"Easter is about hope."
That’s what the Australian-accented, boomerang-slinging
bunny in Rise of the Guardians says about his holiday.
Easter is about possibility. Redemption. Renewal.
It’s rather fitting that the end of The 41st Year
is Easter week. It’s fitting because when I set out to do this last year, I was
really looking for renewal.
On my 40th birthday, sitting in a bar in New York
City, I wrote, “This all started because Heather said, ‘Forty is a
motherfucker,’ and, like most things in my life, I decided to manage my
expectations.”
Forty couldn’t fuck with me if I knew what I was doing. If I
had a plan. A purpose. A mission.
On the first page of the journal I bought in NYC to track
The 41st Year, I wrote, “I know I’ll struggle. I know I’ll focus on
the shortfalls and the challenges. I know I’ll be glaringly aware of the
misses, the failures, and the face plants.”
So here they are:
I did not visit Papa 40 times. I got to Florence 11 times in
the last year. It’s an hour trip and a three-hour commitment. It takes about
$20 in gas round trip. I’ve been too broke and too busy. And yet each of those
11 visits filled me with a sense that my Papa appreciates me. Loves me. Is
proud of me. So, I’ll try to keep my once-a-month pace and hope that will
suffice.
I did not donate 40 articles of clothing or put 40 pages
into Hollie’s scrapbook. I didn’t do even one for either of those. I did accept
some pieces from my dear friend, Teresa, who has lost weight and gave me the
six pairs of pants and four tops that have made my working full time doable
these last three months. As for the scrap book, someday I’m sure I’ll wish I
had captured every minute with Hollie. For now, though, I’m waiting until she’s
interested in helping with the project to really take it on.
I did not submit 40 times. I submitted 27 times but now I
have a weekly habit, so that’s a good thing. I feel good about the submissions.
I feel like I’m getting used to rejection and that’s part of being a writer.
I did not do 40 runs, in fact I haven’t run at all.
Something I regret and something I plan to remedy. Immediately. Let’s roll that
goal into next year.
I didn’t get to 40 new places but I did get to 15 including
two new cities: Kansas City, Missouri and Toledo, Ohio. It’s hard to travel
when you don’t have any money. Some “places” that mattered this year included
the Office of Business Opportunity’s Small Business Conference last May at
which I was a speaker and the Winter Wheat Literary Festival where I was on
faculty. The SCWA’s writers conference in the fall to which I won a scholarship
and the Girls Rock! showcase where I saw my daughter play guitar on stage for the
first time. I’ll take quality over quantity on that one all day long. We even
got to Five Points on St. Patty’s Day which was a big achievement for Hollie
and me.
I also wrote in that journal that The 41st Year
was meant to provide wins. Easy ways to show progress and success.
“Say you will and then do it. No fear. No excuses. No
boundaries.” Reasonable, achievable things on the list.
Categories where I killed it: Blog posts and books by female
authors. I read 73 books last year and have read 28 this year so far. Nearly
all of them are by women writers. My blog posts were mostly on the SCWA blog,
but I also generated content for Clemson Road Consulting, Unapologetically X,
and two clients. This blog, The 41st Year, has been neglected. But
that’s mostly as a reflection of my glaring awareness of misses, failures, and
face plants.
So, it’s Easter and this is about hope. Renewal. It’s about
opportunity.
There has been so much opportunity in the last few months,
really since I started The 41st Year and started being intentional
about pretty much everything. Opportunities are not hiding under bushes waiting
to be found like colored eggs. They’re flying past us like dandelion seeds on
the wind. I’ve tried to gather them all. Chased them all. Watched them float by
and wished they were mine.
Now I’m going to bloom where I’m planted.
This was an important year. A year in which I decided I am
the grown-up in the room and it’s up to me to make decisions and take action. A
year in which I stopped waiting for others to offer, comply, and play along.
I was so afraid that 40 would be a motherfucker. So, I
geared up and took a few practice swings. When they landed, and the resistance
gave way, I decided to kick its ass. And what it feels like right now is that I’m
just getting started.
It feels like Game On. Bring it, 42nd Year. Show
me what you’ve got.
Thanks, Kasie. This was a terrific blog post. Game on.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the support, Gail. Glad to have you in my corner.
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