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Life as I Know It Love

Day 19: Feels good to be alive

19/30: Something purple. Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away,” says Antoine de Saint-Exupéry.

 There were lots of elaborate floral arrangements, bouquets and centerpieces in our wedding, but these wild flowers that Sheila happened to have found somewhere in the venue, in all its simplicity, has got to be the best looking set of flowers there was that day. Great capture, Sheila!

(Note to self: Give the Catilo couple one huge thank you and one huge link towards the end of these 30 days, for being a major sponsor to this 30-Day Challenge.)

Today I was reminded to appreciate the simple things. I woke up this morning a little bit late, but feeling a lot better than I’ve ever felt the whole week. I realize that for the first time this week, I actually had 6 hours of uninterrupted sleep, no longer awaken in the middle of the night by my incessant coughing. The feeling of weakness is gone and I know that soon enough, I’ll get my voice back too. God is awesome, and it feels good to be alive.

Tonight we’re going to an intimate Gary V concert at Crossroads77. I’m all prepped to be inspired. <3

Destinations Life as I Know It

No More Denying, I’m a Coward

I’m still not done pondering about last Friday night’s trip to Cubao-X. I don’t know what happened to me there, but somewhere in the middle of looking through the glass window displays of those boutiques that already closed for the day, and being in Vintage Pop as it closed its doors for good, I realized something about myself that I’ve been trying so hard to deny for a while now.

I’m a coward.

Photo credit:creampuff.tumblr.com

It sucks, being thought of as successful in what I’m doing, but really, I feel so far behind. I’m too attached to my comfort zone, and it’s sad, because I know that I could do so much more.

Lately, I would try to absorb as much words of wisdom and inspiration from random strangers, thinking that I need all the courage-booster I could get for when it’s time for me to take the leap. But often, instead of being inspired to be better and to do something about this wealth of knowledge I’m exposed to everyday, I feel frustrated instead. Why can’t I just do it? What am I waiting for? What am I still doing here? Why can’t I, like her, just take the leap into the unknown? Why why why?

Questions, questions. I have lots of them.

I hate that about myself — having too many questions all the time. Must be rooted to my pessimism. Yep, that’s me. Pessimistic to the very core. My natural instinct is to see imperfection in things. Show me a beautiful picture and I swear, I’d see something wrong about it. Offer me a brilliant opportunity, and I’d see complications, and problems that might arise, and unimportant reasons why it would fail. Put me under pressure, and the best solution I could think of is to back out.

I’m not sure when I started to become like this. I wasn’t like this. In the words of a former boss, ”Cynicism is not your thing. You’re sunshine, you’re guitar music. But cynic, you are not.” I remember feeling insulted by those words before, but now, tell me I’m that and I’d be, if anything, proud of myself. At this point, I’m a coward hiding behind my sunshiney, I’m doing-exactly-what-I-want-to-do-with-my-life, oh-hai-I’m-going-to-chase-my-dreams mask.

Today, I arrive at the conclusion that if I stay a coward like this, I will surely fail. But I don’t want to fail! Which perhaps makes me more of a coward. (No wait, chicken or egg? I got lost, too.)

I may be pessimistic alright, but my Dad used to tell me that I can be very passionate about some things too, if only I would put my head and my heart into it.

And so I promise to be better. (Shut up, I know you heard that already. I’m not talking to you, I’m reminding myself.)

Notes-to-self to start the week, maybe you’ll need them too:

It’s not too late to start again somewhere. Bong Salaviera, the owner of Vintage Pop whom I had the wonderful opportunity of meeting last Friday, is migrating to Canada with his family next month. Along with this comes the difficult decision of closing down his lovely store. Just when he’s already established something remarkable, he’s got to leave everything behind and start from scratch in an unknown place and culture without a clue how to do it. He’s in his late-thirties or early-forties. And here I am, at 26, frantic about my career, and my life, and what direction I should take. Stop worrying, Riz.

Stick with what you love to do. One of the things I learned in the 5-years that I was a corporate slave is, I can only excel in what I love doing. When you start to feel like you just have to endure being there, then that’s the time to go, no more prolonging the agony. There’s gotta be something in the job (more than the income) that’s worth being there for. At this point in my life, I have pretty much imagined what kind of ventures I’d like to invest my time and money in. While there are a bunch of opportunities out there — some seems more profitable than the others — you have to choose that one opportunity that makes your heart flutter. It just won’t work without passion, and love. Bank in on love, Riz.

Don’t be afraid to fail, coward. Admitting that I am one, I’m starting to feel good about myself already. Acceptance is always the first step, anyway, and now, I’ve accepted the grim reality why I’m stuck where I am. See, I’m making progress already. It’s okay to fail, Riz. That only means you tried.

*Photo credit: Creampuff.tumblr.com

Life as I Know It

Loving and Hating this Nocturnal Bodyclock, What’s Wrong with Me

I never learn. I’ve lost track of the number of times I made a mental note about not sleeping during the early hours of the evening, so I won’t wake up in the middle of the night restless.

Crazy things happen to me during these ungodly hours, when everyone in my side of the planet has already signed off for the day. Crazy, impulsive things.

Exhibit A: Two months ago, I jumped into the Project 365 bandwagon, impulsively, at 4:00 in the morning, thinking I could actually last an entire year. I quit, 60 photographs later.

Exhibit B: I left an old domain name and bought chasingdreams.net, just a few hours before the break of day. Now, I have 2 inactive blogs which I’m not sure what to do with anymore.

Exhibit C: I thought of painting my walls purple, at 3:00 AM on a Monday, and then posted a blog about how I want my room to look like Bella’s.

Exhibit D: Realizing that there’s no way I could paint my walls purple, and overhauling my room will need more time and planning than I imagined, I thought of modifying this blog’s color scheme instead, just because I had to see purple-and-blue on something that I own. Started modifying the template at 2:00AM, ended at 5:00AM.

Exhibit E: I conceptualized two new blog projects with Xai (to be launched soon, hopefully), the result of a series of after-midnight brainstorming/chat sessions between two sanguines. You see, that’s the sickness of sanguine people like ourselves — brilliant ideas, lacking in follow-through. But at least I wasn’t alone this time, right.

Oh, and now I’m thinking about doing the 30-Day Blog Challenge too — like her. (Ahh, good luck with that Riz).

I know it’s bad for my health, this nocturnal schedule I’ve developed for myself. But can I help it if inspiration pours in at these late hours, and it’s the time I feel on fire the most? Maybe because it’s quiet and nobody’s buzzing on YM or Skype every now and then. Plus, SkyCable’s connection is fastest at these hours.

So far, none of these crazy impulsive things I sacrificed sleep over has developed into something grand yet, but who knows, one of these days, they just might.

Then maybe I could actually say with conviction that nocturnality is good.