It’s been a while since I've had that whole “What am I doing
with my life? Will my time on this earth have meant anything at all?” meltdown.
I found myself in that miserable mental state a great deal during the last year
or two in my previous job. I felt unsatisfied and unfulfilled and spent a lot
of time wondering what I was supposed to do with whatever gifts I’d been given.
Of course, being me, I also spent a good amount of time whining and feeling
sorry for myself, which was considerably easier than actually putting on my big
girl panties and dealing with it.
Miraculously, despite breaking every rule of job searching, two years ago I found myself
in a new position at Villanova University and I haven’t had that empty feeling
since. Until now. It’s not the job, which I truly love, it’s
more about the rest of my life, which somehow feels increasingly hollow.
Rob wants to know why I go to bed so damn early? It's so I
can avoid the void. A woman can only watch so many episodes of The Gilmore
Girls in one sitting before she realizes she’s pathetic. You know it’s time to
make a change when you beg your daughter to put down her homework so you can
watch television together.
I have some sense of what has caused this rather sudden
mental and emotional nosedive:
- The season. I tend to retreat into my head as the days grow shorter and darker. Sometimes I’m afraid I’ll drown given how much swimming is going on in my brain.
- My three-year
sentencecommitment as a church elder has come to an end, and I resigned from my committee work at the same time. What I failed to realize is that, while I bitched about it ad nauseam, serving actually gave me a sense of purpose. - I lost my 10-hour a week consulting job. It wasn't much, but it was just enough to keep me busy in the evenings.
- My kids need me less and less, which I always thought would be heavenly, but now I’m discovering is actually kinda sad. The only things they want from me are dinner and rides to friends’ houses, neither which I’m particularly excited to offer.
It goes without saying that my childishly competitive nature
demands that I figuratively put pen to paper and write my own damn book. Not
because I have a book burning inside of me, but rather because I hate when
others succeed at something I always hoped I would do. Well, let me be the first to tell you that
this is not the best approach to becoming a writer. Envy does not lead to
success. Truth is, years ago I wrote the first
paragraph of my novel. Trouble is, that’s all I've got. I have no idea where to go with it or how it would end. And I don’t want
to write a mediocre book. I want to write a critically acclaimed book.
I know what you're thinking: "Here comes the whining and excuses. All the reasons why Kim doesn't have the energy or the self-discipline to make it happen." But you're wrong! In fact, I have a solution for what ails me. Ready?
I know what you're thinking: "Here comes the whining and excuses. All the reasons why Kim doesn't have the energy or the self-discipline to make it happen." But you're wrong! In fact, I have a solution for what ails me. Ready?
Instead of writing a book, I'm going to become an actress!
2 comments:
Someone once told me '...you need to value your creativity higher than the distractions.'
I wrote this on a piece of paper and stuck it to my kitchen wall... I might never have 'gotten it' otherwise.
Good luck!
Yes! I am more than ready.
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