Quickie Friday Post

I snoozed a few too many times this morning so let’s see if I can write a post in 5 minutes!  (Can’t wait to read it, eh?)

Today:  workout with Mike, ocarina rehearsal (was hoping to squeeze lunch with Melissa in there but her darned job made her stay in Carbondale longer), teaching, and dinner with Maddie.  (See, Melissa, if YOU had a twitter account or a blog, I’d link you too.  Think about it.  FAMOUS.)

Tomorrow:  City in a Jar’s Slow Food in the Park (make a dish for $5, check it out!  I’m going to make great use of the More-for-Less Cookbook that I rarely use), wedding, SLSO concert (RITE OF SPRING BABY!) and out with friends after.

Sunday:  Run.  Rest.  Recuperate.  Run.  Seriously, did I mention run?

OH and right now I am feeling weird and naked because my engagement ring is at the jewelry store being resized.  I’ve lost a little weight since February plus I think it was big to begin with and the darned thing was turning ALL the time and driving me crazy.  I miss it and I swear there is a little tan line on my finger, even though Chris didn’t agree.  I don’t get that back until Saturday either.

That’s it in a nutshell!  And the fun fun fun thing happening Monday is that…I am going to pick up the invitations.  For the wedding.  I am ridiculously excited about the invitations.  They are going to be AWESOME.

Last thought:  Here’s a flowchart that helps to explain why musicians are neurotic.  Because we should be practicing.

309833_2410885714241_1314185364_2895130_1378686189_n

What are you doing this weekend?  (Hahaha, I know I complained about this question.  But answer in the comments as I want more comments, pretty please?!  With a cherry on top?)

Hello I am a cat

Last night in a facebook conversation, my friend Sarah and I got on the topic of lolcats.  Well, to be clear, we were pretending we invented lolcats.   (What’s funny is I remember when Sarah FIRST told me about lolcats and I thought it sounded stupid…I used to also think camera phones, text messaging, and boys were stupid too…then again, at least one of those still is 😉 )

Then I got an email from her.

It says:  I made one of those "cat pictures" you are talking about.

image 

A few minutes go by.

Another email:  Here is the nautical version.

image

I replied and asked if she could make a Mexican version.  (Probably not politically correct, but to our credit we have gone on a trip to Mexico together.)

A longer period of time passed, and then:

image

I was CRYING by this point.  Maybe you have to understand the nature of Sarah and my humor (and if you are reading still you surely do) but I was absolutely LOSING it at this point.  I promptly made this cat my facebook profile picture.

And then:

image

Sarah’s MS Paint skills are UNPRECEDENTED.   Such talent the world has never known.

image

Now, you may not find these funny.  But I do.  This morning I came up with the idea of a Hawaiian cat, with ukelele.  We’ll see what happens.

Off the hook

I put quite a bit of myself into my blog posts over the weekend (particularly the 9/11 one) so yesterday I was feeling exhausted and didn’t have anything left to write.  I don’t really today either…it’s rainy, I just got back from a tough but awesome workout at the gym, and the only thing I could think of was a lame post regarding lunches.  (Which I’ll totally write later, you know it!).

I was going through my Gmail inbox and noticed I still have a couple of monthly reverb11 prompts hanging out.  I deleted one because I just didn’t ever want to write about it (totally lame), but the one from June looked interesting, so here we go:

image

What can you let yourself off the hook for?

That’s a great question for me.  If you are a regular blog reader, you know I am pretty hard on myself and I like to beat myself up about…well, everything, ranging from my weight, my body image, my running, my violin playing, you name it.  Sometimes this is really productive and gets me going out to the door or into the (figurative) practice room.  Other times it just makes me lie on the couch in a pool of self-loathing.  Sadly, as of late, that last one has been what I’ve been feeling.  Sure, I’ve been getting my life done—I’m nothing if not a functioning depressive, which at least tells you I’m actually not that depressed or I would be lying on the couch more…I’ve been practicing, working out, teaching, playing a variety of concerts, and rehearsing for an upcoming recording.  BUT I feel like a lousy individual and human being and that really wears on me.

What can I let myself off the hook for?

I can let myself off the hook for being sick.  I can let myself off the hook for hurting my ankle.  I can let myself off the hook for having a recurring wrist problem that affects my violin playing.  I can let myself off the hook for feeling fat when I don’t get a workout in, because FAT IS TRULY NOT A FEELING.  I can let myself off the hook for feeling like a bad friend when I am having problems and need my friends to help me and listen to me.  I can let myself off the hook for eating less healthy food during a bad week.  I can let myself off the hook for feeling awkward and uncomfortable around my father because we never established a relationship any other way.  I can let myself off the hook for knowing he will read that, because it doesn’t mean I don’t love him.

I can’t let myself off the hook for everything.  I won’t list that stuff here.  But I don’t have to continually beat myself up every time I haven’t achieved perfection in my life.  Nobody achieves perfection.  I told a student in a lesson yesterday, “Nobody has a perfect audition.”  I believe that when I tell it to the student.

I need to relax and let myself be, or I will self-destruct further than I already have. 

(Please remember I am prone to dramatics and do not assume I am near suicidal.  Just venting here.  Everything is fine!!)

Time to get serious

Did you have a good weekend?  If you missed my weekend posts, you should check them out.  I’m especially proud of my post on 9/11:

Don’t worry, we aren’t about to forget

Happy Birthday, Jen

From South Carolina to Phoenix by Bike

Here’s the weather forecast for the week…looking good!

Untitled

At dinner last night I was complaining to Chris how I felt like a total fraud runner and that I felt like I had been working so hard and wasn’t getting better.  He (wisely) pointed out that the last month I hadn’t really been running very frequently. He also pointed out that I wouldn’t be complaining about sucking at the violin if I had spent the last month sick and injured and barely practicing.  (Well, I probably would be, but I concede his point.  He also told me to stop writing about him on the blog..sorry!)

Where did this girl go??

runninginspiration

It’s time to get serious!  I know where that girl went, but I know where to find her again.  (She hurt her leg, got a nasty cold, and did some other stupid stuff.)

I am not sick any more, I am not injured right now, and I will be running 4 or 5 days this week.  I will be ready to PR at the Rock and Rock Half at the end of October.

Run, Shadowfax

When I lived in Cleveland we used to carpool to play gigs in Canton, which was about 1 to 1 1/2 hours away, depending on how fast people drove.  I would get into the car with my friend Jun and say “Show us the meaning of haste”.  Okay, lame story.  You probably had to be there.  Basically we wanted to get home from rehearsal before it was ridiculously late.  No, really, I suppose you just had to be there.  I crack up every time I hear that quote.

overconfidence

Happy Birthday to Jen!

Today is Jen’s birthday.  Jen is my friend and running partner. How much does it suck that her birthday is on 9/11?

Her mom left a message about how it was HER day and not the terrorists.  How September 11 was a good day.  It makes me sad.  Jen—it’s okay to be happy about your birthday!  Don’t let the terrorists win!!

image

(source)

Jen and I decided to run 9 miles today.  However.  I suck.  I have been struggling with side stitches—I’m guessing from breathing issues?  So we cut it short at 8 miles.  We could easily have walked another mile but running just wasn’t happening any more for me.  HELP!  What can I do?

We were running on the paved, multi-use path of Forest Park.  Often we are passed by bikers.  One woman yelled “on your left” and naturally we moved over a bit.  As she passed, she yelled at us “There’s a perfectly good gravel path for you over there.”  I yelled after her “This is a multi-use path, BITCH.”  Frankly we don’t care for the gravel path as well, plus there’s a part that is somehow mildly creepy as it goes through the woods.  Plus the paved path is multi-use!  I was SO annoyed at that woman.  I hope she had a lovely day yelling at ALL the runners who were on the paved path.

After the run we headed to the Crepe place in the Central West End.  I wanted to take Jen out to lunch for her birthday, and we LOVE going for Crepes after a long run.  We split a sweet one and a savory one.

IMG_0962 image image

Last night was the second Chamber Project St Louis concert.  It was a lot of fun!  We hung out at the Tavern of Fine Arts afterwards (great wine, tasty roast beef sandwich).  Jon wore a great T-shirt.

IMG_0959

I MUST ask him where he got it.

Don’t worry, we aren’t about to forget!

After the attacks, everybody wanted to share their stories.  Where were you?  What were you doing?  Did we really care where anybody else was?  Not really, I think everybody just wanted to share their own story…and ten years later, we’re doing it again.  With a bit more perspective, but only a bit.

September 11 means something different to anyone who lost a loved one.  I can’t imagine that pain.  The senseless loss.  The collective mourning, but yet…your loss being so personal.  I cannot imagine.  The rest of us, the lucky ones, we all experience September 11 in a completely different way.

I am having a tough time with the ten year anniversary.  Not because of the reminder of the attacks, because, well, frankly, who has forgotten?  Nobody has forgotten.  It’s not a reminder of that.  It’s a reminder of ten years passing by and feeling like a blink.  For me it’s a reminder of who I was then and who I am now…so much the same and yet so different.

Ten years ago I had just finished up school.  I attended the Cleveland Institute of Music for college and then stayed on to do my graduate work as well.  I won a position with the Charlotte Symphony on May 21, 2001, (read my orchestra auditions post for more information on that process!) and spent the summer in Cleveland working part time and hanging out with my friends, including Sarah, who will be one of my bridesmaids and has been my best friend since the summer of 1998.  Chris and I had been dating for just over two years and we were having trouble deciding whether or not to make a go of it long-distance.  I wanted to, he was apprehensive.  We did agree to continue dating.

I moved to Charlotte in chunks.  I didn’t own any real furniture to speak of other than a small wooden futon, but I had music, books, clothing, and naturally (it was 2001) CD’s and videos.  My father had been up during the summer and I had loaded down his car with some boxes of stuff.  I went down to visit at some point in the summer and found a place to live in Charlotte.

I could dig out my calendar and find the real timetable, but a few days before September 11 I left Cleveland and went to Charlotte to sign my lease and drop some stuff off at my apartment.  I then drove two hours to my parents’ house and planned to load up some more things, including some furniture they were giving me, and was going to drive up again on September 11.  The following day I had a meeting with the personnel manager of the orchestra, then a few more days to get organized and perhaps visit my parents again, before work started the following week.  Like I said, I don’t remember the exact timetable.

I was 23 years old.  I was young, fresh-faced, idealistic, and was just at the beginning of my career.  I planned to do some teaching, but hadn’t done much yet.  I couldn’t WAIT to use my violin skills in an awesome professional orchestra.  I felt incredibly lucky to have won a job, and yet thought really highly of myself as well for having done so.  I still called adults by Mr. and Mrs. insert last name, and I had never really lived on my own before.  (dramatic statement ahead) I felt as if I had my whole life in front of me, and the possibilities were endless, limitless, and amazing.  I really couldn’t wait to start my job.  I was…king of the world!  (Okay, I”m sorry I said that.  But I’m not taking it back.  I really felt like that!)

The morning of September 11 my parents went to work.  I was in my old bedroom (it later became Carrie’s, I think, but not yet) and was woken up repeatedly by the phone ringing.  I remember being annoyed because I wanted to sleep in.  I got up around 10:30 am, checked my email (AOL dial up), even sent a few emails to friends (I didn’t have my own computer, so this was my last chance for awhile), and got into my car.

I drove a bit and then turned on NPR after a few miles.  You can imagine my shock.  I didn’t understand what was going on.  I drove for two hours to Charlotte in fear and confusion.  By the time I hit the road both towers had already fallen.  I couldn’t get through to anyone on my cell phone, so I just decided to continue on through to Charlotte, get there, hook up the television and antenna, and figure out my next move.  I finally left a message for Chris but didn’t get to talk to him for hours.

I didn’t really understand the scope of it until I unloaded my car in Charlotte.  I plugged in the television and antenna, and it was then I saw my first footage of the planes going into the buildings, the buildings on fire, and ultimately, the buildings collapsing.

I did finally get in touch with Chris and some other friends as well.  My mom had been calling the house all morning, to tell me to get up, turn on the TV, and maybe to not go to Charlotte.  I can’t remember if I stayed the night in Charlotte or if I drove back that night, but I remember spending at least two days at home on the couch with my mother watching Peter Jennings on ABC.  Peter Jennings brought us through the disaster.  (When he died a few years ago I felt true pain because I felt so connected to him during this time.)

We all know the rest of the story of 9/11.  For weeks we all were afraid something else would happen.  We as a people considered giving up so many liberties and privileges (and did give up many things) in exchange for “safety.”  But that’s not the subject of this post.

What is the rest of my story?  Obviously I’m not in Charlotte anymore.  I learned quickly that my concept of what a professional orchestra career would be like was very different from my reality.  I was SO excited.  I remember how disappointed I was FROM DAY ONE in my job.  Nobody cared.  Nobody tried to play well.  I kept taking auditions.  I wanted to get out, to move one.  One member of the orchestra told me I needed to just settle down and realize that this was as far as I was going to get.  I was 24 years old at that time!  Give up????  I haven’t given up ten years later—I am not ever going to give up and settle in my life, but I sure as heck wasn’t going to do at 24.

After two years, I left.  One of the things I am most proud of with myself is my ability to LEAVE things and people that make me unhappy.  I’m a quitter, in a way, but I quit things for myself, for my own happiness, to start something new and better.  I’ve never regretted leaving the Charlotte Symphony.  I’m sure it’s a different place now—I know some people play there now and really enjoy it, and that’s great for them.  It wasn’t for me.

I went back to Cleveland, where I started freelancing and teaching like a madman.  I learned how to make opportunities for myself, how to teach children, how to deal with people (well, still working on that) and how to work 70 hour weeks.  Was Cleveland awesome?  No.  But I put together a basically full-time orchestra and teaching career and made enough money to do what I wanted to do, more than enough money.

But then we moved to St Louis.  My career here is VERY slow. And that hurts, so much of the time.  But I feel like things are starting to turn around.  I love this blog.  I am really liking my new teaching job, which could become full-time, if I want a full-time job.  I LOVE playing with Chamber Project St Louis, and I have so many more interests and varied friendships than I ever have.

I miss orchestra playing most of the time though—it leaves a void that I keep trying to fill and fail to do so—but I need to remember that I am only 33 and who KNOWS where I (we) will be in ten years.  On the 20th anniversary of 9/11, I plan to look back and see how much farther I have come, and I hope I am more proud of myself.  I would make some goals for myself, but I prefer to take things as they come.  You never know what life is going to throw at you or what opportunities will present themselves, but you can be ready to go with the flow and do what needs to be done.

The other day a friend of mine told me I would always do well in life because I was the most resourceful person she knew.  It meant so much to me to hear that.  I think that’s a strength I often forget I have, that I will come up with solutions to problems, and that I am not afraid of hard work and trying new things to get to where I need to be.

Let us go forward from today with hope and love for our fellow humans.  I saw this quote on a friend’s twitter this morning:

Imagine what our real neighborhoods would be like if each of us offered…just 1 kind word to another person. -Mr. Rogers