Sunday, February 26, 2012

Auto correct

I've noticed that when I'm chatting with someone online and I make a typo, I will automatically "correct" it--usually with the help of the *, even if the actual meaning is obvious. I'm not sure why this is. It seems like wasted effort. For example, I often mistype -ing endings as "inh". Anyone with half a brain knows what I mean, so why is it that I feel the need to "fix" it immediately.

Exmaple:
Friend: [[says something sad]]
Me: sounds depressinh
Me: *depressing

WHY do I do that!? Do I really think my (highly educated and intelligent) friend is going to think I meant "depressinh"** and stop the conversation to google that word and figure out what it means because he is unfamiliar with it? Am I afraid that he will interpret it as a depressed hyperbolic sine function*** and try to figure out what I am talking about mathematically and how it relates to his situation? Am I so concerned that someone will think I don't know how to spell the word "depressing" that I have to fix it so they know that I really know how to write it? I don't know. But I continue to do it.


**ironically, when I wrote this word, I misspelled it "depressing". ha.
***ever since I wrote that I can't stop seeing the "sinh" at the end... the the point where I have to really concentrate to figure out what the word is supposed to be. Great.

Friday, February 24, 2012

When the noise stops

Sometime life is rough and sometimes there are things you don't want to deal with. So you don't deal with them. You fill your life up with noise instead... with so many people, and responsibilities, meetings, classes at the gym, deadlines, soccer practices, late nights at the office, long runs on a Sat morning... with so much commotion that you never have to slow down and face those things. Then, suddenly, for no reason, the noise stops, and it's just you. Just you and your dragons, and no distractions. And maybe you're holding a tiny sword, or maybe just a straw or a paperclip, and you're wondering how you're going to MacGyver your way out of this situation that you have been avoiding for so long. Thoughts that you were trying to keep unthought come creeping in, and you start feeling things you didn't want to feel and you realize that "avoiding" is not the same as "dealing with", and everything is just SO QUIET and you want the noise to start again so you can distract yourself. But it doesn't. So finally you suck it up and go to the Post Office.

Man, you would not believe how much I hate going to the Post Office.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

How to find true love

Stephanie and I are rockstars at giving dating advice. Sadly, most people don't really want to hear our advice so we mostly just talk about things we would tell people if anyone listened to us (that makes it sound like we gossip about specific people, which is not the case. What I mean is that we discuss the philosophy of dating and what works and doesn't work, etc). I wish she were here to help me write this post that will tell all of you everything you need to know in order to find true love. Since she isn't here, it will probably just tell you most of what you need to know.

Since the day of love aka Valentine's Day has now passed, I was thinking about all the dating advice I have heard over the years. When it comes right down to it, no one is really qualified to give such advice to others. There are a few reasons for this:

(1) Assuming you are dating with the goal of getting married, who do you listen to? Married people obviously were "successful", but especially if they got married rather quickly (I know a few people that married the first person they seriously dated), how much experience do they really have to draw on? Maybe they just got lucky. Unfortunately, married people generally LOVE to tell us single people what we should be doing in order to join the ranks of happily married couples like themselves.

(2) Unmarried people that have had many relationships clearly have a lot of experience, however if marriage is their goal, they are obviously doing something "wrong", so why would you want to listen to them if you're looking to get hitched?

(3) As Hitch would say, "There are no rules." I have heard SO MANY ridiculous dating "rules." Once in a while one of them sound like very sage advice, and then I see a person that completely disregards that rule and ends up happily engaged. Listen to me and listen good: There. Are. No. Rules. Well, possibly a few very very basic ones like decent personal hygiene and not killing your dates, but I won't get into those.

Back to the "rules". I mostly hear the advice given to girls on how to deal with guys, since I am a girl. I also have a sneaking suspicion that guys don't get quite as much advice on how to deal with girls. I could be wrong. I have been told things like "You can only text him once for every 3 times he texts you" (presumably so you won't come across as desperate or something), "If he calls and want to do something at the last minute, say you're not available and try to make plans for an evening a few days in the future" (presumably so you don't turn into a booty call, and so you force him to be more committal), and "Don't walk across the room to talk to a guy, make him come to you" (presumably so... you can be the prey instead of the predator? I don't know...). There are so many more, but I won't bore you too much. I think you get the idea, and I'm sure you have heard plenty as well.

I have a few issues with all of these rules. First, it feels so much like rules of combat. Don't let him know how much you like him because if he thinks you like him more than he likes you, he will have the upper hand. Make him work for it. Pretend you are more busy than you really are. Act disinterested when you're really interested. You are being pitted against your possible future romantic partner in some crazy game where no one quite understands the rules or the goal. What should be a relationship of love, trust, friendship, and affection, becomes this competition where you are always trying to second-guess and outplay the other person. I fail to see how anything good can come of this. Do you really want to build a relationship on a foundation of playing games with each other? (If you do then fine, have at it, but I don't.) Unfortunately, there are times I find myself playing the games as well, out of sheer habit or societal pressure or perhaps something else.

Second, I don't like feeling insecure. More than that, I don't like making other people feel insecure. And by that I mean insecure about how I really feel about them. Life is hard enough. Dating is hard enough. Relationships are hard to figure out, hard to get into, hard to get out of. We're all in this together--can't we realize that everyone else struggles just as much as we do, and help each other out. Do we really need to add one more thing on top of work, school (for some people), family, paying bills, getting enough sleep, exercise, and eating right, and everything else that is a potential cause of stress in our lives? I, for one, would like to pretend I'm on the same team as whatever guy I'm seeing.

One of my friends once said "Yeah, but feelings get involved, and then things get messy." He has a point. It's hard when you love someone that only likes you as a friend. It's hard when someone loves you and you don't/can't reciprocate. I've been on both sides of the equation, so at least I have the benefit of knowing to some degree what it's like to be in the other person's shoes. I would hope that makes me a little bit more empathetic, and/or a little less annoying, as the case may be.

The problem with dating, especially if your ultimate goal is marriage, is that in a way it's the most selfish endeavor one engages in. You can't be "nice" to someone and marry them even if you don't really like them all that much, just to make them happy. You have to think about you. If you are considering spending the rest of your life with a person, it has to be THE person. Unfortunately, this means you will likely have to break hearts (unless you are my brother and your first girlfriend happens to be the perfect girl for you and you marry her and live happily ever after). You will likely get your heart broken. There's no way around it. (Just try not to be a jerk about it, okay? No matter what side of the heart-breaking equation you are on.)

As the famous Sunscreen song reminds us, "Don't be reckless with other people's hearts. Don't put up with people who are reckless with yours." I have a harder time with the second part, I think. I like to see the good in people. Especially people that I care about. I give people the benefit of a doubt--when their behavior could be interpreted in different ways, I tend to pick the interpretation that puts them in the most positive light. e.g. He said he would call me at 6pm and he didn't. His phone probably died. ... We planned to go out on Friday night and he never showed up. Maybe he was taking his sister to the hospital. [[Interestingly enough, I once stood up a guy I was supposed to watch a movie with because I had to take my roommate to the hospital. It happens, people!]] Unfortunately this can sometimes escalate to Hmmm...it looked like I saw him kissing another girl. Maybe she got something in her eye and he was trying to help get it out...? ._. There is a fine line, I suppose.

I don't like to think that someone would deliberately want to hurt me or use me. For most people, this is true. For a few, not so much. While I realize this positive, happy, perhaps slightly naive, puppies-and-rainbows approach to life and dating might not be the most effective, and might set me up for being hurt sometimes, it's the approach I want. I want people to be honest and sincere. I want them to dislike playing games as much as I do. I want them to be happy when they feel happy, confused when they feel confused, insecure when they feel insecure, and not try to hide everything under layers upon onion layers of fronts and pretenses and acting. So, maybe my approach doesn't always work. But when it works, it works. :) And it's so much nicer when I'm not having to stress out all the time about whether or not I sent more than my weekly allotment of text messages, or if I acted too interested, or if I was a bit too sincere about something. So much less drama.

The only piece of dating advice I have heard that I felt like was remotely useful was from a self-proclaimed "dating coach" (who I'm sure made tons of money off of other people's loneliness and discontent with life), that shared the phrase:

I do not give the best of me to those who don't invest in me.

Cute, it rhymes. It's more about self-respect than anything else. It's the one piece of advice I have actually tried to live by. If it is obvious that a person is not investing anything in the relationship, even if you like them, you can't invest back. He/she does not deserve the "best of" you, if he/she is not willing to put any work into it. It's not playing games. It's about demanding the respect you deserve. This applies to everyone.

So, in summary:
There are no rules.
No one can tell you how to achieve success in dating.
People play too many games.
I don't like it.
Sometimes I do it anyway out of habit.
I still don't like it.
Have some self-respect and you won't let people use you (as much).

I'm sorry that I didn't actually tell you how to find true love. The title of this post was deceptive. Or maybe it wasn't. Because when it comes right down to it, nobody can tell you how. There is no hard-and-fast way, or secret set of rules that works for everyone. (If someone tries to tell you otherwise, they are lying to you, and most likely want your money.) But the good news is, you will probably manage to find it anyway, by just stumbling through life like the rest of us. So in a way, I did tell you. Just be yourself, don't be a jerk, and keep your priorities in order. You won't find love. Love will find you. And if not, there is always cats. Lots and lots of cats...

My mom emailed me this a while back... hmm...

Monday, February 13, 2012

cat love





The last one is my favorite (and nothing to do with love, really... but I love it, so deal).

Down with love

Okay, after 22 of these posts, I am officially sick of love. How did this seem like a good idea?!

More lyrics

Nunca me senti tan solo
como cuando ayer de pronto
lo entendi. . .
que nunca te tuve y nunca te perdi

--Que Lloro, Sin Bandera

I always thought this was really deep. Like I said, Latins write the best love songs.

Lyrics

Back beat, the word was on the street
That the fire in your heart is out
I'm sure you've heard it all before
But you never really had a doubt
I don't believe that anybody
Feels the way I do about you now

And all the roads we have to walk are winding
And all the lights that lead us there are blinding
There are many things that I
Would like to say to you
but I don't know how
--Wonderwall, Oasis

Oh the memories this song brings back.

Surprising?

"It doesn't surprise me that I'm single. It surprises me that more people aren't."

Oh how I wish I could remember where I read this. It was an article (blog post) about how improbable it seems for two people two fall in love. About how it seems like life/dating is just an endless stream of liking people that aren't interested in you, and being pursued by people that you can't bring yourself to have romantic feelings for, even though they are great individuals and good friends. How the possibility of true, mutual love seems so remote it is nothing short of a miracle when it occurs. And yet, you look around and it seems almost everyone is in a relationship. Counterintuitive, surely? Are they "settling"? Is love really not as elusive as it seems? Are most people just lucky? Or do a small percentage of us expect significantly more from a romantic partner?

love takes hostages

“Have you ever been in love? Horrible isn't it? It makes you so vulnerable. It opens your chest and it opens up your heart and it means that someone can get inside you and mess you up. You build up all these defenses, you build up a whole suit of armor, so that nothing can hurt you, then one stupid person, no different from any other stupid person, wanders into your stupid life...You give them a piece of you. They didn't ask for it. They did something dumb one day, like kiss you or smile at you, and then your life isn't your own anymore. Love takes hostages. It gets inside you. It eats you out and leaves you crying in the darkness, so simple a phrase like 'maybe we should be just friends' turns into a glass splinter working its way into your heart. It hurts. Not just in the imagination. Not just in the mind. It's a soul-hurt, a real gets-inside-you-and-rips-you-apart pain. I hate love.”
--Neil Gaiman

Yep.

invitation

The following is from an invitation I recently received from Calvin for a (anti-?) Valentines Day party. (He's didn't make it through an entire poetry major for nothing, folks!)

Hi kids.

Are you single?

Do you hate love?

Are you aware of what actually became of St. Valentine? (Hint below).

image.png


If you answered yes to some or none of these questions, then let’s veto Valentine’s Day and celebrate KATIE’S 47th-ish BIRTHDAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Note that Katie is not actually turning 47... I'm pretty sure she's much younger.


Yes I do work sometimes

Lest you think I'm wasting all my time at work today, I will admit I took the easy way out and scheduled all these posts in advance.
"Now I know what I've been looking for all these years......myself! I've been waiting for me to come along and now I 've swept myself off my feet."
--Jerry Seinfeld

Not sure if this is quite as funny out of context, but it was a good episode.
"That action injured you and saved me. I will not forget it." - Lieutenant Commander Data

In the context, this wasn't about love per se, but I think it's very poetic.


No doubt

Doubt thou the stars are fire,
Doubt that the sun doth move,
Doubt truth to be a liar,
But never doubt I love.


--Hamlet

In the strictest sense, stars really aren't "fire." Trust me, I'm an astronomer.
Also, the sun doesn't move, the Earth moves around the sun, so it only looks like the sun is moving.
As a wise man once said, many of the "truths" we cling to depend greatly on our own point of view...
Thus, what am I left to conclude about your love?
"I miss you even more than I could have believed; and I was prepared to miss you a good deal."
--Vita Sackville-West

No idea who this person is, or where I originally found the quote, but I like it.

El Problema

Y como deshacerme de ti si no te tengo,
como alejarme de ti si estas tan lejos.
El problema no fue allarte,
el problema es olvidarte.

El problema no es que mientas,
el problema es que te creo.
El problema no es cambiarte,
el problema es que no quiero.

El problema no es quererte,
es que tu no sientas lo mismo.
El problema no es que juegues,
el problema es que es conmigo.

--Ricardo Arjona

Latins write the best love (and breakup) songs...
"Love doesn't make the world go round, love is what makes the ride worthwhile."

--Elizabeth Browning

Those 3 words

"I love you."

"I know."


Points if you can name that movie (but not too many points because it should be easy).
They say "All is fair in love and war."
Sometimes I think they're not so different.
Except you can get arrested for war crimes.
And there's no Geneva Convention in love.

This is a poem, and I wrote it.

Horrible Love

"I say ‘successful’ in that I achieved my objective; it was less successful in that I inadvertently introduced my arch nemesis to the girl of my dreams and now he's taking her out on dates, and they're probably going to french kiss or something..."


--Dr. Horrible
"Love is but the discovery of ourselves in others, and the delight in the recognition."
--Alexander Smith

Can't hurry love

"The most wonderful of all things in life is the discovery of another human being with whom one's relationship has a growing depth, beauty and joy as the years increase. This inner progressiveness of love between two human beings is a most marvelous thing; it cannot be found by looking for it or by passionately wishing for it. It is a sort of divine accident, and the most wonderful of all things in life."

--Sir Hugh Walpole

I admit, some of these I am reposting from my a few years ago on my blog. But I doubt most people read the archives, so it's okay.


Love, MIB style

Jay: You know what they say. It's better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all.
Kay: Try it.

--Men in Black

I think this exchange speaks volumes, and I've always liked it.

How to find a soul mate

Just over 3 years ago I wrote a post about love and soul mates. I think it's still relevant.
http://janvswild.blogspot.com/2009/01/on-true-love.html

"The Single Life"

"Never mind that close to half of marriages end in divorce, that many of those who stay married do so unhappily, and that, rationally, we all know life can be a struggle regardless of relationship status. Ninety percent of us will marry — often repeatedly — on the belief that marriage can add something fundamentally good to our lives.

Valentines Day Pending

In honor or the approaching day where all things love and relationships are celebrated, I will be posting a series of quotes on love, relationships, and marriage (both negative and positive) on my blog. Enjoy!