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Fast Car

Hannah Horvath

*Warning: Some major love for Girls ahead*

Tracy Chapman’s “Fast Car” has been running through my head since last night after watching the series finale of Girls. My desire to feel and embody the sadness of the song was satiated thanks to Spotify.  I listened to it on repeat too many times than I’d like to admit to today—thanks, Lena Dunham. I listened repeatedly to summon my tears; I was almost on the brink of doing it, but I had to stop for a slice of veggie pizza on my way home and it would have looked ridiculous if I had walked in wiping tears away.  I just wasn’t in the mood to face the judgmental eyes of my regular pizza guy (this kinda sorta unintentionally rhymes). Why, you ask, was I hoping for a stream of tears? Because I was hoping for the sweet catharsis and utter satisfaction that comes with the release of a damn good cry.

It’s because last night was the end of Girls or what felt like the end to my overextended adolescence, but most importantly it was that realization of holy-shit-I’m-almost-30-and-I-still-haven’t-moved-to-Brooklyn, and that I have yet to attend a warehouse party in Bushwick. YEAH, I KNOW. Please stop judging me for a second and hear me out. Sure, I KNOW, it’s like, what-in-the-hell-is-wrong-with-me? It’s hard to imagine that one could be so affected by a fantastically written television show (Sunday night HBO programming, nonetheless), but alas, here I am, affected. Stories, in any form as we all know,  can reflect upon you like a mirror. It shows you things about yourself you may not want to see and sometimes, on very rare occasions, it perfectly expresses the sentiment that life is not always what you think or thought it will or would be, and sometimes emotional pain is too much to bear, but fuck it—-we’re all in emotional pain our entire lives, as mama Horvath says, and you just have to fucking deal with it. You can either move along and continue to march to the beat of your own drummer, or you can run out and away from it all, having forgotten to pump your breast milk.

I’m sad. And listening to “Fast Car”, which by the way if you don’t know (and I’ve causally forgot to mention), was the song of choice for the finale episode of Girls. It’s beautiful and comforting in the sadness it expresses. Plus, I can’t quite get over the beautifully unique voice of Tracy Chapman. I can’t seem to get the mimic down no matter how hard I try or for how long I sing into the mirror while the song plays. The song—it’s the thought of driving towards your dreams but knowing that you’ll never get there because it’s a dead end or a one way street. Fuck. The tears are welling up again.

Putting all of this aside for a second, my sadness also stems from the end of a relationship, not with a man, but with a television show. A show that has for five long years been a source of familiarity, laughter, a mirror to which my millennial cohorts and I reflected on our post-collegiate life of ups and downs and trying to figure out who the fuck we are, what we fuck we want out of life, and the deep fear of never actually getting it. In other words, it represents what we may never be and we all just have to be fucking OK with it. And oh yeah, I’m turning 30 soon and I’m faced with the existential crisis of realizing that some of the decision that I make now can affect the course of my life. I am one of the most indecisive people you will ever meet, by the way. It’s also realizing that the idea of something is not the same as actually doing, and that sometimes those two things never quite mesh the way we had hoped.

It’s scary to face or think about coming into yourself, and of age, and of leaving pasts behind that you’ve outgrown, subsequently turning into another person, and eventually reproducing extensions of your self. I watched Hannah go through it, albeit fictionally on television, and it’s scary: We older millennials are getting older and it’s not all Bushwick warehouse parties and tattoos and crack spirit guides—it’s more than that. It’s more than all the drunken nights out and coming home at the crack of dawn and functioning the next day after having one too many tequila shots. We’re getting older, and some of us are starting to have kids, who are not named Grover? Please do not name your child Grover.

The end of this beloved series (at least for me) coincides with the theoretical end to my own view of myself as a young adult as I close out my 20’s in a few short months.  With all of the show’s criticism and privilege that some of the characters had, it was all-too real and relatable to my particular cohort. It was a mirror for my 20’s, to all the mistakes I’ve made, all the friends I’ve gained and lost, and all the nights out in Billyburg that ended either at Alligator Lounge or Bagelsmith.  I will miss the reflection of that part of my youth staring right back at me.

Excuse me while I go hop into a Fast Car and head into my future.

Hitchin’ a Ride

Today, on this first official day of Summer (with a capital S) I learned that no one is hiring. And I mean, NO ONE IS HIRING. Every job posting is a joke and a taunt, and I truly believe that they’re ALL fake. Or the job is already taken. This is definitely the worst time to look for a job because everyone’s brain is on temporary vacation until after Labor Day. I’m actually OK with that, but what about afterwards?

Today really was a beautiful day.

I thought about moving forward and moving backwards. I thought about how far ahead of the game I used to be, and how I knew exactly what I wanted and how I was going to get there. But then, somewhere along the way I fell behind, terribly behind, and have used the past year to catch up on the last 5 years that I lost out on, career-wise. Figuring out what you love and what-you’re-meant-to-do-for-the-rest-of-your life is utterly exhausting, and soul crushing and every other life-crushing metaphor you can conjure up. Everybody seemed to have kept moving during those 5 years, but not me. I was happy where I was, at the time until I wasn’t, having missed out on actually enjoying my standing-still time because of my own perfectionist tendencies and academic endeavors. I finally got my chance to be a fuck-up for a while. And it was the best thing I could have ever done, for me.

I got my body tattooed, explored New York City’s farthest reaches and darkest corners, met the most interesting and fucked-up people, spoke to anybody that I could anywhere I could, spent a lot of money, made a lot of money, explored the depths of my sexuality and along the way, fell in love, and  I finally discovered what I wanted. Which, funny enough, lead me right back to where I started.

I guess everything is cyclical.

I’m happy to continue on and reach farther and ignore the fact that I fell behind because I gained more than I ever could have in retrospect, if I had followed the traditional path. I think about how miserable I would have been if I didn’t pull over to the side of the road for the while and decide to hitch a ride. Granted it’s not the safest thing in the world, but it sure as hell was fun.

Now, let’s all head to the beach.

Taryn

XO

Coincidence and Change

Today as I walked down the last of the untouched snow from the first blizzard of 2015 I thought about where I am. Not so much physically, but mentally about where I am at 27. I am here, I thought, as I took the same shortcut I always have through a drive between my block and the next so as to avoid having to circle Queens Blvd. I am here right now and god dammit so much has changed over the course of a couple of years.  So much is the same, yet so much has changed. I was angry to think that I was in the same place that I have been for years but weirdly comforted at the same time to know that I am still in the same place I have been for years. The beautiful paradox of it all.

A little over 3 and a 1/2 years ago my friend Rebecca and I, after years of not speaking, carpooled out to law school in Central Islip, Long Island. We rediscovered each other again after postings on Facebook confirmed that we were both going to be attending the same law school. I was happy to have someone I knew there with me. During the first day of orientation I felt so deeply out of place: my hair freshly dyed back to brown after having spent the summer as a blonde, my tattoos were all exposed and I looked like a walking ad for Beacon’s Closet. It felt off, in short, I had no idea what the fuck I was doing there. During the second day of orientation with the lecture hall full of the incoming class of 2011, I took the Oath of Professionalism: I laughed inside at the ridiculousness of it all. But I wasn’t ready for that. The thought of work and putting on a suit made me ill. I saw another friend from college when I walked outside and asked her if I could bum a cigarette. I knew that was the last time I would ever go back there even though that day I begrudgingly bought law books that cost the equivalent of a month’s rent for an apartment on the East River Waterfront in Williamsburg. That day when I came home I cried to my mother and said that I can’t do this. I want to be a writer.

I just damn hell’ed saved myself $150,000 +.

A few days later my mother, along with my brother, drove me back out to the school to return my books, to which my brother walked up to the counter at the school book store and proudly declared to the cashier: “We shant be needing these.”

I smiled as I finished making my way through the driveway. How life would have been so different had I gone through with it. I thought about all the struggle I wouldn’t have endured and all the endless nights of partying and freedom that I had so deeply craved back then and still do but on a much smaller scale. I thought about how after my brush with law school the restaurant I ended up working at, which unexpectedly (because, hey, it always is) lead to me to meet the man that I fell in love with. I thought about the procession of events and career choices that followed over the years. I had, indeed, made myself a writer and it had taken me all that time to do so. The struggle continues but I am finally getting somewhere.

Two weeks ago I heard back from a law school that I applied to, one that I had wanted so desperately to get into in the years since. I applied on a whim and out of curiosity to see if this time I would get accepted. I told myself that despite my desire to be a writer if I had ever gotten into that school I would at long last owe it to myself to give it a try. This law school is all the things that the other one wasn’t. Once I heard of my acceptance and after the initial shock, scream and awe, one of my greatest fears was realized: some things really do never change. After all of these years there was still something inside of me that wanted it or there was something deep down that wanted to prove to myself that I could still do it and that despite the years I hadn’t completely lost it (which I felt in the years since).

I also realized something interesting: after I left law school the first time, my life changed. I classified myself as a writer and all hell broke loose. I have been struggling ever since and it has only fueled the fire for my writing. My stories were born from the nights of mischief and the men who I went with that I knew that were wrong with me, the people that I met and befriended and whose own stories one couldn’t even conjure up. I had wonderful material. And the sex, the wonderful and weird sex that I had and the relationships that formed that helped me understand the human condition more, leaving me very well versed to offer relationship advice. I didn’t travel as much as I would have liked to but oh the wonderful things I packed into all 27 years of my life. I did it and I didn’t regret a minute of it.

Every writer needs a story and I’m still working on it.

Once I got inside my building, as I walked up the five flights of stairs to my apartment, as I always do (it’s great exercise) I thought that I made my choices and it’s not a coincidence that I’m here right now. I think I know where I’m going but I know now where I want to go. There are no coincidences, just life. I know that my first world struggle is OK and that everything is the way it’s supposed to be.

And if it’s not, nothing can stop you from changing it.

Taryn

xx

Gone, Baby, Gone

I feel the need to start off this post by saying I do not, I repeat, I do not have a fascination with death. The morbidity of it is not what gets me, it actually, in fact, scares the living crap out of me. It is rather the finality of it that gets me. Death is the ultimate and highest form of closure, the great equalizer, as I have heard countless times and that leaves one belonging to the ages. There is no going back.

Two weeks ago my grandpa died.

In my entire life there were only three deaths that affected me (thank god only three during my 27 years) but two of them affected me more so and with one in particular that shook me to my core and left me with his initials tattooed in black lower-case script on my upper right forearm. It was the only way for me to heal.

My grandpa or Papa as I had only called and known him by was born Harry Siegel on May 28, 1922. My mother’s verbal spelling of her maiden name Siegel plays back in my head whenever I write or type S-i-e-g-e-l  out. Papa was 92 when he passed away and lived an unbelievable life and was married happily for 66 years to my grandmother. As a young girl and even as a young woman I was never anything less than intrigued and surprisingly jealous of the life he lived: he grew up during The Great Depression, was a medic in WWII and very recently I learned he took part in transcribing the historical Geneva Convention, he owned numerous business, he partied, dressed impeccably, ate and drank well, raised three beautiful children and watched his grandchildren grow—-I’m not quite sure what more a human being could want out of life. My jealously stemmed from living through history, quite literally—he lived history and lived through a by-gone glamorous era that I have only seen on a film screen, read in history books and when I listened to his retelling of his place in history. I only regret never writing it down but I know I would do Papa proud and great justice by remembering and writing whatever I could. I could never get enough of his stories.

I remember Papa going through old photo albums, showing me family and old friends and then I remember him showing me his wedding album. It was hard for me to turn the pages of the album because I couldn’t stop staring at the pictures, somehow thinking that if I stared at them long enough I would find something more than what I could actually see and that if I concentrated hard enough I could imagine and be present on the actual day in1948. They both looked so young, so vital and just so unbelievably happy. My grandmother looked so beautiful. Papa made sure to point out that at his wedding he wore blue suede shoes. He was fashionable and ahead of his time and wore them way before Elvis sang about someone having the nerve to step on his blue suede shoes. It was hard to tell from black and white but I could tell they were gorgeous and of course, tasteful.

A couple of weeks before Papa passed away he fell and broke his hip. My parents ran at two in the morning at the heeding of my grandmother’s frantic phone call. My Dad, a man who has a deep understanding of the human condition, listened to my grandpa’s request to leave him and let him lie on the floor a little longer than he should have: if I go to the hospital then it’s over.

The words are haunting but my father understood more so than my mother and I. I was so angry when I asked why they didn’t call 911 right away but it wouldn’t have changed anything. He had broken his hip and several over bones. After successful hip repairment surgery at 92 and then the unfortunate but very common contraction of pneumonia and succeeding treatment, he eventually left the hospital at the doctor’s request. We were told that he was responding to the antibiotics and that he was well enough to be transferred to a rehabilitation center while he heals and gets over the pneumonia.

When Papa entered the rehab facility I did not recognize him, he had become a mere shadow of who he was: a powerful man with a powerful voice and strong convictions. He was in a fog and kept saying he felt like a fool. You were never a fool Papa.

On the last day I saw him, he looked at me and I wasn’t sure if he knew it was me or that he even saw me. I was His Taryn and he always knew when I was there—I was his gorgeous. Papa, at 92, never lost his faculties, he was in a post-surgery fog but I feared something else was going on even though I didn’t want to believe it. I saw him close his eyes tightly and then breathe deeply. I asked him if he was OK. He nodded. Before we left him, he whispered something into my mother’s ear that she couldn’t quite understand but she heard “Mom”. His voice was weak and it was hard to hear him during that time. My mother later realized that he said: Take care of Mom.

The next day he was gone. I picked up the phone from the doctor at the hospital they had brought Papa to. He passed away, the doctor said. I didn’t hear anything else he said to me. It was October 27th.

The morbidity seeps in: we went down to the morgue to see him and the morgue is every bit as scary as it sounds and is as cold as it looks, down to the gentleman who brought Papa out–he himself looked cold and pale. That can’t be Papa, I thought. That is not him. I was insistent but not out loud. I was in a fog. I couldn’t speak. This is not how it’s supposed to happen.

But then again, it never is.

I approached my father a day later who was in the midst of planning out the funeral and I began to ask questions and realized, for the first time, that he was right to let my grandpa lie on he floor of his bedroom, which would be for last the time, and heed his request to not take him to the hospital right away as my grandmother was shouting that he was alright. I knew, he said to me, I wanted him to be as comfortable as possible because I knew that this was it. Then why didn’t you say anything—-I angrily thought. My Dad knew how much Papa hated and mistrusted doctors and hospitals—Papa’s younger brother Dave, a doctor himself, died during the prime of his life because doctors had mistreated and misdiagnosed him about 50 years prior. My mother told me he never got over his brother Dave’s death.

Papa knew.

In the weeks since his death I have only begun to go through the clinical stages of grief not in any particular order as you do jump around from one stage to the other: denial and isolation, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance. I think I am still in denial and starting to border on anger. Although my anger in general stems from many different things.

I miss Papa so much and because I truly am in denial I still think he is there, at home, and that this is just a time when I’m really busy and have not gotten the chance to see him. Two weeks ago I went to his apartment to help my mother find some paperwork—it felt so empty, like a tangible, heavy emptiness that one cannot describe, it can only be felt.

But I know he’s gone.

I also began to think about death a lot and in all different forms, not just the physical as I, myself, am dealing with a form of my own, personal death: a new, scary, yet exciting chapter in my life. With Papa’s death, I felt that my childhood died along with him. I know a lot of grandparents aren’t fortunate enough and with human life being limited, to see you reach full adulthood, marriage and if you do desire and if you’re lucky enough to have them, children. My Papa won’t get to see those wonderful momentous occasions but I am happy to know that he has remembered me, his first grandchild, as the little girl he watched grow into a young woman. I’m glad that I got to maintain that innocence, in a way, in his eyes.

Getting back to my own “death”—I have reached an impasse, which I have spoken about numerous times but I am at the edge of the cliff right now, looking down and then looking up and waiting to see what happens when I take the leap in the next couple of weeks—-will I fall or will I be like Icarus and fly as high as I possibly can despite the consequences because as with everything there always are. I must clarify, by my own “death” I mean morphing into a new person, into a newer me, one that I have never seen before but one that I am slowly growing into. In order to be the new me, the old me must die and that is not such a bad thing. You can never go back to being who you were.

Papa was proud and I know that Papa would be so proud of where I am going in my life as I move towards my career and work towards my future goals little by little each day.

When anyone would ask Papa if he was comfortable, even to his dying day, he would always say:

Eh, I make a living.

I love you Papa, rest in peace. You now belong to the ages.

Your Taryn xo

What’s The Deal With 27?

 

On a not-so-beautiful early Saturday evening on Labor Day weekend I find myself at home, thank god. It is such sweet relief to be sitting at my computer and not standing around in an empty restaurant in newly minted fine dining restaurant attire; I am more than happy to leave my black tie in my locker, along with my apron and wine key to be used at a later date. And I am also happy to leave the deep and dark misery I feel that is waiting tables (until I am set in my career) there and stuffed into my locker with other tangible objects.

On this Saturday evening, when I should be enjoying a beach of some sort, I am inside thinking, in a pensive mood and reflecting. I am on the cusp of turning 27 and although the age itself is not horrifying it is most unusual that a large portion of my 20’s has passed me by, realizing that I am not where I am supposed to be just yet but I am closer than I have ever been before. What is most unusual is that I am no longer a child, true I haven’t been a child in years but I have finally reached full-grown-up territory, uncharted terrain if you will where biological clocks tick louder and where every move you make can severely affect the rest of your life. In other words, there is no more fucking around, literally and figuratively. At least it feels that way.

26 sounds safe to me, not as threatening as 27, although I must admit I felt the same way when I turned 25, reaching that quarter of a century mark, feeling as if I had to grow up right then and there. 26 was not the best year and for most of it I had reverted to being a child, sucking up whatever residual childhood I had left in the way that one sips, rather slurps disgustingly loud, that last little bit of Acai Super Antioxidant Jamba Juice until you get that last little bit of blueberry….I mean, I pay almost $6 for the drink and I want to make sure I have every last drop of it, I try to get my money’s worth but it’s also fucking delicious. Am I the only one who still drinks Jamba Juice? I remember when it was made popular by Britney Spears when she was Britney Spears. My age must really be showing now.

I find myself now yearning for the past (I am incredibly nostalgic) and to go back to a simpler time where the most important thing I had to worry about was making sure that my camp t-shirt was ironed and that I was wearing the right color on the right day and then having to make it to camp on time in the morning after having had one too many beers the night before because I would lose so terribly at beer pong (BEIRUT!!) Oh, and remembering sun screen and also remembering to put gas in the car. I was a camp counselor for eight summers and it was a glorious carefree time. What I wouldn’t do to go back.

As time has progressed through my 20’s, life has only gotten harder and I can’t seem to figure out if it has been at my own hand or if it has been the hand I have been dealt. I feel as if I have purposely been challenged, more so over the past year, than at any other point in my life. It’s true that I have become more resilient but I have also become incredibly jaded and much more cynical. I guess that is what happens when you get older: what else could go wrong? I have learned to laugh at hardship upon hardship because at a certain point it actually becomes pretty funny. It’s better than crying.

As I trip and stumble to 27 and say goodbye to 26 on September 8th I can’t help but have mixed emotions: happy to move upward and onward with my life and be finished with what have been the hardest months of my life but sad that I’m moving closer to 30 and now having no choice but to grow the fuck up and realize that credit cards are not another phrase or representation of free money (I knew that before but being the grown-up that I am I am exercising super-human control right now) and that I need to conduct myself as an adult who makes rational life decisions. It’s exhausting. I am at a point in my life where everything is falling apart and everything is coming together at the same time. I’m on to the next chapter and hoping that this one will be easier, less confusing and more exciting than the last.

Hopefully I’ll survive the curse of 27 that Jim Morrison, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, Kurt Cobain, and Amy Winehouse couldn’t quite beat (they didn’t live long enough to see their 28th birthday).

Here’s to 27!

Check out my list of 27 honest realities about life you must accept before turning 27 that was published by Elite Daily.

Taryn 

XO

On Death and Destiny

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This past week has been one of both utter sadness and of a renewed and deep appreciation for life, one that I don’t believe I have ever felt before, making both large and small problems and annoyances seem like nothing. I wore them like a badge this week, a signifier of the living. This past week an unexpected (at least to me) death of an old friend and work colleague occurred, passing away at the age of 24 from brain cancer. For the first time in my young life I experienced the death of someone that was more or less my own age. Death became a reality that I have never thought about, never paid attention to because I am at a point in life where death is highly unlikely and a time in which YOLO is the only way to live: without consequence (or minimal consequence) and without fear. I do not feel the same anymore because for the first time death is real, although itself intangible it is there. And it can happen. And now more than ever I wish to come out of my haze of confusion and happiness and live. I want to feel grateful to be alive and to wake up in the morning and see the beautiful sun shining, providing us all with light and life and then roll over and see the man I love fast asleep, beautiful and peaceful with me unable to do anything but smile. For the first time in my life, deep down to my very core, I feel grateful and enlightened.

On my way to her wake, I saw more old friends: friends I have regretfully lost touch with and those who were glorified acquaintances, nevertheless, in The Big Chill-like fashion we were all reunited happy to see each other despite the devastatingly awful occasion. As I walked in to go see her and say goodbye, nervous as could be as I almost did not know how to act, there she was. In that instant I remembered her youthful beauty, the way she was and how she was full of life, hope and great promise. My tear ducts were blocked from being in a state of disbelief but my stomach had surely made up for my lack of salty tears. People from all different walks of life filled the room to show their love and support and I was not surprised to see how many people loved her and wished to say goodbye. I couldn’t take being in there for that long and as I turned to leave I saw two white poster boards with pictures of my friend from the day she was born up until her passing: pictures of her having fun, pictures of her with her family and her fiance and pictures of her enjoying her full albeit, short life. I looked at her baby picture and was reminded of how short her life would inevitably be. A wave of sorrow overcame me. How could this be? I thought. How does something like this happen? I wish I had gotten to see her one last time. She always had such a beautiful smile.

I walked back towards the train with my friends and I realized what an uncharacteristically warm and beautiful day it was in early April. I suddenly felt a deep appreciation for something as simple as a warm day and at that moment I couldn’t imagine not being able to look up at the sky and breathe in the freshest air that New York City has to offer. 

In the days since her wake I have thought about destiny, that bitch who lives by her own rules and who is already aware of where your life is going and of course, the when, where and how of your inevitable demise. Some people do not believe in the concept of destiny but I do to a certain degree and I apply it to the things I cannot change, I accept everything that is and that will be. I feel free. I know now that it’s time to live and to not hold back, take chances and do what you love. If I don’t wake tomorrow I want to know that I was doing what I love, living my life to the fullest and that I had all the love in the world from my family, my boyfriend and my friends. I do not want anymore days of unhappiness to pass me by. I’m trying.

Rest in peace darling and thank you for helping me to see the beauty in life.

 

xo Taryn

 

To Live and Let Go

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It feels like just yesterday that I was sitting in the Astoria Kaplan Test Prep Center (it was my second go around with the course because, well, that’s the Kaplan guarantee: if you do not increase your score the first time around you can take the however-many-weeks-course over again for free) oogling my LSAT teacher, weirdly grateful that I was able to take class with him for the second time around, which was no accident, of course. I was in the midst of my journey, in which the final destination (of sorts) would be law school. It was something that I thought I had wanted for most of my life, second to my desire to be a wildly successful movie actress who would date the likes of the most coveted men in Hollywood (oh, the pipe dreams). Until, now. Now I am faced with the death of what I thought was my dream (or the mere possibility of it).

I let my dreams of being an actress go a long time ago, even though deep down if the opportunity legitimately came along I would jump at in a New York minute (tacky pun) and up and leave whatever it was that I was doing. Despite the fact that I would leap at the chance to do it again, I have come to terms with the fact that it is not written in the stars and that it is not in fact my destiny. It is not something that I was meant to do. But going to law school has been present for years and has been a much more realistic dream for me. I did everything I was supposed to do to get to the dream, went through every step, did everything right and in my power and everything that I was capable of doing. I barely got by on the LSAT but it was just enough to get me into law school three years ago.

And I went. And just as quickly as I went, I left it all behind. I left law school, what I thought I had wanted, behind.

I left law school on purpose because something was telling me I wasn’t ready to go and that maybe there was something else that I was meant to do. I told my mother, upon her coming to pick me up from law school orientation that I wanted to be a writer. I wanted to try to see if I could do something with it. Writer? I thought. Where did I come up with that idea from? Why had I not thought of it sooner? It was a completely unexplored facet of myself. Yes, I had always love to write, always had a knack for it and I could hang my hat on the fact that I was both a columnist and editor of my high school newspaper The Beacon, which now seems like ages ago and was the first and most significant memory I had in reference to my enthusiasm for writing. At the time, I took my health column and the controversy that I could and did cause with it very seriously. I remember doing extensive research on how, when and why girls our age (17, oh my god, this almost 10 years ago) should go to the gynecologist even if they are not sexually active. You know, typical high school stuff.

When I graduated, writing, acting and law school got lost in the mix of my new declared major, Public Relations. I cannot remember where in the fuck my grand idea about PR came from but there it was and there it went, along with $65,000 worth of invisible money that I will be in debt-ed to most probably until I am 75 years old. And then I remembered law school. I transferred from Hofstra University to Queens College to go after my remembered dream. I went through all the required steps, made it to the Kaplan course to practice and prep for the LSAT a.k.a the most ridiculous and challenging exam of my life (and I thought nothing could beat the ridiculousness of the SATs) and I did it. I got into law school, finally.

I rejoiced. I went  to orientation. And then cried over the fact that I wasn’t ready. I said I had wanted to try writing. And then I completely lost myself for 3 years.

Which now brings us to today: I pursued my writing like I said I would, going to far as to applying to graduate school for creative writing and getting in. My desire to become the next Lena Dunham was realized. I felt validated in a way that I never had before and knew that this was going to be the right move for me. I had struggled for a year and a half to get something off the ground with my writing and slowly but surely I did but something was still nagging me. It was law school. It appeared again and it tugged at my heart, dragging me away from everything. It was trying to make me believe that this was still a possible career for me and to not let it slip away before it would be lost forever. I struggled with re-applying knowing that if this go around I did not get in then I would know once and for all that my running away was not for naught and that it was indeed a very possible career choice for me. But I got in. One. Last. Time.

I checked my email last week and there it was: My Hofstra Law acceptance (what, no snail mail big admissions packet?!) which coincidentally came a few days after my inevitable rejection from CUNY Law (where I had realistically wanted to go because you cannot beat the price of the school, a mere 1/3 the cost of Hofstra!). To say the least, I felt relieved and I felt smart again but most importantly, I couldn’t believe I had gotten into law school for the third and most probably final time. This was it, I thought. It really is now or never.

It is with a heavy heart that I chose to be a writer. With that, my law school dreams are dashed. It both a wonderful and terrifying choice because even though I have made the career choice to be a writer (finally and for real this time), I still feel like I am floundering. Perhaps it’s because not enough has happened career wise yet but it will. It is a career choice in which anything can happen; I am both in control and at a total loss for control all at the same time. It is at this very moment in my life that choices (or I am just at that twentysomething  stage in life) begin to disappear and you move farther and farther away from your past or what you thought you had wanted and become who you are supposed to be. And it’s scary as hell.

So long to my cute and very unnecessary Legally Blonde references and to the use of legal jargon in my everyday life (dammit, I’ll stop). So long to the powerful bitch that I had seen myself becoming once I was able to take on a case of my very own. There will be no arguing, no legal writing and most importantly, I will not be nose diving into a pile of over $200K debt (maybe I am inadvertently saving myself).

Today, I throw out the confusion and indecisiveness (here’s hoping), let go and say: I am a writer.

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