Thursday, October 20, 2011

Today,

I faced my fears and confronted the bus driver about being late (again). It sort of backfired and he made ME feel like I was in the wrong, but at least I spoke up and stood up for my rights.

I felt like there's been too many coincidences over the past few days for me to brush this dream under the carpet.

I sat and chatted over a small capp with people whom I love hanging around and getting to know.

I was overjoyed when these two stared at me, reading into my soul while gushing about how they can see me travelling the world as a journalist. It was "so me," they said.

I realized that God speaks through people you least expect to hear from Him through.

I was reminded that it's not going to happen without faith.

I am stirred into a deeper level of faith as I teeter on the edge of making the biggest decision of my life since coming here.

Today

was a good day, notwithstanding the rain and the late bus. Better days are yet to come. And they will.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Bad timing to be thrown this bundle of emotions. A rude shock. And a realization of how much I actually REALLY want this to work out.

My heart's reaction causes me to question if I've just been paying lip service to the notion of "His will be done" all along. As much as I've chosen not to think about it and trust that if it's meant to be then it will happen, I am quite taken aback at how that short conversation affected me so much and stole my faith so easily. Maybe I have to rethink things. Whether I've truly grown in faith, whether I've learnt to really rely on Him rather than on my whims.

Coping mechanism kicked in instantly: to write. (On twitter, no less)

Here's a reminder. Lest I lose sight.

"Dear me, come what may, don't lose sight of the bigger picture and The Perfect Will. Rejoice. Embrace. Persevere. Celebrate. Come what may."
I have figured out why writing a paragraph about a topic I like which would probably take someone else about 1 hour to complete, takes me about 3.

It's because I dream and get distracted while attempting to complete the task at hand. I see and I smile and I listen and I think as I devour the stuff that pop up on my computer screen when my head is lost to my fingers. I live in possibilities and beauty and all things fantasy and faerie-like. I don't have a prolonged attention span. I hate being confined to what I HAVE to do, rather than what I WANT to do. I don't roll like that, yo.

Case in point: I LOVE studying international politics. I love rocking up to class and listening to intelligent stuff and figuring out the theories and observing the sort-of debate that takes place in tutes. I LOVE reading about Somalia and understanding the nuances that led to what's happening there at this point in time.

What I do NOT like, on the other hand, is this agenda of researching and gathering specific points to write a specific essay which I probably wouldn't remember a year from now to pander to someone else's specific academic demands. I do not like being forced (by no one but myself really) to remember stupid macroeconomics graphs and the causal effects of this and that and everything in between. I do not like conducting research from all these books strewn across my floor, looking for a specific point in 10 500-page books which will fit into the theoretical window that I'm expected to tackle the topic from.

I work best in my head, at my pace, when I want to, wherever I want to.

It's just a pity that this world keeps spinning madly on whether I choose to keep up or not. I experience bouts of sudden inspiration when I go heck, screw all these responsibilities and expectations and need-to-accomplish's I'm just going to enjoy the ride. And then reality kicks in and I realize if I merely dance and paint and sing and play music and read all the time, I will stay true to my heart and I will probably be the happiest girl on earth. But I'd probably also end up in poverty with no goverment that cares about me enough to make out fortnightly Centrelink payments to a sufficient extent that I can chuck a surfboard on my littlemisssunshine van and drive up the coast and surf all day long.

So it's the suffering now for a possible future when I'll have enough money to occasionally follow my heart, or a screw the world attitude now for a possible future of abject poverty which would mean no heart-following. Because who are we kidding? Even in this uncertain doomsday economic climate, and as much as I scrunch my nose up at the Asian notion of 'study hard for a better life' philosophy, money is still what makes the world go round isn't it?

So, get back to your Somalia essay NOW. You don't really want to fail the subject do you? pfft.