I won't be writing a novel this month, but I'll be writing.
Monday, November 2, 2020
Monday, September 14, 2020
Practice Makes Better
I started this blog in the spirit of uploading unfinished drafts. The point was to let go of perfection in favour of progress. It was supposed to add momentum to my writing - the refining will come later, much later. Just. Write.
But of course, even in a blog called "Drafts" I have 29 unpublished drafts that I can't bring myself to post. They're just not good.
As soon as I shared this blog with friends and instagram, I began treating this blog like a messy bun on pinterest - a cute and curated thing pretending to be effortless so that you think if my minimal effort writing is good, then my edited stuff must be amazing!
I want people to think I'm amazing. I'm scared of you thinking I'm bad, or worse, ~ okay ~.
But I want move past this fear.
I've handed in my resignation at work and I'm going to become a high school teacher (if I can land a job by next year...).
I don't completely understand what I'm getting myself into, but I do have at least one hope - I want my future students to love learning. I want them to feel the joy of understanding something. I want them to question, find answers, then find more questions. I want them to be okay with not knowing, not knowing how to know, and not understanding things straight away.
Not understanding them for a while.
I want them to forgive themselves for failing.
I want them to differentiate between guilt and shame. I want them to respond to guilt, and remove shame.
And to help my students work through those things, I need to accept them for myself.
I want to experience this advice so that when they do not want to do it, or struggle, or give up, or come back and give up again, I know that it's a very difficult thing I'm asking of them. Necessary, but difficult. Leading by example is not a glamorous walk along the pedestal, it's Jesus carrying his cross. (I used to be a Christian, so this imagery really sticks in my head).
Michelle Johansson said that students - young brown scholars - will look into your eyes and know if you are lying. And I don't want to lie to them.
So I will ask questions, find answers, and ask more questions.
I will learn to be okay with not knowing, not knowing how to know, and not understanding things straight away.
Not understanding them for a while.
I am learning to differentiate guilt and shame. I want to respond to guilt, and remove shame.
I want to grow so that I am able to teach what I've learned. But I also know that my future students have so much to teach me too.
I want to grow so I am able to learn from them.
Thursday, August 13, 2020
Capitalising on my love for Animorphs
I wanted to say that even though Spinoff already published "I read all 54 Animorphs books in five days and it almost killed me" and thus have taken the element of nostalgic surprise, which is pretty much the only hope of a mass appeal of Animorphs, that what I had to say was indeed still interesting and worth being on their platform.
I wanted to say that that piece is more of a fun-challenge-i-subjected-myself-to-pain-for-your-entertainment thing, and mine would more of an earnest and sincere almost undescribable appreciation of the first 18 books I've been able to get my hands on.
I'd probably include Mr Knightley's quote about loving Emma less so he can talk about it more to add literary credibility to my opinion.
I wanted to write about finding joy that truly felt pure.
I wanted to write about how the joy I felt reading these books carried me truly dark times.
I wanted to tie in how the characters tackle questions of identity, humanity, friendship, and grief gave me language to talk about my mental health, relationships,what kind of person I want to grow into, and how I see my place in the world.
I've wanted to write this for four years.
I've only realised now that one of the things stopping me is the thought of making money from what feels like such an uncapitalist exchange I have in reading these books.
Books are ultimately part of capitalism - the production and purchasing of them require it.
But finding these books, tucked away in the corner of a second-hand bookstore at $4 each just felt so removed from the system of marketing and attention hungry algorithms that writing about it on a platform whose aim is to reach as wide of an audience as possible may take away from this quiet and profound joy I've found.
So I wrote it here instead. A very small and quite corner of the internet that I make no money. Publishing this still makes me productive though. That by writing I'm practicing a skill that adds to the productive work I do in my current and future jobs.
Whatever I'm going to stop worrying about the minutiae of this.
I hope you to find the quiet and profound enjoyments that don't lean so much into the demands of capitalism and productivity.
Sunday, August 2, 2020
Have You Been Writing Lately?
Sunday, March 29, 2020
Me and Taylor Swift (but mostly me)
If I loved you less, I might be able to talk about it more.
A nice girl smiles and waves and says thank you. A nice girl doesn’t make people feel uncomfortable with her views
Tuesday, February 18, 2020
Relatable and not cute
It's awkward/deeply anxiety inducing not knowing how much I'm being paid compared to my colleagues. I feel that I'm underpaid. I don't know the stats and figures and trends, it's just an educated guess.
It's awkward/deeply anxiety inducing lying to friends about being too busy to hang out because the proposed plans are too expensive (a $4.90 coffee counts as too expensive most days).
It's awkward/deeply anxiety inducing when the first Happy Birthday text I recieve is from Moola and I remember every other short-term loan and debt collector I owe money to.
It's awkward/deeply anxiety inducing asking parents or friends to borrow money. I know I'm borrowing money from people who aren't giving from a comfortable pool of savings or excess dispoable income. We are the struggling helping the struggling.
It is my New Year's resolution to save $500. An amount I find anxiety inducing to tell people. I worry that this is a small inconsequential amount to them and they are judging me for making the bar so low.
I also worry that this amount is too high and they can't imagine putting that amount of money aside over 12 months due to their low income and high living costs.
I don't want to make someone else feel ashamed for how little money they have. I don't want them to feel the same way I do when friends so casually talk about how spending $800 on return flights is such a great price and I pretend that the reason I'm not tagging along is simply out of lack of interest.
I want to be better with money.
I want to take steps so that money is less awkward/anxiety inducing.
I am taking steps.
Saturday, February 1, 2020
Perfectionism: A Word Vomit
I'm pretty sure I've said that in a previous blog post but I'm too scared to re-read any of them in case I don't love them. Then I'll feel like a useless failure.
And I feel dumb for putting too much pressure on myself about this blog, which I titled "Drafts" in the spirit of the mess and imperfection of stream of consciousness blog posting.
I caught up with a friend over a foodcourt dinner and coffee (iced) and he reminded me that I truly have the skills, ideas, and an imperitive to write.
Nothing I do stems from a place of self-acceptance and self-compassion. I'm usually motivated by fear and obligation and when it comes to... er, life. But with writing, those two things just aren't cutting it anymore.
I run away from writing projects and assignments and I don't feel like there's any real need for me to write. I give into the fear and I lose a sense of obligation.
My friend reminded me that I have a very specific voice and specific perspective that actually makes for compelling writing. Maybe not in these blog posts, but there are things that I want to write about, that will add value into other people's lives.
I want to pull away from the rigidity of perfection on the one hand, and everything else that's trash on the other.
I know how my fear of failure is tied to my childhood anxieties and expereinces, I just don't know how to move passed it.
Thursday, January 9, 2020
When A Friend Is Grieving
I want to message her every day to say if there was anything she needed, let me know.
I want to message her every day to tell her how amazing she is and that she is the legacy of her parents who I've never met.
I want to message her every day.
But I don't.
I message her to tell her I love her.
I tell her I think about her daily, and that she need only to think of me when she has the capacity.
I tell her I'm here, and that she doesn't have to be here until she's done being every where else she needs to be.
I tell her I can talk about my strange romance if she wants a distraction.
I tell her my pay weeks.
I tell her she can give me the seen or leave my messages unopened for as long as she wants.
Then I leave it.
I want to message her every day.
The Point: Outsider At Home
I'm trying to write about the feeling of returning home but also feeling like a foreigner and a tourist, looking at Samoa as an outsider.
I'm trying to write about feeling nostalgic for a place I don't recognise anymore.
I'm trying to write about I've thought of Samoa as home but when someone asked me, where are you from? I answered, New Zealand.
I'm trying to write about how I feel like I belong in Samoa, without having to prove anything, but also that in order to feel like Samoa is home properly, I have to give, serve, tautua.
I want to give, I want to go back, I want Samoa to be familiar again.
I want to know Samoa and I want Samoa to know me too.
I'm trying to write all of this... so here is my brainstorm.
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1. I'm am endlessly grateful to my dad for prioritising touch typing as a skill I had to learn as a child. He would make me take typing ...
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I'm trying to write about my recent visit to Samoa. I'm trying to write about the feeling of returning home but also feeling like ...
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So I had a dream on Friday 10 November, 2017 and when I woke up, I wrote down everything I remembered in a notebook. I came across it yester...