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I called my mentor in a state of panic the other afternoon. I’d been procrastinating with my writing, allowing deadlines to draw dangerously close before a project was completed. This game of Russian roulette didn’t just puzzle me; it also exhausted my mental and physical capacities. And I couldn’t figure out why I’d hold a craft that fulfills me so close to open flame.

It was simple, she explained. I wasn’t enjoying myself anymore. I had replaced my creativity - my voice - with authoritative dictation that things must progress quickly, and now! The perfectionist that exists deep in my soul (the one I try to suppress) had reemerged and was shouting orders left and right. With every free minute of my spare time dedicated towards pushing myself to the next level, I’d neglected to live the life that exists out my window. My procrastination, in essence, was my hesitation to let my work product be less than perfect. I’d unconsciously overwhelmed my life with responsibilities, deadlines and little room to breathe, she continued; and without flexibility, I had no room for the errors and mistakes we all need to make in order to grow and thrive.

And with that, I pledge to myself and to my life to take it in and let it be. To find enjoyment, once more, in the spontaneous - occasionally, the capricious. To believe, as I always have, that the universe has a funny way of working itself out.

Window shopping

Coping with stress well is not my strong suit. I binge on “piece” food - raisins, animal crackers, cookies, chocolate chips - or don’t eat at all, sucking down one caffeinated beverage after another in an attempt to fuel my body. Oversleeping is never a problem; but working until 2, 3 and 4 in the morning and then unceremoniously passing out on a pile of paperwork often is. I worry, frown and fret, allowing tension in my parental lobe and upper back to become equally tight. I think of countless unimaginable “What ifs?” and allow my mind to wander down paths that are so far from where it should be, a search party is almost warranted.

My chaotic afternoon was interrupted with a bang - literally. A giant heap of snow fell off the roof to my office building and shattered to the bricks below like an avalanche. It was then, after eight hours with my eyes focused sharply on the monitor in front of me, that I looked outside to see what had caused the commotion. It was then, too, that I noticed one of the most gorgeous sunsets I’d seen in recent memory, with clouds of lavender and pink swirled between the gauzy blue cumulus, hinting at the spring that awaits just around the corner. It was then, lastly, that I was reminded that I need not wait for a shining, perfect day to enjoy a shining, perfect moment.

What’s outside your window?

I waltzed into my eyebrow wax appointment this afternoon in a particularly chipper mood - not only because I was early and would be able to enjoy a dizzying selection of European fashion magazines at my leisure; but because there’s nothing quite like the feeling of hot wax sizzling against the delicate eye area to get a girl fired up on an otherwise ordinary Tuesday afternoon.

Trouble in paradise appeared around 5:41 P.M., when my waxer (who shall remain anonymous, as shall the spa) - noticed my eyelashes were coated in navy blue mascara.

“Ooh, love your mascara, hun,” she commented, Tweezerman in her left hand and magnifying mirror in her right hand.  “What kind is it?”

(FYI: aestheticians and certain elderly types are the only people allowed to call me “hun.”)

“Well,” I began, delving into an explanation of my gig as a beauty provocateur and the ensuing deviation from my standard DiorShow in Black Out towards the lash path less traveled as research, of sorts, for an upcoming product review.

“Oh, I could totally do that,” she replied. “I’m all about makeup.”

I nodded and told her I appreciated the support, then closed my eyes, determined to enjoy five minutes of peace and quiet in the darkened room before heading back into the chaos of Newbury Street.

My waxer was inquisitive.  ”So, like, how do you do that?” she asked as I squinted my eyes open.  “Like, how do they know to send products to, like, you, and not, like, me?”

“Uh, well,” I answered sheepishly, “they Google me. I guess.”  I tightly closed my eyes and began to faintly hum the soundtrack to the Sound of Music to signal that it was time to get on with the show.  Salon chit chat, while occasionally appreciated and often a good source of local gossip, was beginning to grate on my nerves.

My waxer, with apparent intent to destroy my solace, continued her babble about how much she “just loves” makeup and stopped mid-wax to pull out a tube of generic mascara she got “two-for-one” at Rite-Aid the way a grandmother would show off photos of her grandchildren stuffed into her wallet.  Since a good eyebrow waxer is especially hard to come by - need I remind anyone of the Dellaria Massacre of 2001? - I kept my mouth closed and prayed she would finish already.  Kind of like getting stuck with a guy who ‘just wants to hold you,’ when all you want is to practice bedroom acrobatics.

“So, seriously, Kristin. Next time they need someone to review stuff, I’m your girl!”

Kristin?  Kristin?! I had just slapped my Visa on the counter to pay for $30 plus tip worth of perfection, but felt like slapping this “girl” - whom I’ve been seeing exclusively for brow services over the past two years - silly.

If all’s fair in love and war, what are the rules for a perfect arch?

The loud clump grabbed me first.  I, in “How is the weekend already over?” mode, peered over the top of my book at the well-groomed woman sitting across from me in the subway car. We uncomfortably made eye contact. The trolley screeched to a halt as it approached the Harvard Square stop. My neighbor rose;  my attention shifted from Kerouac down the floor, where, clad in a New Balance hiking boot, wool sock and air cast, was her left foot.

On her right foot?  A Christian Louboutin patent leather pump.

Februarity

I made the proactive choice to sacrifice my social life this month, choosing instead to forge relationships with the dozen or so books I’ve devoured between the scribbling, the editing and the waiting. Two books in past four days, actually; 600 and some odd pages of time spent with the women whose memoirs I must perfunctorily review for the publication of my dreams. I’ve written, scratched out and re-written hundreds of pages, many of which have nary to be typed into a document legible for the rest of the general population. My eyes have strained at the screen until the wee hours of the morning. The coffee addiction I attempted to nix has been brought back to life in full swing, a welcome addition to the solitude I’ve grown accustomed to. Talks of web design, HTML and coding swirl my head, a foreign language I must now entertain as my own. There are pitches, rejections, false hopes and moments of frustration so pure I contemplate slamming my fist through the horsehair walls more than once.

Between the pushes and the pulls, the pleasure and the pain, I know this path is one meant for me. It’s meant for me not only because I have chosen it, but because despite those moments of despair and confusion, it fits me like a well-oiled glove. I continue on, not knowing where it necessarily will lead or what shape it will take, but because one foot must be placed in front of the other. Falling down seven times, and standing up eight.

This time, there is no looking back.

As I was perusing the spam folder Gmail keeps immaculately clean, I noticed one from email address, “Changso,” subject: “Keep your rod iron for hours.” My willingness to subject my computer to a Pandora’s box of viruses to see just what he had to say about the subject is astounding.

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