Sunday, March 11, 2012

Just An Old Sweet Song


 
(Disclaimer: this picture has nothing to do with this week's blog, it just sort of describes the mood. Plus my dog is adorable and everyone should know)
5:15pm. On a bus somewhere along the eastern seaboard.
I guess it doesn’t really matter where you go, or what you’re doing, life will always take you on adventures if you’re willing. As you may have noticed by this week’s location, I’m off on a new journey headed down south to Georgia for a huge, week-long, ultimate Frisbee tournament near the beach. Gotta love spring break. (More about this next week)
Since my last blog, I’ve been wondering what I should write about next, but nothing really pertinent came to mind until Wednesday night. It was a balmy 70 degrees in Poughkeepsie this past Wednesday, which of course meant breaking out the tank tops and Frisbees and spending the whole day out on the campus green enjoying the sun. Later on that night, I joined a good friend of mine for some Ben & Jerry’s out on the lawn and we had a good talk. I remembered writing about this same friend way back in Italy. Her name is Kendra and she has just returned from a semester abroad in Senegal, Africa. Since our homecoming she has been a constant confidant. Often, my best friend, Lacey (who went to Italy with me), Kendra and I will sit and watch the sunset together, we’ll talk about school, friends, family… whatever. But there’s something really special about these chats. Lately I’ve been doing a lot of self-reflection, but it’s interesting to see how coming back from abroad has affected my friends who also went away last semester. Lacey seems to have hit the ground running, she’s just so completely in her element with all the new lessons she’s learned, I have to admit (reluctantly) I’m a bit envious. I see it in Kendra also, she’s already naturally outgoing and as she puts it, she “doesn’t do awkward.” Talk about envy.
In the end though, it’s just another opportunity to reflect. I ask myself, is it healthy to be envious of your friends (or anyone really)? Can’t you just be happy for them? Honestly, it’s not like they don’t have problems too. I think the answer is yes. Yes, you can be happy for your friends, in fact, what I’m learning is that you need to be happy for your friends because otherwise you seriously diminish your own chances for happiness. Envy is a thing that consumes the best of us at times, and while I’ve never had any good luck ignoring my feelings completely, they all have their space and place. Envy’s a tricky one though because it’s a feeling that doesn’t serve you or anyone around you. You just waste your energy feeling jealous that you’re not one way when you could be spending it getting closer to being the way you actually want to be. Even if you channel your jealousy into motivation to achieve new things, it seems a tainted motivation. Like you can’t motivate yourself so you rely on the success of others for your own motivation. It all just seems so fruitless when it comes to envy.
So what’s the lesson here? It goes back to what I wrote about Kendra way back in Italy. Kendra’s mom wrote to her in Africa, “It takes a lot of courage to release the familiar and seemingly secure, to embrace the new.” These were words of wisdom for me in Italy and they are words of wisdom for me still. As I ride these long hours down the eastern coast, they echo like an old sweet song. This isn’t something you deal with when you go abroad (or have any life changing experience for that matter) it’s the way your life is forever affected. Envy masquerades as a place of security and familiarity, but it’s not, it’s just a place of fear and stagnation. The lesson this week (and, let’s be real, many weeks in the future probably) is to be honest enough with yourself to acknowledge that place of envy, but take up the courage that is most certainly within you and step beyond those fearful, stagnant places to the new and unfamiliar road ahead. I can’t say I know what that road will hold, or even just that it will be better, it may not be. All I know is this: better to move on, take new chances and maybe gain the whole world, than to stay so very still, certainly gaining nothing.

1 comment:

  1. Envy is the toxic fumes of unpotentiated desire. For me this has been the greatest alchemy, being willing to admit that what I am envious of is what I want in my life, and often have not been willing to admit and go for. Sometimes it's as simple as I want what he/she has, often it's deeper; I want what that represents for me. The attention, the approval, the achievement; sometimes what I envy I want because of what it would mean of me if I have it: "I am _____, can't you tell? Look, you can see it because I have ____."
    In all cases it's the old adage, where there is smoke there is fire...

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