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Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Forgive and Forget


I was just arguing religion with my Mom, yet again. One of the disagreements I have with organized religion are their views on homosexuality and how some extremist believe that you can go to hell for being with someone of the same sex. I personally think it is ridiculous for any individual or organization to proclaim that loving someone can send you to hell and that you should be punished if you love the wrong person.

But then I came back to my room, took a moment and realized that I am giant hypocrite. My best friend from high school and the guy who I loved for all those years hooked up in Vegas and I wished them nothing but misery and punishment to them because of that for years. The thing is they didn't just hook up; they fell in love and got married.

I know I am maybe a permanently single, sometimes bitter spinster. But even despite all that I am an advocate of love. Even though it has never happened to me, I believe in all that jazz about not knowing when, where or how love will find you. So I how can I condemn a couple who found in love. I have to take a step back to see that because it is definitely a little easier if the memories and details are a little hazy.

The truth is I can't hate them anymore. It takes up too much of my time and it no longer serves a purpose in my life. At one point in my life I wanted each of them to be happy and now they are and NOW, finally, I get to be too. This is something you will not read in this blog again... this part of my life is OVER.

ps - OPRAH to the rescue again http://www.oprah.com/spirit/8-Ways-to-Forgive-and-Forget

Onwards...

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

I am stuck at 16! The return of Miss Doom & Gloom


I usually only blog on days when I am feeling good and hopeful. I don't like spreading my doom and gloom in the world too much, so I restrain from posting anything negative. But the truth is bad days do exist and this blog is about my journey to transforming my life and I guess even on that journey there are days like these. Days where I feel completely overwhelmed by the work I have to do to get my life to be what I want it be and hell just to get the bills paid. I sometimes honestly don't think I am capable of this whole adult thing. Even though I have graduated from college, started a career which is now changing, had my heart stomped on countless times, moved out and then back in ,and came back from a lot of crappy times to find happiness and myself again in Europe; I still can't help thinking I stopped maturing after 16 or 17 years old.

Like how reliant I am on my parents. Not so much for money usually but for other stuff. I was so stupidly homesick when I moved away to Saskatoon. And I made sure that my apartment was not too far away from my parents place when I moved back to Calgary. And even though I said my reasons for moving back home were just to help my Dad and save some money to travel, the truth I was lonely living alone. So, I was okay with moving back home for the most part. But now I have visions of a new life in Toronto and that is a lot further away than Saskatoon. Am I going to be able to handle that all my own?

I have been working since I was 16 years old and I have been handling my money pretty much the same way the whole time. In avoidance and just do what I want with. When I was living alone I was forced to kind of get a little more responsible with my money but then the bills, which I rarely opened and just guestimated how much they would be, were piling up and I didn't have that much of a choice in the matter. And when I moved back home I had a bit of a chance to get my debt controlled for the most part and even start to save for a trip to Europe and to move to Toronto one day. And then I lost my freaking job!?!?!?! And decided to go to San Francisco and Europe and spend every damn last penny doing it!?!?!?!?! Are you freaking kidding me Andrea Marston!?!?!?! That is something a 16 year old would do and the stupid part about it is, that most parts of my brain doesn't regret this at all. But I should have managed my money better, I should have not traveled for so long and I should have had a job lined up for as soon as I got back. I should have but instead I am just back in the debt with the no job. Fantastic!

And I am just as pathetic as that 16 year old girl who spent her whole 11th grade in the back of the library because she didn't know how to sort things out with the people who she had fallen out with and she had no clue how to make new friends. 12 years later and somehow that is still my life! And I know that is all on me. But I still have no clue what to do about it after all this time. People ask me if I would ever go back and make things right with the high school friends that I cut out of my life. The truth is I don't want to go backwards and I think their reason and season for being in my life is complete. I am sorry for being somewhat irrational when I cut them out of my life but I don't think it is a good idea to go back there again. I do have some friends now, mostly old work friends and the 2 college friends that I still talk to me on a somewhat regular basis but if I want any kind of social life, I have got to make some new friends. I have about the same amount of knowledge on how to get a boyfriend, as I do on how to make new friends and that would be NONE! All the friends I have made in the past have been at school or work. Going on the tour alone and being forced to be social after my three years of basically being a hermit was a giant leap for me and truth-be-told I am not usually the type to take giant leaps. But I met great people and I think I did an okay job with being social and making friends. But now, I am home and I have no clue where, how, when and with who I can test out my new socializing skills with. I feel like Paul Rudd in I Love You, Man awkwardly having to go out and make friends, alas where is my Sidney Fife/Jason Segal? And then I am going to Toronto and have to start all over again, yet again! Yay? I am tired of being a social awkward nerd.... I am tired of being alone. BLERGH!!

And then there is my weight which I have been struggling with long before I was 16. My flabby dark cloud that follows me around. I have been on countless different diets from the time I was 7 years old. My weight has fluctuated on different diets and work out plans but I have pretty much have always been the fat girl. I want to be healthy, I want to lose weight but sometimes my faith in myself and any sort of inspiration are a lot harder to come by than food. Food is always there and I wish it would just go away and not taste good at all. I just want to be rid my fat for once and for all but the whole struggle seem to be never-ending and it scares me that I will never get it under control. I want to give it my all this time, I want to be strong enough to really go for it this time. I am just worried it won't work or I will screw it up again and again and again.

When I was feeling low back in June and July before I decided to turn things around, it was like fate handed me moments of inspiration. I was home sick one day and I happened to catch an episode of Oprah where she was talking to Julia Roberts about her new movie Eat Pray Love. Deciding to read that book before the movie came out changed my life. It made me believe that I could really transform myself but can I?

I am just having some bad days where food and procrastination seem to be the way I am heading. I know what I want my future to look like; I just have to no idea where to start the process of getting there. I guess I just have to dive in and see what happens. But if God or the Universe is listening I could really use some inspiration.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

New New New Year's Resolutions - And YES I mean it this time!


I have got to tell you peeps, I am pretty pumped about the NEW in the New Year. That is what I have decided to strive for this year... newness. I want to live in a new city, try a new career path, have a new body, and just start over somewhere new. New ... is the word for 2011!

I am usually one of those people who scoff at the idea of New Year's Resolutions. And I had also been guilty of giving up on them by like February. But back in July of this year I did make some resolutions to change my life. I wanted to get my finances and weight under control and then by June 2011 move to Toronto. These were my heartfelt intentions and what I was focusing my life towards. Getting laid of put a wrench in my plans but gave me a wonderful opportunity to get a chance to travel. The chance to see NEW things I had never seen before was a chance I could not pass up. I think it was in Europe, meeting new people and going to new-to-me places, I began to really become addicted to idea of New.

Now, it just so happens that I need to re-evaluate my situation and where my life stands at this time just in time for the New Year. So 2011 will be a year that starts off with resolutions but this year I hope I can find the conviction to end 2011 with success.

Here are my New Year's Resolutions for 2011:

1. Create a new healthy body.

2. Sort out my financial situation. (Pay off debt and start some savings).

3. Make New friends.

4. Get myself to Toronto by the end of 2011! (And hopefully start some kind of Second City classes at night)

5. To open my heart to the idea of being loved and being ridiculously IN LOVE!

Here's to good intentions, all the new in the New Year and to a new moi!

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Italy and Paris - What a wonderful world...


I had been daydreaming about going to Italy and Paris for years! I dreamt of Venice's canals, the Coliseum in Rome and the Eiffel Tower.

It was when we crossed Italian border that I became totally in awe of my life. Walking through the history I had been obsessed with the last three years as a way to escape from my history was surreal. Floating in canals that I had only seen in the Bachelor, seeing the place where the Gladiators fought like in the books, movies, and TV shows I had watched about Rome, and to seeing Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel and David; this all seemed so far away from the life I had known for the last couple years, hell... in forever. I was there eating authentic fresh Italian food, drinking the best wine in the world, walking through history with a bunch of people I hope will be lifelong friends. I might have been running a fever, in constant fear of being robbed and then getting robbed in my hotel in Rome. There might have been terrifying moments while losing a tour mate who only has 20% of his sight while in Venice. There might have been drunken nights being stalked by scary Italian greasers and badass hangovers in Florence. But it is because of these moments that I was living, that I once again began to grow to love my own history again and more importantly love my life again.

Italy was a fast-paced dream come true. It literally feels like a dream thinking about how we strolled into quaint Lucerne, Switzerland before heading to Paris. We stayed in this hotel called the Jail Hotel and old jailhouse converted into a very "quirky" hotel.

I must admit that I could hardly sleep that night because I was so excited about seeing Paris and the Eiffel Tour. I am not sure what it is about that iron architectural beauty that has my heart pit pattering about seeing it for so long now. I had figurines in my apartment, picture on desktop at work and home, and charms for my jewelry; the Eiffel Tower was all over my life. It was beautiful place to escape to in my daydreams. The drive to Paris seemed the longest; I am not sure if it actually was or if it was the building anticipation to get there. Even as we were stuck on the outskirts of Paris in insane rush hour traffic you could see hints of Paris' beauty and history. We got to the hotel and were going to have dinner before heading out to see Paris by night via coach and river cruise.

When we got on the coach it was slightly drizzling but as we drove deeper into the city, Paris began to take my breath away. French history is some of my favourite. It was probably some of the only social studies classes I paid attention to in high school. I had read countless books factual and fictitious about the French Revolution and that mad genius Napoleon. To see places like the Arc de Triomphe, the Louvre, and Notre Dame had me beaming. When I first even saw a glimpse of the Eiffel Tower, my heart felt like it may explode. And then as we got off to the coach to board the river cruise we got a full view of the of the beautiful Eiffel Tower shining in the Paris sky. I probably looked pretty idiotic, smiling from ear to ear with my headed constantly tilted up. I was finally here at the Eiffel Tower and I was finally feeling 100% of a feeling I not too long ago had lost hope in; happiness. We boarded the cruise and I made sure to get a seat with an amazing view of my beloved tower and a bit away from everyone else so I could enjoy the moment. As I sat in my seat the Eiffel Tour began its light show and started to sparkle like diamonds. I jumped out of my seat and pressed my face to the window like a little girl seeing a puppy. It was at the moment that I began to cry. Like pretty noticeable, almost sobbing crying. In front of all the tourist and my very tired tour mates I was a blubbering idiot and I didn't give a damn who saw it.

I worked through the depression, I fought through hopelessness, and I made my way not only back but to the Eiffel Tower sparkling like diamonds! I felt as victorious as someone who trekked up Mount Kilimanjaro as we floated by the Notre Dame. We got off the cruise and stood before a once again sparkling tower. I wanted to remember everything in that moment and everything I was feeling. In Paris in front of the Eiffel Tower I found my Joie De Vivre. I found happy again and it felt better than ever.

The next day I had a bit of a happiness hangover but I was so excited to see the Eiffel Tower by day. The weather was the coldest and dampest it had been throughout the trip. We got stuck for 1/2 hour behind a cement truck in the hotel parking lot, we rushed around the Louvre, went to the Eiffel Tower and got lost on the way to the Arc De Triomphe and on the metro and by the end of that day I was the most tired I have ever been. Everyone was going out the Moulin Rouge and I was supposed to meet everyone after but I was so tired that I fell asleep contently after my shower. I was in Paris. :)

The next day we drove back to London and I shed some tears as I bid adieu to my new friends who I had spent the best 12 days of my life with. I spent a quiet, snowy, laid back 3 weeks in England enjoying my family. I visited some adorable English towns and I saw the sights of London by day and night one more time before heading back home.

I have been back home for two weeks today. And when I look at pictures off my camera and posted by my friends on Facebook, it feels like it was all just a dream. As I sit here in the limbo of unemployment with a very uncertain future ahead of me, I often get scared and worried about what's next. But if someone told me January 1st where 2010 would take me I would have not believed them. So how can I doubt the limitless possibilities that lie in my future? I can't. I just have to keep moving and see where life takes me.

At the end of 2010 I am unemployed, broke, well-travelled with absolutely nothing left to lose and so much to gain. Hope, happiness and faith in humanity are restored and I am SO ready for 2011! Bring it on!

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Germany and Austria - Unexpectedly Awesome and Life Changing


Germany and Austria were not places I had too many expectations about when I booked my trip. They were just pit stops between Amsterdam and Italy, the places I was really looking forward to along with Paris. Turns out they ended up being some of the most beautiful, interesting and colourful places I have ever seen in my short life. Germany actually ended up having a major effect on my life and my future but not before it gave me a rowdy good time at its beer halls.

Amsterdam was a bit of whirlwind of booze, sex, history, and smoky coffeeshops. So, I was ready to just chill out in Austria and I didn't think there wouldn't be anything new and exciting there for me. After all from what I saw when we were driving in, it was not too much different from home with all the snow (which my Aussie and South African friends were so pumped to see) and mountains. We parked in a very unremarkable coach parking lot and it was only when we walked through this brick-lined arch that Innsbruck, Austria blew me away. Settled in between the mountains was this cobbled stoned city with colourful, whimsical buildings filled with the cutest shops and people I have ever seen in my life. It was straight out of a Disney movie or something. We enjoyed desserts, tasted a lot of schnapps, and enjoyed the warm fluffy atmosphere in the cold mountain air. Some of the younger people on the tour (yeah I am ancient) went clubbing that night and they said they met some of the best people they ever met in Innsbruck. I didn't doubt them because all during that day it was hard not to notice the smiling happy children with their incredibly perfect looking parents. No wonder the Sound of Music was filmed in Austria. In my mind Innsbruck is the happiest, most perfect place in the world.

Because I was so unexpectedly surprised about Austria, I was wondering what was in store for me on the way to Germany. At first while we were driving through it was also very much like home with mountains rolling into hills. Hints of Germany's unique beauty came as the sun was setting as we drove through the Rhine Valley. Hidden in the hills on the banks of the Rhine Valley were beautiful castles straight out of a fairytale. As the sky became darker we began drive through what I am pretty sure was the Black Forest until in the thick of night we arrived in St.Goar, Germany. The streets and even the corridors of our old hotel were very dark as we got to our rooms to settle in before our wine tasting that night. My roommate and I heard music coming from the street and went to the window and saw what had to be the whole population of St.Goar with colourful lanterns parading down the cobbled street in front of our hotel. I am not sure what it was all about but I thought it was a cute way to start my stay in Germany.

That night we walked the dark streets of St.Goar to a nearby winery. We walked down into an ancient wine cellar. There were benches and long tables lit by candles, little shot glasses and cheese. It wasn't until a couple of years ago did I pick up an appreciation for wine and even then it was only white wine. Well I was lucky because this particular winery specialized in white wine. I tasted 4 delicious white wines and a very sweet and yummy ice wine. We then headed back to the hotel had a few drinks and chatted amongst ourselves before heading to bed. I decided to have a shower before bed because we were leaving pretty early for Munich in the morning and I thought a nice hot shower would relax me before I slept. Well when 45 other people beat you to that idea in an old hotel with a pretty small water heater, you can expect to have the coldest shower of your life. I was so chilly that night that I didn't sleep that well and I think I slept most of the way to Munich.

Our tour manager was really good at giving us a ton of the information for the next place we were stopping on the tour. And I really wanted to know about the places I didn't know much about like, Austria and Germany. The problem was I think I was trained when I was a baby to pass out in a warm smooth moving vehicle. So in Munich, when the group split up into people going to shop for lederhosens and dirdnls and those going for the walking tour, I chose the walking tour. Plus, my body is not exactly dirdnl-ready.

The guy who took us on the walking tour was from New York City and the most hilarious guide I have ever met in my life. He made the already interesting history of Munich even more amusing by adding his own take on it, peppered with some colourful language. I was amazed by the detail in the architecture and the vanity of its leaders to create such extravagant shrines to themselves. I knew that the Romans were famous for this but the German leaders were just as opulent. And then there was the brainwashing of a nation by Hitler followed by the tragedy of the Holocaust.

I was not sure what to expect of the German people because of this history and because of their reputation for being a very stern people. But in the hotels and shops we had visited in Germany everyone seemed to be incredibly friendly and even more so that night at the Beer hall. Maybe it was because half of the tour was dressed up in Bavarian gear but the tourist and locals in the beer hall were amazingly sweet to all of us. The girls and guys in costume were getting the most attention in the beer hall but even me in my sweater and jeans and felt drinking hat I had bought in the middle of this drunken night, got my cheeks rubbed by a smiling German man in green lederhosens (see picture). The band was great, the beers were HUGE, and the crowd was jovial and tipsy. I would so go back for Oktoberfest! After only two large beers I decided not to go clubbing with the crazy Aussies and drunkenly head back to the coach and back to the hotel. I was too hyper drunk to go to bed, so I sat in the bar and decided it was a good idea to add 4 cocktails to the 2 liters of beer I had just drank. The funny conversations I had that night made it a good idea but waking up the next morning and getting on the coach the next day, made it a bad idea.

Okay after all that fluffiness, history and drunkenness you may be asking yourself where was the monumental life changing moment. It came the next grey, rainy, hung-over day after I dragged myself through the BMW museum and drove out of Munich.

That was when we ended up in Dachau. We were visiting an old concentration camp. I had learned about the Holocaust in school and more at Ann Frank House and yesterday during our walking tour. It was all just horrific historical story to me until we walked through those gates at Dachau. I can't explain the feeling I got to you as I stood on the same pebbles hundreds of thousands of prisoners of war walked through. My heart tightened and I felt cold and I knew this place was the end of way too many and caused suffering for way too many more. As I walked through the barracks and saw their openly exposed toilets lined in a row, I broke down. These poor people were tortured and killed because of someone with so much hate in him fueled a whole nation to stand behind him as he slaughtered millions of people. And as I saw the extermination chambers I realized this was all the consequence of hate. I began to think about the impact hate had had in my life over the 3 years.

At first after everything went down in Vegas I was filled with grief. I just cried and cried and when the tears ran out all that grief hardened into hate. I hate them for what they did to me, I hated my friends for trying to stay in middle of us rather than just choosing my side, and I hated myself for being so vulnerable to what I had let happen to me. Every day I seethed and wanted to see Karma come and bitch slap them. I lived to see that happen and when instead I kept hearing how they were moving in together and then getting married, my hatred spread to God, Karma, the Universe or whomever else was in charge up there. My hate was all consuming and sometimes even today when I think about it bubbles up.

But as hate had its consequence on millions of people who died in the holocaust, on a smaller scale hate had its consequences in my life too. I locked myself into my own little world, skeptical of people, disgusted with myself, and I lost any light there had been in my life. And now that I am trying emerge from all that darkness I know that I have to forgive so many people and myself. I am not saying I want to be friends with any of the people I removed from my life 3 years ago but I do want to let go for my hate for them.

Forgive is an Aramaic word that literally means to untie. I want to untie myself from my hate for my friends who I thought betrayed me, for myself being so vulnerable to getting hurt, and for the people who broke my heart to pieces. It is easier for me to forgive and untie myself from my hate for my old friends because hindsight has made me realize how irrational I was about making them chose a side and in fact it is their forgiveness I should be seeking. Fighting to get my life back I think is a sign that I beginning to forgive myself and I am really beginning to see that I am wiser because of all that has happen. The only people I am finding it hard to forgive to this day are the two people who I have thought all along deserved my hate more than anyone I had ever known.

But my hate has no impact on their life or what Karma shall come upon them for any sins they may have committed against me. The hate impacts only me by keeping them apart of my life now and I don't want that anymore. So how do you forgive someone who has hurt you as badly as they hurt me? Do you remember that at one point in your life you genuinely loved them both and you wanted them to be happy? I don’t know, that doesn't seem to bring me any peace or sense of forgiveness. But visiting Dachau and realizing how tragic hate can be, made me committed to find away to learn how to forgive them and untie myself from the hate I carry with me. I am not sure if I am all the way there yet with the whole forgiveness thing but now I am at least on my way... forward.

Thank you Germany, for giving me another piece of the puzzle for Andrea 2.0.