Thursday, September 4, 2014

Size matters

I am five feet, two and a half inches tall. I weigh one hundred and ten pounds. I am a small person. But I am big.

I think the size of a person should not be measured by their height or stature. It should not be measured by physical appearance at all (few things should be). I think the size of a person should be determined by their spirit. By their aspirations, their thoughts and opinions, their views, their dreams. The size of a person should not be determined by how big they are in front of you, but by how much of an impact they leave on you.

I am five feet two and a half inches tall, I weigh one hundred and ten pounds. But I am big.

I have travelled. I have walked some of the oldest streets and seen lively new cities. I have lived in five different countries and I have learned – in and out of a classroom. I have experienced things that no one else has experienced in the same way, and others have experienced many things I never have.

I have dreams. Hopes to one day have a career. Plans to travel more, and travel often. I have goals I aspire to and experiences to leave in my past. I have a past. A road less travelled by, but well travelled by me. Some paths that shaped me and some paths I wish I had never stumbled upon. Those paths shaped me too. I have a past that has made me who I am, and a future that I strive towards.

I have words. I use them when I can but mostly they use me. They flow out of me as midnight ramblings and cross-country musings. They shape me more than I shape them.

I have talents. Some stronger than others and some I am not even aware of yet. I have skills that I can boast of and weaknesses that I try to improve upon. I have faults. Many faults. But my strength is in admitting them.

I have friends. Not everyone may want to be with me, but the friends that I have do. They choose to spend their time with me, choose to trust me with their friendship as I trust them with mine. Some admire me, some want to help me, some barely know me, some love me. Not everyone needs to love me, but the people I care about care about me. For the most part.

I am not saying this to be conceited. I do not wish to paint an elevated picture of myself. I am saying this because I think confidence is important. Focusing on your own strengths is much more productive than tearing yourself down one flaw at a time.

I know people that are medium sized. They think more than they act. They talk about dreams that they do not work towards, they make promises they do not keep.
I know people that are small. They’re narrow minded with simple ambitions. They do not believe in themselves or, sometimes, they believe themselves better than others.
And I know people that are giant. Bigger than their skin, bigger than their past; as large as any dreams that they are working towards.
I have met many people in my short lifetime: it’s the big ones that leave an impact.

Be big.

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Little Things

It’s the little things.
Sometimes you have to stop and think about the small things, the minute details, the every day acts that go unnoticed.

It’s easy to get consumed by the big things – by the heart break, by the abandonment, by the sadness and the stress. Those things consume you; they get in your head and surround you, pull at you from all sides and eat away at you in every spare moment. They fill the empty space in your mind, they become a body that sits with you on the train on the way to work and lies next to you in your big bed that now feels empty. Try to ignore them. It’s hard, but focusing on these demons is no good; they are demanding enough without you actively paying attention to them.

Focus on the little things. The smile from a colleague at work in the middle of a busy day. The feeling of accomplishment when you manage to succeed in something other than focusing on the negative thoughts in your head and your heart. The friends reaching out to you in ways you hadn’t even thought of. The dinner dates and movie nights that keep your mind off of things. The sitting on the couch with your roommate all day on a Sunday and doing absolutely nothing and being perfectly okay with it. It’s the people. The people are big - bigger than the problems. They are hope, they are caring, they are the strength that you lack for the time being. They are the rehab.

Focus on the little things while the big things are focusing on you. Eventually those small moments of happiness will be the big parts of your life again.

Sunday, March 23, 2014

Dear world...

Dear world, I am not perfect.

I try to be a good friend. I go out of my way for others and I never really ask the same. I bend over backwards because my friends’ happiness is 90% of my happiness (and their troubles are 90% of my troubles). It’s just who I am. I give 100% 100% of the time, but sometimes it still isn’t enough. Sometimes I’m distant or sometimes I need to be a little bit selfish.

I try to be a perfect student. I care about my classes. I study when I have an exam and I do my homework always and to the best of my ability. I write papers like my life depends on it! Yet I am not a straight A student and don’t know how to give any more to my work than I already give.

I try to have my life in order. I worked a summer internship, a campus job for class credit, I stressed about finding a Coop and would not settle for anything but what I thought I deserved. Yet I have never had a paying job so what does that say about my expertise?

I try to be a good girlfriend. But crying to my boyfriend and making my problems his own is not fair to him.

I try to sleep. I wake up, go to class, go to work, do my homework, spend time with friends, and try to find a minute to myself. By then I end up lying in bed at 1 am having a sordid affair with insomnia.

I try to be a good blogger, but sometimes life gets in the way.

I am a good sister. I think. I am a good daughter. I hope. I am good. I try to be good in everything I do. What if trying isn’t enough? I stretch myself too thin and I’m thin enough already.

Dear world, I am not perfect, so please cut me some slack.

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Wings

Travelling is stressful. I’ll be the first to admit it. The hassle of fitting a life into a single suitcase; the annoyingly long layover, or, frighteningly short connections; the food (if you can call it that); the crying babies; the sleeplessness and restlessness in your soul to reach the journey’s end. Yet, it is all worth it once you do. Whether you return home (or in my case, one of many homes), or, step into a new adventure, it is always worth it once you do.

As I drive down a London highway on a rare English summer day I cannot help but feel the hope that the end is in sight. And, once it is all said and done (the feat of surviving an embassy, the seemingly unnecessary over night stay, the same-clothes-for-two-days-straight experience), then I start to believe it wasn’t all for nothing.
For, as the plane touches down and the final part of my journey comes to an end, my adventure begins. I am free.

Free to extend my hidden wings, to stretch and exercise them. Shake the dust off the gilded feathers so the world can see them in all their glory. I’ll be free to soar, incandescent, as the light of new adventure and the warmth of new knowledge catches the glistening wings of my exploration. Like stretching your muscles before you exercise, each tendon and ligament contracting individually, causing a slow, delicate ripple of strength: exciting.

Yes, travelling is a hassle. Because you have to keep those wings folded, guarded, hidden, lest the adventure be clipped before it’s time. But, once the wings are free to extend in their full unabashed glory of curiosity, of wanderlust, then nothing can hold you down.

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Some things never change

One thing I’ve always had a hard time wrapping my head around is this: for the most part, things stay the same. For someone like me, whose life is consistently changing, growing, evolving, it is hard for me to realise that some things never change.

I always thought that when I moved yet again, when I was ripped out of the place I had become most comfortable and had to say goodbye to the people I was closest to, that everything would change. I thought that the place I was leaving would be a different place entirely if and when I ever came back to it. I thought my favourite corners; my streets of memories; my sentimental buildings would all crumble without me, their foundation to keep them standing. The truth is: life goes on.

I always assumed that when a life is lost, a truly beautiful, inspiring, innocent life sacrificed to such atrocities as cancer or time, that the world would never recover. I thought when the people I loved were lost that everything in everyone’s world had to change as everything in my world had just done. You might think this thought naïve but there is a word for this naïveté: egocentrism. It is the honest belief that everyone experiences the world as you experience it; that the things that are important to you must be important to everyone; that your sadness is everyone’s sadness and your happiness is everyone’s happiness.

I learnt about this term in a Developmental Psychology class. The exact phrase is ‘Adolescent Egocentrism’, and I think rightly so. One of the most eye-opening realisations you can come to as you grow up and fully begin to understand the world is that this is the furthest thing from the truth. No one experiences the world the same way you experience it, and that is what makes you so perfectly unique (and I truly believe unique is the best thing a person can be in this world). The things that are important to you are only important for that reason: you, if everyone held the same things to the same import everything would be considered important and in that, nothing would be. Your sadness is your own because the things that make a person sad are the things that make them who they are: what they care about, what affects them, what triggers emotion, these things are unique to everyone and that is what breeds diversified thinking. Likewise, the things that make a person happy, that truly appeal to them on a satisfactory level, that offer them comfort and joy both when they need it and when they don’t, these things define a person and must define each person individually.

For instance: the things that make me happy are good friends, good books, good science fiction and my boyfriend. My family, my writing, my travels, my studies, the list goes on! Obviously, these things will not be the same for everyone; my list of what makes me happy cannot make everyone else happy. And that is ok.
Suffice to say, I have come to realise that for the most part the things and places you leave behind when you go out to explore yourself are not what change: you are. Slowly, you begin to evolve out of adolescent egocentrism and appreciate that when you left high school that was the world you knew, but when you come back from college that world is exactly the same, you are the one that makes it different. You see the same halls you walked and streets you drove home on entirely differently than when you saw them before. You fit differently in your childhood bed that might be an inch too small now. You see a different view when you look out the window and imagine what is beyond the horizon.

When I left Trinidad I was young, impatient, and bored. I returned now two years later ready to bring my exploring home. I realised I know more about the various countries I have lived in that the one I was born in. When I realised this I realised that knowing that the places we explore never change brought me comfort. Every time I visit or re-visit somewhere I know that I will see the same place through new eyes, and knowing that now is yet another thing that makes me happy.

Monday, April 29, 2013

Boston Strong

I was neither born, nor raised in Boston. But I love Boston. It has now been two weeks since the horrendous bombings; yet, in light of these recent of events I am proud to call Boston my new home. If I learned anything from the horrific experience, I have learned of Boston’s inspirational love.

My heart goes out to the three unfortunate souls that were lost as a result of the bombings, and to the countless people who were injured. As well as the brave police officer who unfortunately lost his life in this whole ordeal. I do not know them, but I love them.
I love the selfless first responders on the scene: the paramedics who treated injuries within moments of the life changing, terrifying explosions. I love the dedicated police officers who worked tirelessly all week to find, and capture, those responsible for the tragedy.
I love the friends that I shared such unfortunate circumstances with, who all came together to celebrate life when death and tragedy was all around us.
Above all, I love the masses of people that gathered in the streets to rejoice when our shared troubles were finally over. Hundreds of people stood together, decorated in American flag apparel, proud to be together in Boston. International and American students alike stood together to sing the national anthem (or, in my case, mouth the words I did not know) and cheer on the police officers that passed us by. Everyone chanted in unison: “BPD! BPD!” College kids have never been so happy to see the Boston Police Department.
Most of all, I love that amidst all the pride and celebration I did not hear a single word of slander. Nobody yelled insults against Russia, nobody offered hatred or negativity at all. In fact, most were celebrating that they caught the final suspect alive. All that I witnessed was American pride, Bostonian strength, and human love.

Despite the terrifying and tragic circumstances that I, and, everyone else in the city, had to endure for that week, I would not want to live anywhere else right now.
Amidst all this celebration, we must mourn the five lives that were lost. A child, and two women killed as a result of the bombs; a brave police officer; and, yes, “suspect number one”, because he was just as human as the other four victims. May the families of everyone involved finally find some peace.

So, let us not focus on the negative aspects of these events. Speaking as an international student myself, it is a real tragedy that the two suspects were immigrants. But, do not discriminate. Just because they practiced a different religion does not mean they did this because “their God told them to”. Just because they are from a different country does not mean they did this because “all Russians hate America”. Most likely they were both very disturbed young men, and for whatever reasons they did these horrible things we can take comfort in knowing that they did not succeed in their mission of hate. The love of Boston was too strong.

I am Boston strong. I am Boston proud!
“They picked the wrong city to mess with.”


Tuesday, April 9, 2013

For Leah.

This weekend I celebrated my twentieth birthday. This weekend I found out that my little cousin would no longer celebrate any birthdays.

It doesn't seem right. It doesn't seem right that after I got the phone call that morning I went about my day as usual. I took a shower; I went to class; I walked in a fashion show, even- but none of it felt right. The world shouldn't just keep spinning on its axis, life shouldn't just keep going. Not when someone just lost theirs.
Leah, my little Leah, my sweet cousin Leah, was 3 years old when she was diagnosed with cancer. The doctors told us she didn't have much hope. They told us she didn't have much time: a year at best, they said. She survived her fifth birthday, and her fifth Christmas. That's what my Leah did, she survived. When she was too weak to walk, she crawled, and when she lost the ability to speak, she still remembered to smile.

The last time I saw Leah we were at the beach. It started to rain and everyone, including me, ran for cover. But, not Leah. She ran away from her mum, who was hiding from the rain with the rest of us, and went out and danced in the downpour. I swear the sun came back out just for her.

On Friday morning, my mum called to tell me that little Leah had passed away, and nothing has felt right since then. The world should know. Everyone should know that the world lost a beautiful soul that morning. Everyone should stop and mourn.
My little Leah inspired me every day. Though I haven't seen her since that day on the beach she has, and always will, inspire me to dance in the sun in spite of the rain. For the last year and a half every wish I made was for her recovery. All I wish now is that she is in a better place, that her suffering is over, and that she can keep dancing in the rain.

I will always love you, Leah.
Rest in Peace.