choices

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

Choices

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Lately I have been thinking about choices, mostly because it has been difficult for me to make one. The word options has also come to mind, along with the thought that once I make this choice my other options disappear rather quickly…or do they? But mostly I think about choices and the bad ones I have made over the course of my 25 years (almost 26). I speak, for the most part, about the ones that I have made over the past 5 years, the ones that really matter. For instance: what career path am I choosing…do I continue my education…what men should I date or not date…what friends do I keep in my life…what should I be putting on/in my body or not putting on/in my body? These are very broad questions  and they sound almost stupid but these questions are my reality and have been my reality for the past 5 years. It’s weed out time but I still have time. Time to figure out what to do with my life.

I love to think about choices because they encompass everything that you do. Why have I made some of the choices I have made in my life? What if it was meant to happen this way? Your choices both good and bad are necessary, a sort of necessary evil that has shaped you into the person you are today and you are better for it. This is an incredibly positive way to think and now I feel that I don’t know who is writing this post. It must be someone else. Me? Positive? Not these days. In fact, far from it.

But what if all of this misery that I feel and the unhappiness of the everyday is meant to drive me, push me forward in a way to a place that I am supposed to be? I know my writing is better the more unhappy I am, in that case, the unhappiness drives me. But then, wouldn’t one have to believe in a grand design to all things big and small? I guess maybe I do believe that. I desperately want to believe that. After all, I am finally able to reach momentary happiness while I sit and write and express myself. I know I was supposed to make all of these ridiculous mistakes and turn down great opportunities to career paths that I may have been programmed to want, at no one’s fault but my own. But why do I still cry almost every day over lost opportunity? It comes back to choices. Once you make one choice, the other’s fade away but I cry as if all opportunity is lost. And it isn’t.

I am trying to learn to live positively, taking all the good with the bad but it’s so difficult when the mind has been beaten down and smashed in for so long over conscious, perhaps even unconscious choices of where to go and who to go there with and why.

One day I know, these choices will get easier and make more sense. Perhaps in hindsight.