Decorative Flower
Her Realm, Personal website and blog of Cole
Aug 06

10 Different Things I’m Grateful For

These lists are usually the same. I thought I’d try out another approach.

  1. NASA. Seriously. The Curiosity rover stuff last night was amazeballs.
  2. Blogs that unexpectedly catch my interest and make me read for hours. Like this one.
  3. The fact that gravity on Earth doesn’t crush my bones. That would suck.
  4. The recent cooler weather.
  5. Torrents.
  6. Living vicariously through myfriendswho go to awesome blogging conventions.
  7. Friends who answer my sob-ridden phone calls at all fucking hours.. even if they’ve heard it all thirty times this week or they haven’t talked to me for months.
  8. That totally awkward 2-day roadtrip I took to Graceland, which I hated but made for an amazing story.
  9. Inside jokes and my friends who put up with cat puns. Srsly.
  10. People who get me, like this person:

Post card from PostSecret


Aug 04

Samantha, My Mini-Me

You know, it’s kind of crazy how much my sister and I seem to have in common despite the fact that I’ve lived away from her for most of her life. People comment on this, on how easy it is tell that she’s my sister. I’m sure much of this is now because I’ve been home for two years, and have spent a lot of time with her. She’s always looked up to me, but now she doesn’t have to do it from quite so far.

The list of things we have in common is sometimes startling, other times amusing and always telling:

  • When I cut my hair, she cuts her hair
  • Her favorite color is pink because mine was
  • She likes Scooby Doo because I did
  • She plays MapleStory because I did
  • We share the same favorite type of pasta
  • We’re both  sensitive
  • She also likes playing online
  • She loves video games
  • She will be far more technologically-savvy than I, if she continues in this fashion

A plethora of other similarities, including expressions and gestures are shared between us. I’m sure some of this is her mimicking me and other things stem from having the same mother, but I don’t even realize many of these things until others point them out.


Jul 31

Clutter-free is Less Anxiety for Me

Periodically, I clean out my life. Whether it’s deleting files from my hard drive, emptying my iTunes library, selling oil clothes on eBay or finally throwing out bottles of shampoo that I’m never going to use, it feels great. A while back, I went through my laptop and external hard drive, deleting bookmarks and emails that I no longer needed. Especially when it comes to my digital life, I’ve often attached myself to things–files, data, etc. It’s easy to do this with documents and emails, because they don’t require any physical space, but because of my anxiety, I keep some sort of mental tally. I see the number of files and the names of folders fly past my eyes, and it makes me nervous, restless.

At first, deleting always causes me to feel a little fear. I think “What if I needed that again?” “What if I can’t find that file again, when I need it in the future.” But once the cleanup is done, once I convince myself to get off my ass and take out the trash or clean out that drawer or just to open that folder and start clicking, I feel such a sense of relief and lightness. I love clearing up that mental space. Spring cleaning helps to defragment my mind. I know what I have and where I have it, and I don’t worry about losing things, and part of me likes being somewhat-unencumbered.

I will never be completely free. I’m not the type who can pack a bag and travel the world, but I do like having just what I need and knowing that everything I need, I have. I don’t like clutter. My uncle recently asked me what I liked to collect and I said “Nothing! I hate clutter.” In fact, things like my computer and Kindle let me live with even less clutter. I’ve been cleaning out books and movies. I can honestly see a point in my life when I have neither.

But I haven’t always been organized, so while I’m making strides now, there’s a lot of past clutter to go through, or so it feels like. And I get pretty frazzled, or fragmented, when I try to keep track of things in my head. Other people simply forget about things until such is the time when they need to remember, but I’m not so good at forgetting. I don’t have enough back burners for all the mental flotsam and jetsam, so the only way I can feel less anxious is to get rid of as much as possible, which results in me literally getting rid of stuff.

So while I certainly love the remaining material things perhaps more than some people recommend that we do love things, I also recognize how unhealthy it is to love those things more than people. Because things are replaceable while people, for the most part, are not. Things provide me with tools and solutions, but people provide me with companionship and happiness. Still, both people and things can make my anxiety go crazy, so one thing I’m really trying to work on is to preventing myself from letting in and becoming close to people who are  toxic and bad for my mental health. Just like the clutter of files or material things, they take a crazy toll on my mental faculties.

For the most part, I don’t have a lot of baggage, but I do tend to look at things in my life as though they are more baggage-y than they are. I suppose this is why I clear out as much as possible, so the remaining people and things are the type of baggage that, at the very least, I want to handle.


Jul 29

ex·cit·ed

Some people get giddy with excitement, and it’s adorable. Others talk about their favorite things in a way that is simply obnoxious. Me? I don’t get excited, no really. I become passionate  about the things I love. I want to talk about them seriously. I analyze. In short, my fandoms and interests lack the sort of levity that enables others to be excited and fun about theirs, and it makes me jealous.

I don’t know how to squee with delight. I don’t know how to get super excited about upcoming events. I can’t prolong the happy feelings of doing something for more than a few days after. I’m just not very good at all at being excited. I wasn’t always this way, I don’t think. I mean, I was always weirdly serious, deep,  but I remember feeling excited in the past. There’s a few things that have made it difficult, I think.

  • My anxiety flaring up in the recent years
  • Others bombarding me with their own excitement..
  • ..and subsequently removing any room of my own for me to be excited
  • My self consciousness

Most of those are not very good reasons, logically, but I just don’t know how. How do you get excited? How do you psych yourself up? How do you make the feeling last? I don’t know


Jul 25

The Wrong Side of the Bed

For as long as I can remember, I’ve already slept on the right side of the bed. That is, when you’re facing it, I’m on your left. When I’m in it, the right. I did this before I was married, and I continued to do it with Ryan. In fact, when I moved to Japan, I tried to sleep on the other side, but it gave me such anxiety that I didn’t get a wink those first few days. We switch it up, and I was happy. After moving home, I continued the trend, never moving to the middle of the bed. There’s always been a right side of the bed for me.

Unfortunately for me, my window is not on that side of the bed. It opens to the other side, which means I don’t really get the benefit of cool night air, so I’ve started to taking to sleeping on the wrong side of the bed. Only, now, it doesn’t feel quite so wrong. It feels a little cooler, and it certainly was strange at first, but I’m sleeping as well as I can for sleeping in a 90-degree room.

It won’t stick. I’ll be glad to go back to the “right” side, but it’s interesting that it doesn’t bother me so much now. I wonder what happened.


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