So I found myself sitting in there and taking the blog post I wrote late last night and I let them read it. I figured that them reading my thoughts at my worst would be the best plan of action.

Together, Amber and I came up with a list of things that make me want to be alive. Some of those things were:
  • My family
  • My friends
  • My art
  • My cat
  • If I died, I wouldn't know how Project Runway ended or how good the Harry Potter movie is going to be
And together we decided that I should take this weekend off work and go home with my mom. I'm going to take a weekend that's severely for me. I'm going to work on art and play the sims and be with my family and just take care of my wants and my needs. Because I need to get my life back in check, and it's not going to get any better if I don't.

I just want to say thank you from the bottom of my heart to everyone who has been there for me through this. Beckie and Jessica have been a wonderful physical support system, and there are tons of people online that have been a great support system for me emotionally. I'll take the time to write more once things calm down a bit.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

10/21/10

I don't know if anyone reads my posts, or if anyone really cares, but I know that I care, and that I read them. And that the people who matter will find them, or I will show these posts to them.

To start off, I am not okay. I am suicidal. I am a danger to myself. 90% of my thoughts are about harming myself (through cutting, mostly, but I also have a tendency to pick at my skin until it bleeds, or tug on hairs), or worse, taking my own life. I can't honestly tell you why I feel this way, or why I can't fix it for myself. All I know is that I want to die every day, and I can't make it stop.

I think it's also important to note that I haven't been going to class. Well, I go to some classes, but even then I have a low level of interest and a tiny attention span, and I spend every moment that I'm not in my room wishing that I was in my room. I consistently wish to be asleep, or to be deep in my head where it's all about the creative aspect, and not that pain in my chest that I feel every day.

I also am slacking on every aspect of my duties. I'm not a good community leader because I don't want to be with people. I'm not a good co-president of Arts Advocates because I don't want to be in control of my own life, let alone an organization that is almost 20 years strong. I don't do well managing my time, so how can you expect me to have any role in anything else?

I'm sleeping more than I have in my life. I can't bring myself to wake up unless someone physically makes me get up (either by calling me or coming to get me). Or more often than not, I wake up, but I can't seem to find the ability - or desire - to make my muscles move. All I want to do is lay still and be alone, but what's terrifying is that the more I'm alone, the worse off I feel.

Tonight, I confessed to Becky exactly how bad off I am. In the morning, I'm going to talk to Scott, my hall coordinator about all of this. I'm going to tell him everything. I think I already know what I want to do, but I don't know if I can have the strength to do that to myself again.

But I think I might need to.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Renewal:

There is something completely revitalizing about coming off a depressive state. Now, I completely accept that I'm bipolar, and there will always be parts of my life in which I am extremely low, and parts that I am extremely high.

In the last few days, I've come out of that depressive state and I've began to see the world as beautiful and revitalizing once more. Honestly, I am absolutely manic. I am hyper and full of energy and running on not enough sleep and too much caffeine. And this would be a problem except...

I don't want to die anymore. And that is a gift all in itself.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

On Friendship:

I've noticed that when it comes to friends, I tend to make bad choices. I cling to people that hurt me instead of the people that are good for me. I make myself depend on people that consistently put me down, instead of the people that build me up. And I'm trying to change that.

I've also noticed that when I think about why I'm friends with someone, I very rarely think of present events. I remember when times were the best, instead of what they're like now. With Alexa, I always thought of the summer before Junior year, when we'd spend every day just me, her, and Sara. With Ruth, I think about 7th grade and the summer before 8th grade. With Madi, I think about when we started to write Eternity Will Never Be Enough together.

The thing is, that while those times were good and they were a great basis of a friendship, that's not what I should be focused on. I should be focused on the now, why they're my friend now. And with certain friends, I've realized that what used to be isn't good enough anymore.

But I've also noticed that with Jessica, I don't think like that. Sure, last year and this summer were one of the best of my life, but she didn't just make me happy then. She continues to make me happy every day. Every day, she's there for me and builds me up. There are no expectations in this friendship. I don't have to write a certain way, or do drugs, or listen to a certain type of music to be her friend. I just am.

And that's what I like right now.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Again:

You've done this before.

You remind yourself this over and over as your hands grip at your sheets, as though those sheets are the only thing holding you down. And in a sense, they are. Because if it wasn't for those sheets and the way that your hands are intricately wrapped up in them, you're sure you'd be scrambling through your belongings, trying to find something else.

Blades are nothing new to you, in fact, they're anything but that. You remember the way they feel fondly, as though they're an old friend that you've simply lost touch with. But as those thoughts creep into your brain again - hurt yourself, hurt yourself, hurtyourself, hurtyour.. - you twist your hands further into the sheets, as though wrapping them into an invisible shield. In there, you can't reach for the blades. In there, you can forget about the precise way you can use something heavy to break open a razor, and how delicately, you can escape cuts on your fingertips - those always seemed to hurt more - and then you're presented with something wonderful, something harmful.

Later, of course, probably when you calm down, you'll feel okay. You'll realize exactly how irrational these thoughts are, but now, you can't. Now, all you want is pain. Physical pain, that is. You're in enough pain, the feeling in your chest that takes away your breath and the feeling in your head harmonizes to put you in the worst pain that you can imagine. But you want something different, something that actually exists. Something you can see.

But you won't. Maybe it's the knowledge of how you'll disappoint everyone that stops you. Or maybe it's that you know you're not good at keeping secrets anymore. Or maybe it's that you know that doing it - just once. You can escape the pain in your chest just this once... - will always lead to a downfall. Or maybe, it's that marking on your wrist, the tattoo you got for beating this that stops you. But whatever it is, you don't.

And you're right, you've done this before. You've fallen and picked yourself back up more times than you remember, and you'll do it again. And that's what's playing through your head as you lay your head in the tear-soaked pillow and let your brain capture you into a deep, deep sleep.

Sunday, August 29, 2010

M-I-Z-Z-O-U:


There's something magical about a new school year, especially now that I'm in my sophomore year of college. Off topic, but isn't it weird to think that I'm a sophomore in college, especially since I started this blog in the summer before I was a junior in high school? But anyway, this year is so much different than last year, and maybe the sole difference is that there was no fear in coming back to school this year. It was just natural, as though I was stepping back into a life that I had just temporarily put on pause.

Immediately after being at school, I redefined my love of school. While I'm the first to answer the question of "Where do you go to school" with a huge smile and a reply of "Mizzou", I realized that my love of Mizzou is more limited to my love of McDavid. From the moment I moved in last year, I exhaled a long breath that had been held in for oh, all twelve years of my previous schooling. McDavid, and furthermore Mizzou, is different than anything I've ever experienced. I flourish here. I thrive here. I am more myself here than I have ever been. There's something about this place that screams acceptance.

And I don't think I fully realized that until I had to go away from it for a little while. But I love this place, I love the people. I must admit, I seem to love this batch of McDavid inhabitants a bit better than last years. I love the organizations. For those of you that don't know, I'm the co-president of Arts Advocates, and I'm in SCAM (Student Council at McDavid). I'm also a Community Leader, which puts me out there and pushes me to get to know everyone I can.

Last year, moving to Mizzou, I encountered a nearly crippling wave of homesickness. Which, luckily, is nowhere to be found this year. Sure, I'm eager to go home. I miss my mom, dad, and of course, my cat. But I'm in no hurry to stay home.

Long story short, I love this place. I thrive here. It's a very, very good place to be.

Monday, August 16, 2010

I was going to make an "end of summer" post

But getting up at 9am today kicked my ass a bit. So here's a picture of my face instead:

Saturday, August 14, 2010

I tend to have this problem with words recently. They're worded so... elegantly in my head. But when it comes time to up them down on paper or type them up, I find myself staring at a blank piece of paper or an empty new post box. The words are forever lost in my mind, waiting for me to figure out how to say them.


Monday, August 9, 2010

When they can't find you, you'll turn into a mystery:

While I haven't really taken the time to express what's been going on, I know that a lot of people closest to me know what the last month of my life has been like. Before I get into anything else, I'd like to thank those of you that have been there through my tears, my laughs, and my breakdowns in the last month. And always. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. I feel like I've been a mess the last couple of weeks.

It all started on July 8th, when I lost my Grandma Howard unexpectedly. I'd really like to, at some point, take the time to write out how I feel about that. But now is not the time. Simply because I don't have the energy, and that's not what this post is about. A couple days later, my friend Madison went through absolute hell with personal issues. Then, my great-grandma was placed in the hospital due to her having trouble breathing. The next day, my grandma was taken to the hospital after her blood sugar dipped below 15. Which, even if you're not familiar with diabetes, is so near death that even we are baffled as to why she's still with us. After that, my grandpa was admitted to the hospital after having a mini-stroke. And on Friday, my great-grandma was placed back into the hospital. That's what this post is about, really. Her. She's not doing well. Not well at all. I guess there's a part of me that knew this was coming. It's why I moved home this summer, to be near family. I knew that she was getting worse and worse and worse, but I didn't want it to be true.

I don't know all the medical terms for it, or even really what is going on. But what I do know is that she can't breathe. Ever. She's consistently on oxygen because she just can't breathe otherwise. She can't even get out of her chair and walk to the kitchen - a distance of less than twenty feet - without feeling out of breath. She's scared to take a shower because the steam makes it too hard to breathe. My great-grandma is literally suffocating to death, and there is not much they can do except watch her. They can postpone the inevitable, but they can't stop it. Or even make her feel better. Over the last couple days I've seen her go from sitting down and being able to breathe, to simply sitting up in her hospital bed and being breathless as though she'd ran a mile.

Quite frankly, it's breaking my heart.

Today, my mom informed me that when my great-grandma says her prayers every night, she tells God that whenever he's ready for her, she wants to go. She's ready to die. And that's a thought that both terrifies me and makes me happy. Utterly, completely selfishly, I don't want her to die. I don't want to let go of this person that I love so completely. I want her to be around forever, to give me advice and tell me stories. I want the woman that helped raise me, that made me mac & cheese and mashed potatoes summer after summer because I didn't want to eat anything else. I don't want her to go anywhere, because she's my great-grandma, and she's so, so important to me.

However, then I think rationally. I think about the way she's living, the way she can't do anything. Almost everything she's loved has been taken from her. She can't work puzzles anymore because the movement wears her out. She can't cook because she can't be on her feet. She can't go shopping or go outside or go to church or play with her grandchildren. She doesn't have a life, she has a stationary position in a chair in front of a tv. She is miserable. She is suffocating to death. Every day she gets a little worse. And while I don't want her to go away, I realize that there comes a time when she needs to. Because she doesn't have a life anymore. She's not happy, and as much as I want her, I realize that it's getting to the point when I need to let go.

I'm scared. I don't want to have to come to that. But it's coming, and I'm trying to prepare myself for that. But for now, I want to be there as much as I can. Because I only have so much time left, and I don't want to waste a minute.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Prompt: A Picture Of Someone Who Has The Biggest Impact On You:

I bet there's a part of everyone that expects me to post a picture of Andrew McMahon, and that could totally be expected. I'd say that's true, but no one has a bigger impact on me than this woman right here:


This is the wonder that I get to call my mother. I don't express how much I love her enough. I love you, Mom. I'm so lucky to have you.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Prompt: A Recent Picture of You and 15 Interesting Facts About Yourself:

A new month, a new list for 30days. This one is a bit more fun than last months. I apologize for the horrid picture, as I took it with my cell phone while standing in the parking lot at the hospital yesterday. But today's topic insists I list 15 interesting facts about myself, so here it goes:
  1. I'm ambidextrous. While I don't write with both hands, I do have the ability. My handwriting with my right is simply neater, therefore that's the hand I tend to choose. However, I do most things with my left hand. I can also bat right and left handed, and play tennis left handed. I tend to reach for things with my left hand, too.
  2. I'm dual-majoring in Human Development & Family Studies and Social Work. I intend to get my Master's degree in Social Work, and would like to go on to either be a therapist or an adoption social worker.
  3. I am a recovering self-injurer. I say recovering because every day is a step to not slip back into that habit. I was hospitalized in 2008 after a battle with depression and self-injury. I also have a tattoo on my left wrist that reads "swim" as a tribute to this battle.
  4. I have a lot of friends in my life that I would consider "best friends", but I have three people that I consider my true best friends. They are Ruth, Madison, and Jessica.
  5. My favorite band is Something Corporate, which I can thank Ruth for getting me into. While they stopped producing music, they are still a band I cherish. I am seeing them in three days for the second time live.
  6. In the last six months, I have travelled more than I could ever imagine. I went to Chicago for the first time, and have countless trips to St. Louis. I've learned that distance doesn't change friendship, and sometimes your closest friends live far away.
  7. I am extremely lucky family-wise. At nineteen, I still have one of my great-grandparents and seven of my grandparents. I still have both of my parents, and both sets of step-parents. I realize that this is a huge gift to have, and I don't take it for granted.
  8. I have a slight addiction to LUSH Cosmetics. And by slight, I mean that I've probably spent $100 on soap this summer alone. I really love the Karma line, but you could probably talk me into anything in that store.
  9. In three weeks I'll be beginning my Sophomore year at Mizzou. I'm taking political science, philosophy, sociology, nutritional sciences, intro to hdfs, and intro to social work this semester. I'm really excited to not be taking French.
  10. In the Mac vs. PC game, I'm a Mac. However, not in the pretentious, asshole type way. I got my Macbook Pro when I was looking at a Journalism major. And quite simply, I wouldn't go back to a PC. Maybe I'm spoiled, maybe I'm an asshole, but my Mac works for what I need it to, and I like that.
  11. My favorite color(s) are Blue and Red. In my dream house, I will have a kitchen that is mostly black and white with red accents.
  12. I really enjoy Harry Potter. My dorm theme this year is Harry Potter, and I can't be more thrilled to participate.
  13. At school, I do a lot of stuff. As in, I participate in ways that I didn't think possible in High School. This year alone, I am Co-President of Arts Advocates, a club that I lovelovelove, and I'm a CL (aka Community Leader). I also intend on joining Student Council At McDavid (SCAM) and Purple, the literary arts magazine.
  14. I have two pets. I have a cat that I've had since I was four years old. She's gray and white and formally named Chablis (Cha-blee), but we just call her Kitty, or if you're me, Kitten. I also have a guinea pig that I call Lady Gaga (I really need to rename her) that I've had since March.
  15. I grew up in Hannibal, Missouri, but I consider my home to be Columbia, Missouri. Which, if you didn't know, is where Mizzou is located. I think this is because I grew so much in personality while I was there, and I feel more physically at home there.
In case you didn't know, it's insanely hard to come up with 15 facts about yourself. I don't feel all that interesting. However, I'd love it if you'd give me a couple facts about yourself in the comments.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Dear You:

I’m so, so sorry for what you’re going through right now. You are too young to deal with these kind of problems. You shouldn’t have to. You never should have had to deal with these, but you did, and I can’t help but admire you for what you’ve gone through. You are such a sweet, loving individual.

The next weeks will be hard in ways that I can’t imagine, because I’ve never been through what you’re about to go through. But don’t you worry, I’ll be (spiritually, since distance separates me from you) there holding your hand every step of the way. It might not seem like it right now, but you’re going to be okay. You’ll pull through this and become even stronger because of it. I know you, I know what you’re capable of and what you can do. You are by far the strongest person I know, and I can only hope to be like you.

I love you, and I need you to know that. You’re so, so loved. Regardless of who loves you. It could be people down the street, or family, or people like me, who only know you online. But we love you, and we’re here. I’m here. Always here. I’m a phone call away, and if it was possible, I’d be in the car on my way to you.

Stand strong, You. But don’t worry, I’ll be here to catch you if you fall.

Love always,

Me.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Prompt: A Letter to Someone:

Dear You,

I wish I could drive up right now and meet you in your room. I wish I could lay beside you and talk about all the things in the world that I could do to make you smile. I wish you were okay. I wish I could be there physically to wipe this away.


Thursday, July 8, 2010

Is this the way a toy feels when it's batteries run dry?

I am the watch you always wear but you forget to wind.

Tonight, I lost my Grandma Howard, and while I don't have the strength to write about it right now, I wanted to say that I miss her so, so much.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Prompt - Quote One of the Nicest Messages You Have Ever Recieved on formspring.

"I love how close we've become over the summer. Even though we lived close to each other, I never realized what an awesome friend you are until now. "
- Jessica Shearin

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

So there's this woman and..


she was uh, on an airplane. She's flying to meet her fiancé, sailing high above the largest ocean on planet Earth and she was seated next to this man who, you know, she had tried to start conversation and only, really the only thing she'd heard him say was to order his bloody mary. And she's sitting there and she's reading this really arduous magazine article about a third world country that she couldn't even pronounce the name of. And she's feeling very bored and very despondent and then uh, suddenly, there was this huge mechanical failure and one of the engines gave out. And they started just falling 30,000 feet and the pilots on the microphone and he's saying "I'm sorry, I'm sorry, oh my god, I'm sorry" and apologizing. And she looks at the man and she says, she says "where are we going?". And uh, he looks at her and he says

"We're going to a party. It's a birthday party. It's your birthday party. Happy birthday darling, we love you very very very very very very very much."


Friday, June 11, 2010

Happy Birthday, Eternity Will Never Be Enough:

William:

By now, all of my friends and family know the story of how we met - we being me and my wife, Delaney - when we were in kindergarten. To many, our story has lost it's value, it's quality. Now, it's just the story of how Will and Delaney met, but to us, it's so much more. It's our love story, our very perfect fairy tale. Or not so perfect, honestly. Friends and family know - almost - every detail of our story, from our awkward first kiss to our dramatic one year break up. To our reunion. To the night that I twirled with her under twinkling dance lights and then slid a ring on her finger just hours later.

It's been twenty years, and I still don't think the full extent of our love has sunk in yet. Not even through three - and almost four - children and our first grandchild. Not through anything we've gone through. But I'm kind of glad that I feel that way. It's more… special that way. Even after all this time - all thirty-six years of knowing her - I have yet to find out everything about her. And I know most things. I know that she puts on her left shoe first, or the way that it's always her left hand that reaches for the toothbrush in the morning. But I'm always learning, always exploring the things that I've yet to find out about the love of my life.

I guess that's what makes our love so special. It's growing, forever. It's a constant. I'm always growing in love with her. I love her more today than I did yesterday, but I don't love her as much as I will tomorrow. I love her every time I look at our children, and every time I see my grandson's eyes light up at the sight of me. I physically feel our love with every hug from my daughter, or every time I put my head on her stomach to feel our - soon to be - daughter kicking. I especially feel it when she touches me - whether it is just a casual touch or something more. I see and feel her and her love in everything. I don't think I could handle it if I didn't.

It's been twenty years since I slid a ring onto her finger and proclaimed her my wife. It's been twenty-seven years since our first kiss, and thirty-six years since the first time I saw her. But I know that it's not our limit. I will be in love with this woman until the day my life ends, but that won't be all, either. I will love her until the ends of eternity, but even that won't be enough.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Our Hearts Are Heavy And Light:

we laugh and scream and sing.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Heart of Mine:



How do you measure a friendship?

Do you measure it by the amount of times you see the other person? Or the amount of times you talk to a person on the phone? Or better, do you measure your friendship based on how much they do for you? I've been asked before how I describe my friendship with Ruth. The truth is that I can't. I can describe the things we do together, or the things we talk about when we're on skype or on the phone. But what I can't express is the love I feel for this girl.

Ruth has said before:
"The friends that matter the most are meant for each other. After years and wars, they are still one soul in the same body. My best friend is the love of my life. Why, for you to love someone, does it have to be considered sexual? Does there need to be a physical attraction?"
And I think that's the closest that I've come to describing how I feel about her. I consider her to be the part of my soul that was never put inside my body. As she would describe it, she fills the gaps in my personality that I cannot. When I don't have her in my life, every other friendship I have starts to crumble. I start to crumble. Without her, I do not feel whole. Some people I know would counter to that with "But you're without her all the time, you only see her once a year". And that's the technical way to look at it, but what they don't understand is that I talk to Ruth almost every day. Through skype or texts or the phone, and if we're really busy, an @reply on twitter will suffice. And while these forms of communication will never fill the 1000mile gap between us, it does make it a little easier. There are also things about her that I can't explain. Like the utter relief I feel whenever she is near. Or the way my heart leaps the instant I see her, as though it's other half is finally back. I can't explain how her voice has a way of soothing me instantly, or the way one mean word from her can crush my entire day. She is my soulmate. The most permanent thing I have.

Some people have scoffed at the idea of me moving to Texas. Laughing it off as me just wanting to be near my friend. But the truth is, that's EXACTLY it. I want to be near my friend. Some would consider that to be a dumb reason to move, but I have to move somewhere, don't I? I'm not staying in Missouri for the rest of my life, and moving to Texas to be with Ruth seems like the next best thing. On the ride home from Chicago, Ruth and I discussed this. Like I told her, I want to be near her for the rest of my life. I want my kids - if I have kids - to know her. She fills my holes, and who's to say that she won't fill the gaps in my kids' lives too? Regardless of others' opinions on my life, I will be moving to Texas to be near her.

Now that that's settled, I just need to get her warmed up on the idea of a Star Wars wedding.

Friday, June 4, 2010

and maybe we're a little too much like winnie the pooh:

goodgirlsgoruth: OKAY BYE I LOVE YOU POOKIE
vosetoiless: BYE BOO.
vosetoiless: I LOVE YOU TOO.
vosetoiless: LIKE KANGA LOVES ROO.
goodgirlsgoruth: AWWWWWW
goodgirlsgoruth: I'M ROO I'M ROO
vosetoiless: CAN I BE KANGA?
goodgirlsgoruth: YA

would you rather have online friends or in real life friends?

There is no easy way to answer this question, to be honest. The simple answer would be that I would prefer to have in real life friends, but not in the way that you're thinking.

Through the Internet, I have met dozens of wonderful, amazing people that I am blessed to have in my life. Through the Internet, I have also met a ton of bitches, but that's another story. I am thankful to have these people in my life, however they do not take the place of the friends that I have here.

I would be perfectly happy to have these same online friends here with me, instead of miles away. Because - excluding the people I know at school, who I won't be seeing for quite some time - the people I know in real life kind of suck.

You see I've got this American Love...

best friends, ex friends until the end.






this girl is my best friend in the entire world, and her name is ruth.

How do you think your life would be different if your best friend had never moved away?

Ideally, we would still be friends, the only difference is that she would be here and not 1000 miles away from me. We'd probably be going to the same college, if not roommates.

However, the truth is that I don't know what my life would have been like if she stayed. I don't know if she would have turned into any other friendship I've ever had, where they've been more of time/place friendships that I have always had trouble putting effort into. I don't know if we would have been friends in high school or if we had, would we have survived graduation?

Most people won't believe me when I say this, but I'm glad she doesn't live here anymore. It turned our bullshit, preteen friendship into a real friendship that I cherish. I know that she'll be my friend for the rest of my life, regardless of where she is.

You see I've got this American Love...

Thursday, June 3, 2010

sunsets and fireflies (a summer mix)

When I think of summer, I think of it in a couple different ways. I think of the bright, sunny days that leave me driving around with the windows down and blasting music that I love. However, there's also nights like tonight. Nights where I am sitting here in a bittersweet mood, enjoying light music and smiling. That's what's reflected in this playlist. Enjoy.

  1. Yearlong Winter - Punchline
  2. The Mixed Tape (Cover) - Vedera
  3. Coney Island - Good Old War
  4. Shine Baby Shine - Catch The Sunrise
  5. The Best Happiness Money Can Buy - I Can Make A Mess Like Nobodies Business
  6. Dutch Courage - The Spill Canvas
  7. I Will Follow You Into The Dark - Death Cab For Cutie
  8. Karma Police - Radiohead
  9. O Valencia! - The Decemberists
  10. Your Only Escape - Gatsby's American Dream
  11. All You Did Was Save My Life - Our Lady Peace
  12. When Did Your Heart Go Missing - Rooney
  13. 15 Steps - Radiohead
  14. I'm Sorry I Told You All My Problems - Days Away
  15. Sunsets and Car Crashes - The Spill Canvas
  16. T. Kline's Decline - Days Away
you can download this mix here.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

since graduation was long ago, please somebody get me out of this hole



Lately, it's been hard not to think about how my life was at this time last year. On Thursday, my cousin Mercedes graduated from Hannibal High School just as I did one year ago. And it was weird to sit there and watch her walk across the stage. To know the things that must have been going through her mind. If I know based on my own experiences, it was a lot of "goddamn why is this gown so hot and why are they talking so fucking much". And also a lot of "oh my god, this is it."

High school graduation is something that people talk about for your whole life. When you're in elementary school, it's a joke. That far off, never-gonna-happen thing that your parents talk about in an almost longing way. In middle school, it seems a little bit closer with cries of "six more years!" when you're in 6th grade (I still can't believe it's been that long since I was in 6th grade) and the pressing of your parents and teachers to write papers entitled "What I Want To Be When I Grow Up". And then you reach your Freshman year of high school and suddenly it's a whirlwind of getting good grades, because you want to get in to college, don't you? And then slowly, it's your senior year and then you're sitting on the field and you're thinking "holy fuck, this is it."

That, and that the gowns you have to wear are hot and there's not a possible way to sit in them without being uncomfortable. They're a bit unforgiving.

To watch Cede graduate was magical. I loved seeing the way that she looked so high and proud, her self esteem bursting. And that's the way she should have felt. High school graduation is a gloating moment. A "look what I just fucking did" kind of thing. But it's also scary as hell. It's the end of comfort, the end of knowing exactly what to expect.

But Cede can do it. I have nothing but faith in her. Although in college she might want to stop smacking everyone's butts and saying "good game!"


Saturday, May 29, 2010

I could really use a wish right now

I've been holding off on writing this post.

For any of you that know me personally, or have visited my blog at least once ever, you know that my family is extremely important to me. Especially my great-grandma. I spend a good majority of my free time out at her house. Whether I'm out there just to visit or to help clean, I enjoy every minute of it. And it might not seem like that because well, who really likes to clean? But it's not what I'm doing that makes me love it, it's the fact that I'm there.

When I was a little girl, I held on to the belief that my great-grandparents were going to be around forever. And I didn't have anything to make that be untrue. In my eyes, my great-grandparents were healthy as can be. I was too young to see the underlying health problems that I'm now seeing. So, as you can imagine, the death of my great-grandpa came as the biggest shock. I didn't think I'd lose them, so it hit me twice as hard when I did.

Ever since then, I've held on to every memory of him as though it's a piece of gold. Memories are priceless. In my great-grandma's house, I can still see him out of the corner of my eye. Him coming around corners to tickle me, asking me if I was "his girl" - which I always was. I had so many years in that house with him that it was hard to find something that didn't remind me of him. Or of my great-grandma.

Well, a couple months ago my mother informed me that my great-grandma was looking in to moving into one of the Senior Apartments in town. It'd be a one-bedroom, tiny thing about a mile from my house. And while I realized that this was probably the best decision for her - her house was falling apart: there was mold in the basement and the foundation was crumbling - I couldn't help but feel that my heart was breaking. You see, my great-grandparents had lived in that house for longer than I've been alive, and I grew up there. Ruth tells me not to get so attached to places, but I can't always help it. I felt this same heartbreak moving out of my home last January, and when I moved out of my dorm room a couple weeks ago. I get attached to places. The memories overwhelm me and I can't help feeling sad when I leave.

My great-grandma moved a couple weeks ago, and last weekend I got to see the house I grew up in nearly empty. Gone was the kitchen table. Gone was the couch that my little cousins and I used to use as a backseat in our imaginary car. Gone was the swing that was my comfort after my great-grandpa died. And you know what? It hurt. A lot more than I expected it to.

But there's always comfort in pain if you know where to look. That house was destroying my great-grandma's health. The mold was getting to her and making it hard to breathe. The stress of living next to my great-grandpa's bitch daughter was getting to her. And now that she's out of that, it's like having my old grandma back. She's happier. Healthier. And if losing that house means that I get to have my grandma a couple years longer, it seems like a good trade.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

if you wanna be scene


take a shit where you sleep, and smile for the paparazzi.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

My story


Now that I have more than five minutes/the initial shock of getting my tattoo is over, I want to take a few minutes to write about the experience and the reasoning behind my tattoo. My story.

My story starts in May 2007, at the death of my Great-Grandpa. I was sixteen, and it was my first loss. He was like my father, I can barely remember a day that would go by that I wouldn’t be at his house. From the time I was a little girl, he would always spoil me rotten. And I never got too big to sit on his lap. He was someone I admired, and someone I never saw myself losing. Then one day, he was gone. It wasn’t as though we’d seen it coming. It was a freak accident. It happened when he was mowing the grass out at his church. He’d gotten too close to a ditch and he fell and died instantly. And it was the first time I can honestly say that my heart had broken. My whole world had fallen apart.

The day after he died, my best friend Ruth texted me. The words were simple, and I didn’t know that they’d change my life: “I’m sorry that in your condition the sunshine’s been missing but don’t believe that it isn’t there. This world can be ugly, but isn’t it beautiful?” And yeah, I’d been a Jack’s Mannequin fan before that, but that wasn’t a song that I’d heard before. And I looked up Katie. All I could find was the chorus, but even with just that, it was slowly becoming my favorite song. Those were the words that I kept close to my heart as we buried my great-grandpa. As my mom pulled further away from me to be there emotionally and physically for my great-grandma.

I spent the following year in a blur of depression. I threw myself into friendships that were bad for me. And then, at the beginning of the next summer, I became reacquainted with two people who would change my life. I’d known Malissie and Dennis since my freshman year of high school, but we were never that close. But we bonded, and before I knew it they’d practically taken me in. I found myself pouring my heart to them. About five years of cutting and battling depression, something that had only amplified since my great-grandfather had passed away. And they became the people that were there for me at every moment.

A couple of days after the two of them rushed to my house at 2am to stop me from cutting, I asked Malissie to drive me to the hospital. I was either checking myself in or I was going to die. It was that bad. Both Malissie and Dennis and a friend of ours, Brandi, held my hands that night as I went through checking myself into a hospital.

The following eight days were the most difficult, magnificent days of my life. I started to figure out who I was, and the real reason behind all of my sadness. I’d tried so hard to cover up how sad I was because my great-grandpa died. I found myself smiling again. Laughing again. They would ask me if I wanted to hurt myself, and for the first time in five years, I was able to say no and mean it. I would talk to my mom when she would come to see me, and I would be completely honest with her.

After I got out, things were relatively okay. I got my drivers license. I became a senior in high school. I wasn’t sad all the time. I started my fall in October, when a friend of mine was forced away from me for a month. Around that time, I’d finally pulled out Jack’s Mannequin’s The Glass Passenger, and it became my soundtrack. I got particularly stuck on Swim. Something about the words got to me, but the first time I really heard it, I was driving home from my friends house, and I just pulled over and I cried until I couldn’t cry anymore. But then in December, I slipped. I cut for the first time since I’d been out of the hospital. And I’d never been more disappointed in myself. But I didn’t slip back into depression, I picked myself up and I kept going. Until April.

On April 23rd, 2009, I cut. Six or seven lines across my thigh. And I cried. And I hurt. And for the first time, I hated it. I hated the blades and the cuts more than I hated myself. And that was the first time I felt like I’d made progress. After I’d stopped crying that night, I picked up every blade I had and I got rid of them. I was done. I didn’t know if I would manage to quit, but I had nothing but faith.

I’m not sure when the idea first popped into my head, but one day I listened to Swim again. Really listened to it. And the line “The whole world is watching, you haven’t come this far to fall off the earth” stuck in my head. And I fell in love with that song. With that line. Because, while that song means something for everyone, that line had special meaning. I have come so far. I’ve battled with depression and loss and self-injury for years, and I’m still alive. I still have a heartbeat.

It was sometime in the middle of my first semester of college that I decided that I’d get swim for my first tattoo. Right on my wrist. But I wouldn’t just get it for anything. It would be a reward. It would be the celebration. Of me. Of one year without self injury. Of who I am and who I have been. Who I will be. My self-injury was a part of me, and while the physical scars will fade, I never want the memories to. I am so incredibly strong, and I don’t want to forget that.

I settled on my design right before Easter. It would be in the Jack’s Mannequin font. In lowercase. With the asterisk right above the ‘i’ instead of the dot. And when I showed it to my grandma and the rest of my dad’s side of the family, they all cried. They all hugged and congratulated me for this accomplishment.

On April 23rd, I woke up with my stomach in my lungs. I was nervous. Excited. A long list of emotions that contradicted each other in reality, but inside my body they just made me feel as though I was going to throw up all day. But I was proud, because I’d made it. 365 days had gone by without a single cut on my wrist. And those days hadn’t been easy, they’d been full of heartache and sadness and I’d done it. I did it. So that night, I found myself at Living Canvas, my wrist stretched out in front of me while they put the stencil on. My roommate was by my side, my camera in her hands. And it hurt. More than I’d anticipated it to hurt, but different than I’d anticipated too.

And then it was over. And I’d looked down at my tattoo and I couldn’t believe what I was looking at. Here it was, the physical proof of my triumph. But it was so much more than that. It meant the end of an era. The end of me as a cutter, as a self-injurer. The end of the phase in my life where I sought out pain to make myself feel better. And I cried as I walked home, I cried because of what I’ve gone through. But I know what I can do. I know what I can pull through. I just have to keep swimming. Even when I don’t think I’ll make it through the day, just keep going and it’ll be alright.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

There's a light on in Hannibal and I know I should be home:

Last week, my family gained contact with my cousin, Grant, a boy that we have never met. After his dad died when he was two months old, his mom whisked him away to Colorado, and we didn't have contact. Period. The only time we've ever talked to him was when he was ten and he called my step-dad. But it was a lucky google search that led my mom to his facebook, and she was joyous when he accepted her friend request, which gave us access to photos. To his likes, dislikes. Activities. Things we've never had before.

I grew up hearing about how much they missed him, a baby they've technically never seen. But he's family, and as I've learned with my step-dad's family, that means that there is so much love spread to you. I've heard stories about his dad. I've heard stories about how we lost him.

So when we gained contact last week, you can imagine how excited we all were. For the first time in almost sixteen years, we had hope of getting to know him. And it was exciting, thrilling. The possibility of getting to know my cousin.

But I've come to realize that you can't ever get your hopes up too much, because then you have farther to fall when things go wrong.

When my mom logged on to her facebook yesterday, she noticed that Grant was mysteriously gone. It was as though he didn't exist in her friends at all, and so she called me, panicked, to check if he was there. But he's not. And it's heartbreaking for me.

We still have a few options based on the information that we got off of his facebook, but it's not the same. It's scary to think that we might lose him, again. Like my mom said to me on the phone a couple minutes ago:

"I feel like my heart is broken."

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Day Twenty-Eight: Your Year In Great Detail

I'm not going to go into a lot of detail about this year, simply because I do that at the end of every year. But if you're curious about what has happened to me this year, you should either a) talk to me more often, or b) visit my photo blog

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Day Twenty-Seven: Your Month In Great Detail

This month, I bought a new bookbag. I worked at kgb_. I spent a lot of time at the Underground Cafe. I went home for a couple of days. I watched the super bowl for the first time in my dorm. I dyed my hair purple, and then two days later did an awful black experiment. I watched girly movies with my roommate. I stopped drinking caffeine. I went to Petco to play with ferrets. I finally told my best friend something she should have known a long time ago. I started working on a story that I've been wanting to do for years. I went to a masquerade ball. I planned and succeeded my first spontaneous surprise trip home. I got close with a young girl and am hoping to save her life.

This month, I updated my blog every day. I grew.

Friday, February 26, 2010

Day Twenty-Six: Your Week In Great Detail

Friday, February 19th, 2010:

On Friday, I got up and went to classes as I normally do. I slugged my way through English 1000, French 1200, and Abnormal Psychology in the hope that the rest of the day would make up for it. After classes, I went shopping with SCAM for the remainder of the things we would need for the Farc Formal. After that, I came home and grabbed some dinner from Twain. Then, we hung out in here and watched the Olympics and things like that. I gave Jessy my super disgusting apple juice, which she loved.

Saturday, February 20th, 2010:

On Saturday, I woke up with the intense urge to go home. Not for the weekend, but just for a couple of hours to see my family. So I hauled ass into the shower and ended up making it home within two hours of waking up. It was incredible to see the look on my mom's face when I got back. I spent the day with my Mom, my Great-Grandma, my great-aunts, and my little cousins. And then around 5:30 I got back in my car and drove home in order to make it back here in time for the Formal. It snowed and was awful on the drive back, but I was okay. The dance was incredible, even if it took me awhile to get comfortable enough to dance. It wasn't the best turn out, but it was enough to make it super fun.

Sunday, February 21st, 2010:

On Sunday, I woke up with the intention of studying, which lasted for about two hours and exactly enough time to read a chapter in my psychology book. Then, I was desperately hungry so Kee, Jessica and I took off for Chinese. Which was absolutely delicious. Then, we stopped by Petco, which is usual when we're over in that area. Jessica ended up falling in love with a guinea pig, and Kee fell in love with two mice. Both of which ended up coming home with us. I spent the rest of the afternoon setting up the guinea pig and babysitting while Jessy was at work. Then, I went to the underground cafe and met up with Grace for a write-in that as usual, didn't turn into much of a write-in.

Monday, February 22nd, 2010:

On Monday, I got up and went to classes like I always do. I dragged myself through the awfulness that is Monday in the hope that the day would get better. It didn't. I hate every day before Wednesday. I came home and amused myself by playing with Jessy's guinea pig, Kanye. Then, I went to dinner at Plaza 900. After that, I went to a meeting about a potential summer internship.

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010:

On Tuesday, I went to my two favorite classes. I came home in the afternoon and wrote until I couldn't feel my hand - or my heart - anymore. I kept going and eventually came out with something incredible. I went to Walmart with Kee and Jessica and decided that I refuse to drive them around anymore. I came back and had an awful night. I hate Tuesdays.

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010:

On Wednesday, I woke up jittery and excited. I couldn't handle the wait any longer. I wanted to be at the Underground with my friends, enjoying being there and being alive. Classes were long and dull and I could barely stand them. Finally, that afternoon I went down to the Underground to play Apples to Apples with Liz, Noah, Grace, and Abe. It was so much fun. I had a grilled cheese like I always do and accompanied by a chocolate shake. I hung out with Grace and talked to her after everyone else left.

Thursday, February 25th, 2010:

On Thursday, I woke up and went to classes like I always do. I ended up turning down the Southwestern Internship, just because I couldn't handle being away from Missouri for that long. Hell, I don't even want to leave Columbia anymore, let alone go to the East Coast. Immediately after class, I took off for Malissie and Dennis' house, and as soon as I got there I expressed what a beautiful day it was, and we took off to the park. At the park, we walked around and climbed some rocks. We "skipped" rocks on the ice. We played on the playground. We walked. It was good to get outdoors. The sunshine makes me feel more alive. Then we headed back to their apartment and watched Harry Potter and ate tuna noodle casserole. It was the best.

Friday, February 26th, 2010:

Today, I went to classes like I always do. It was relieving to see how warm and wonderful it was. I proclaimed it to be the best day ever, and sure enough it was. After classes, I came back here and hung out until it was time for dinner, which I had with Becky and Yolanda. After that, I headed down to the Underground (are you seeing a theme these days?) with Grace and her friend Alison. Soon, it got too crowded so we took off for Panera after Liz and Noah met up with us. We stayed at Panera until close, and I had my first cup of coffee/caffeine since I stopped drinking it a few weeks ago. It made me REALLY hyper. After Panera closed, Liz and Noah went home, and Grace and I headed to the Underground with her dad. It was Latin dance night, but somehow we managed to tune them out long enough to write for about an hour and a half. When I finally got home, it was almost eleven and I was so happy.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Day Twenty-Five: Your Day in Great Detail

I woke up this morning in a fairly bad mood. I generally hate Thursday mornings, plus when I got up I had a long talk with my mother about the Southwestern Internship, which I decided not to take in the end. I talked to Haley and Madi. I procrastinated getting dressed. I went to French and focused. I ate lunch for the first time this week. I went to HDFS, which let out super early. Then I went to my interview for Southwestern and told them I couldn't do it. And then I went to Malissie and Dennis' house. So we decided to go to the park, but while we were waiting for Dennis to get dressed, Malissie and I went outside to hang out. And then while I was gone I took some pictures:













When we got back to their house we hung out on our computers and watched Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince. Malissie made tuna noodle casserole. Then at 10:45, I came back to the dorms and hung out with Jessy and Becky in my room.