You need to remember where you have been. You need to remember where you are. You don't need to know where you are going. You don't need to know where you will end up. Recognize the familiar. Take advantage of the unknown. Welcome to my Cup of Cosmos. Enjoy! (and if you need a second cup, check out my other brewing blogs under my profile)
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Brewing Announcement!
What has been brewing? Drum roll please...hold your breath for the anticipation...put your mug down and get ready to cheer....announcing...My NEW Tumblr Site!
http://cupofcosmos.tumblr.com/
Just one more reason to brew up another cup, sit back, relax and enjoy.
This cup is for: Everyone.
An Intermission
Do you know that feeling when you have been sitting in a
coffee shop all day, have ordered everything there is to order on the menu and
still don’t want to leave? You slowly pack up your things one at a time, you
tell yourself over and over that you have had enough caffeine to last you the
entire month, but still, you wish you could just have one more cup.
You know that feeling that lingers at the end of a dinner
party? Where everyone is moving all too slow to get their jackets because they
wish that everything had lasted just a little bit longer, that the
conversations could just keep rolling for hours–wishing that the candles on the
table never ran down.
You know the feeling when you run out of pages in a
notebook, and begin to squish words along the margins or add post it notes to
the pages, and still, you know that one day you are going to need to start a
new one, but you love the one you have so much? You think to yourself: a new
one will never be the same.
Have you ever wished that you had cut more wood for the campfire,
as you watch the logs slowly cinder, and the fire turn to a crackle? You wish
the glow would keep glowing, but there is no turning back time as the fire
burns down. Suddenly a chill replaces the warmth, signaling it is time to shake
out the sandy blankets and find your flip-flops in the dark.
You know when
you finish a book and wish that it wasn’t over, wishing there was just one more
chapter or that you hadn’t read it so fast? That is how I feel. This week is
the end of what has been a big chapter–and I am not ready.
While everyone was rushing this week to finish pages, pack
for adventures, cram and jam get-togethers, I found myself trying to slow
things down. I thought if I just slept in a little while longer the mornings
would linger. I thought if I just kept the coffee pot running, that breakfast
conversations would never end. I thought if I just stayed in my slippers,
leggings and fleece, the day would be forced to wait for me. But that never
happened. Instead, the rest of the world was whizzing by all around me, friends
coming and going, and a constant ebb and flow of hustle and bustle. It didn’t
matter that I was moving slow. The rest of the world didn’t’ care. The rest of
the world didn’t wait for me. Instead, it just kept moving faster and faster.
There are Hallmark cards that remind us to slow down. There
are catchy quotes that remind us what is important, that you should not rush
through life. There are advice givers that say that basking in the moment is
the best thing you can do. But, after this week, I would have to ask, how? I
tried to re-invent the system. I tried to slow down the ticking clock. For a
split second, I was crazy enough to think that I could slow down Manhattan. It
can’t be done (trust me). And then there is this saying that I absolutely hate
that says all good things must come to an end. Who said this? I hate this
saying. All good things ending–REALLY? Not true. I don’t believe it. I can’t. I
won’t.
Last week our dining room table was filled with vases of
fresh lilacs–the dining room smelled amazing. This week, the lilacs were all
but wilted, tired, and eventually, tossed. But, I know that more are just
around the corner. I know that next Monday, the farmers market will be full of
purple, on sale, and ready to enjoy. I know that with all happy endings, there
is a start to a new beginning that can be just as good, if not better.
For me, this week is not the end; this week is just the
start to a very long intermission. My notebook isn’t filled yet (I just got a
new one). My book isn’t finished, I am only on chapter 2 (and I read more than
one book at a time in an effort to slow down the endings, to stagger them for
peace of mind). My New York life will be put on hold (this is a good thing, a
much needed break.) And the only ending in sight is the conclusion to my final
paper (the last line) but everything else is just an intermission.
This cup is for: Alex, who met me late in the night for a
long talk,
For Logan, who I can count on to pick up the phone at any
hour,
And for Kelsey, who understands exactly what chapter I am
talking about.
Saturday, May 11, 2013
I Am My Mother's Daughter
I am my mother’s daughter.
How many times have I said this out loud? How many times has
someone else told me this? How many times have I felt this deep in my heart?
Too many times to count. We look alike, we sound alike. We finish each other’s
sentences. We share the same thoughts. If we butt heads, it is usually because
we are arguing for the same thing, for the last line, for the last word. There
is not enough space in the world to list all the reasons that I love my mom. It
would be impossible for anyone to fully understand our relationship without
being part of it, without being her or me. I am her mijita. I am her peach. I
am her best friend–and she is mine.
If you are lucky enough to have a mom like mine, you talk to
her everyday, or multiple times a day. If you are lucky enough to have a mom
like mine you get care packages (no matter where you are in the world) that are
filled to the brim with goodness. If you are lucky enough to have a mom like
mine, you have someone who will happily be interrupted with a question, a cup
of tea, or a trip to Nordstrom.
If you have a mom like mine you know it is a special
occasion when she wears mascara. She only gets a manicure when you are gone,
traveling outside the country or have moved out of state entirely. Don’t expect
her to ever like cooking–she never has and she never will. Her house will
always have rhododendrons, prayer flags and a Labrador to meet you at the door.
Her office will always be a work in progress, be it a watercolor, a card to an
old friend, or a manuscript. If you have a mom like mine she is a published
author, a gifted poet, a charismatic speaker, a top-notch editor, and a
creative writer. If you have a mom like mine, you know that she will always
have an idea up her sleeve, she will always have characters chatting somewhere
in the back of her head, and she will always have a cold cup of tea hidden
somewhere in the house.
At times, she might go crazy. From the cords that clutter
behind the TV, to dog hair that gathers in corners around the house, she might
scream and yell–but who can blame her? She loves burnt toast, she loves walking
on the beach in the rain, and she can read and type faster than anyone that I
know.
My mom can fix anything from a broken door to a jammed
zipper. She makes the best soup. She hosts the best dinner parties. My mom is
the kind of friend everyone wishes they had–she is the one who will pick up the
phone and call you out of the blue. My mom is the one who will send a post card
to an old friend every Thursday. My mom is the one who has life long friends.
My mom works hard. My mom is honest. My mom is funny. My mom is loyal. My mom
is the one who you can always count on–my mom is the one who will always be
there.
I love her laugh. I love her hands. I love the smell of her
Jean Nate perfume when she pulls me into a hug.
My mom is a daughter, a sister, a wife, and a mother. My mom
is Suz–and for me–everyday is mother’s day.
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Don't Rush Spring
I’m in the thick of it, where the to-do lists stack up so
high I don’t know where to begin, where so many windows are open on my computer
screen I can’t find the curser, where due dates feel so far away, and yet, are
just around the corner. Every time I look at the clock it is always 11:25pm.
They don’t call it “spring forward” for nothing.
To be honest, I always have a difficult time transitioning
from winter to (spring and) summer–to warm and warmer. I hate when it comes time
to bag up my sweaters and push them deep into the back of my closet. I hate
saying goodbye to my boots, putting them up on the high shelves that I can’t
reach without a step stool. I hate boxing up my scarves and storing my down
comforter. I hate having to think about summer shoes, stress about what SPF to
put on my face, worry about mosquito bites, and fuss with having to shave my
legs on a regular basis–don’t even get me started on having to (potentially)
wear a bathing suit. Most people get grumpy and grouchy when they have to bundle
up and layer, I get crabby and cranky when I am forced to give that up.
The responsible thing to do would be to bury myself in the
thick of it. A typical student would brew espresso until their hands shook,
cram and jam long into the night, walk around like a zombie by day and press
the panic button. What do I do? I transform my windowsill into a desk, I move
my chair so that I can watch the spring rain hit my window, I slip into my cozy
socks, I sit with a cup of tea, and I flip through magazines that are months
old, re-read short stories by Nora Ephron, catch up with old friends on the
phone, and pull out my sketch books and drawing pens.
Rushing does nothing.
Worrying is a waste of time. Cramming is overrated. Busy is just an adjective.
I am perfectly aware that I have fifty pages of writing that stand between me
and summer, but I am certain, that without panic, it will all get done.
This cup is for the rusher: slow down–sip slowly–enjoy.
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