I wish someone had told me that you need to be strong in this life, that
flowery romanticism and vacant idealism was never going to be very
helpful. I hadn’t realized when I was younger that the kind of strength
you need isn’t hard or infallible or impenetrable, because I always
thought that was what it meant to be strong. It turns out strength is
much more nebulous than that. It turns out that strength is in the
reaction, not the action. What do you do when your life takes turns and
curves you never expected? Where are you amidst the rubble? What do you
do when you’re not who you thought you’d be? What happens when your life
turns out entirely different than what you expected? How do you handle that?
I believed in so much when I was younger. That was my generation: the
You Can Do Anything You Want Generation. I still believe that, but it
requires much more than I ever expected. The You Can Do Anything You
Want speech came with an asterisk and some fine print that nobody knew
about. You can do anything you want, if you’re ready to work for it, to
sustain long bouts of sacrifice, and if you’re willing to learn what it
means to truly be strong. Alright, then you can do anything you want. Just be
prepared. Because, as it turns out, wanting something really, really,
really badly does not lead to having it. There is work involved. There
is pain. There is sadness. There is a lot of living that needs to happen
in between the moments of dreams and hopes and the pursuit of both.
I wish someone would have tempered my expectations about life, love, and
work. I know part of this is my privilege, that I had the luxury of
being around people who really did believe that I could do anything I
wanted to do, that the only thing standing between me and success was
just me. I know there are a lot of people who do not have the luxury of
delusion. One of my friends was born amidst abject poverty in a small country
in North Africa where there was no delusion of hopes and dreams, besides
making enough money to survive, which in Tunisia, was a dream that many
have a difficult time actualizing. His life and the trajectory of his
life is humbling.
I am aware that there are only certain pockets of people in this world
who have the indulgence of passion, who are ever encouraged to “do only
what they love.” Only the privileged are ever encouraged to “follow
their passion.” I know this. And, in all honesty, I wish I had never
been given such a strangely toxic gift. Because, the foolish pursuit of
only doing that which I love to do leaves out far too much of the
grittiness of life. It did nothing to prepare me for the fact that—on
the path to this elusive, perfect life of only doing what I love—there’s
a lot of shit I have to do that I don’t love. And, I was never prepared
for this and, fuck, I really wish I had been. At least I would have
been strong enough to handle failure and financial stress and the fact
that—no matter how much you love something—sometimes it fucking sucks to
do it. Sometimes love is not always enough to sustain a commitment. It
takes discomfort and suffering and sacrifice and there are painful
moments and that’s okay. I know it’s okay now. I didn’t then, when I was
in my late teens to early twenties. I hadn’t known that pain and sacrifice
were okay, that there is something larger than having good days every
day. I know now that hard work feels better than easy rewards.
I don’t subscribe to this “do what you love” advice anymore. I cringe
when I see mugs and totes and bullshit prints about following your
passion and doing only what you love. It’s just stupid to think like
this. That’s not how life is and that’s not bitter or cynical or
pessimistic or negative: it’s fucking freeing, if you let it be. It’s
ridiculous to expect that every day should be perfect and that, if you
find that magical passion of yours that you love and can make money
from, then you shall be awarded lifelong happiness that never falters.
It’s not worth even entertaining these expectations, because life can be
magic and beautiful and surprising in all the best ways, but it is so
many others things as well, unsavory things that you don’t want to think
about, but demand your attention. And that’s okay. It’s all okay. Life
doesn’t have to be perfect to be beautiful. Your work—your path, your
purpose, your calling, whatever you want to call it—doesn’t have to be
something you enjoy every day to be worth you showing up to it daily.
The journey does not have to be paved with rainbows in order to be
embarked upon.
I let myself get caught up in the fantasy of many things for
a dangerously long amount of time and it left me cripplingly unprepared
for my life. Flowery words about what you deserve and how life should
be a wonderful adventure every moment of every day and you can’t miss
any of it and everything should just feel like a movie all the time,
these can wrap you up and make you hope for a life that doesn’t exist
and a life you shouldn’t be wanting any way. I don’t use the word
“should” very often, but I think it’s warranted here. You shouldn’t aim
for a life of ease, of comfort, and of perfection, of a constant
happiness that never wanes.
A big life is big because it has been built with everything you’ve got, not just the good parts, not just the happy parts: EVERYTHING!.
A big life is big in all the ways. Big reward. Big pain. Big sacrifice.
Big sadness. Big disappointment. Big excitement. Big happiness.
You will find that the times you are most proud of yourself, the times
you look upon your life with wonder, is when you have risen from the
depths of something catastrophic, when you’ve stared down your breakdown
and not let it ruin you completely. You will sense the real hope that
lives within your bones when you’ve become dangerously close to burning
through it all completely. Life is better when your stars and stripes
are earned. The rewards are more vibrant when you’ve been a little
beaten and bruised and broken from weathering the journey it took to get
you where you are. You will never appreciate your happiness more than
when you’ve lost it, when it has vacated you for long stretches of time
and you must claw your way back to it. This is a life. This is the full
experience. This is what the whole thing is about. Live it completely,
in all the ways in which it is meant to be lived. This is it.
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