a girl in the world

finding beauty, pleasure and grace on the road less traveled

I’ve finally ventured out of the rabbit hole and made it out for lunch today. I met actual people! I changed out of my pajamas! I saw the light of day!

It has been nice to come back to a place with familiar friends around. For so long I got used to the idea of landing in a city and making my own way. There is such comfort in knowing that there is a network of great people here who have known me for more than five minutes, who know some random quirk about me, who understand what I’m talking about when I say something cryptic or ambiguous or loaded. That kind of intimacy becomes more and more valuable the older I get.

Over the last few weeks, many great people from the past have walked into my life unexpectedly. There was dinner with an old high school friend in Kuala Lumpur. Email dates with a friend from University. Phone gossiping with a best girl friend. A chance encounter with a locked-away part of history. It sounds like an oxymoron but the past can be so refreshing. All things familiar are all of a sudden new.

A pattern has been consistent throughout all of these encounters: we’re all growing up. Where once we moaned about wanting more excitement, more spontaneity, and more drama, my dear friends are finding peace. There is an overwhelming desire to go back to the simple things, to find meaning, to take control of the uncontrollable. People are having babies, buying houses, getting married, finding love. The values of family, of parenting, of peace, of stability are becoming more and more a part of our conversations.

Instead of just talking about the now, our shared histories enable us to connect the past with the present, so that we can make sense of our future wants and goals. History is important. It’s powerful, it’s deep, it’s healing. And what I realize more and more is that the older we get, the more we need the people we knew when we were young. There is a different kind of intimacy there that can’t be built anew.

Though I’m not yet ready to find a plot of land, build a house and fill it with babies, I do feel the desire to maintain deeper relationships with a small handful of important people, to build closer relationships with my brother and parents, to find some mental and physical peace amidst the chaos of all of this travel and exploration. Maybe growing up means finding balance, finding an equilibrium that gives us the courage and opportunity to grow and the wisdom and perspective to see beauty in the little things.

It's 3.35 AM local time.  And I'm awake.  Last night I slept 12 hours (9pm to 9am).  The night before that I was up until 7 AM because I couldn't fall asleep.  And the night before that I slept 10 hours.

Jet lag is a bitch (excuse my French).

Seriously.  This is insanity.  I haven't been able to properly function for a week now.  I am tired all day long and completely awake all night.  And I haven't been able to shake it off!  Why is travel Eastward across the Pacific so much more brutal than traveling Westward from the Atlantic?  You would think that gaining a day would be good for you!  Backwards time travel shouldn't be so bad!

And what do people do when they can't sleep at night?!  Ridiculous and pointless things!  For example:

  • Watch re-runs of prime time TV on Hulu
  • Starve (I am SO hungry right now but too lazy to get out of bed to get something to eat)
  • Read the same news articles over and over again from different sources
  • Write and write and write
  • Hang out with the equally nocturnal dog
  • Reply to random texts from the equally nocturnal brother
  • Make long distance phone calls to friends in friendlier time zones
  • Think up crazy weird ideas that should be written down but aren't because it's too dark and that would take too much effort
  • Read (and hopefully read very uninteresting, painfully boring books)
  • Blog

I need a remedy.  And I need it now.  HELP!  How do I cure this jet lag?!?!?

If I could just get over this mind-numbing jet lag, maybe I'd find the mental capacity to write a coherent paragraph.  But alas, I am still staring blankly at this screen with a headache pulsing from my left temple and all I can muster is a point-form smattering of random thoughts.  Please bear with me a few more days while I try to convince myself that this insanity that has come over me is temporary.

  • I think the iPad is one of the worst names ever.  Couldn't it sound just a tad cooler?!  iTablet? iSlate? iAnythingElseButPad?!  
  • On my books-to-buy list:  Committed by Elizabeth Gilbert and Linchpin by Seth Godin. If any of you have read these, please let me know what you thought!  I'm debating which of the two I should start first.
  • Infinite freedom is a cause for hardship.  I know, this sounds ironic, but it's true.  I am going through a slough of decisions and it really doesn't help that I seem unable to narrow it down to three possible paths.  It's actually a bit stressful.  I know, I should be thankful, and I totally am, but seriously, the paradox of choice is real and it sucks!
  • I think I'm allergic to Bear (our dog).  That's a problem, right?  How do I cope with that?!  And to think we were considering getting her another shiba puppy playmate!
  • Saw Avatar on a hot afternoon in Singapore last weekend.  What a great film!  Can't believe it's the highest grossing movie of all time.  It was good, but was it that good?!
  • To deal with jetlag, I've been catching up on episodes of Glee and Grey's Anatomy and Brothers & Sisters.  All great shows.  And I'm so glad that I watch them all on-demand as opposed to becoming slave to weekly TV.
  • Do you have 15 minutes to spare?  A long but interesting read about marriage (thanks to my friend S.M. for sharing)

Happy weekend everyone!

Hi, I'm Denise. I'm a writer, artist and photographer. This is where I share what I'm seeing, learning and making.


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