After eighteen and a half years in the public education system, I am officially (for now!) done. I can finally call myself a college graduate. It's a weird feeling to be done with something so intertwined with who you are. After I completed my last final I went about business on campus as usual--taking a nap in a beam of sunlight on the only couch in the quiet and warm Cape Cod Lounge at UMass, and after, making a list of things to do. The list was strangely short. Make homemade Christmas gifts, do yoga, practice the ukelele, read books, explore x, y, and z. Now, I know that this is not reality. Generally, you have to work to make money to pay off loans and bills and support yourself. But, for the next 5 months, it weirdly is mine. For the first time in my life, I don't have any job commitments or any schoolwork commitments. My only long term commitments right now lie in the destinations of plane tickets and bookmarked pages of Travel South America on a Budget. This cannot be real life.
So since I have "nothing" (everything) to do for the next, oh, month or so as I await my plane rides, I'm going to write it down here. Because why not.
What I have planned (telling you will help me to actually do what I say I'm going to do):
1. Do yoga every day, either in a class or on my own.
2. Commit myself to spending 10 breaths in my favorite yoga pose that day.
3. Explore different yoga props. Currently, I have added a big bouncy yellow ball, two spongy blocks, and a hula hoop to my practice. Also socks for dancing around on my hardwood floor.
4. Make homemade Christmas presents for my friends and family. I can't tell you what they are yet.
5. Explore places around the valley. Some destinations include Mass Moca, Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health, Katalyst Kombucha & People's Pint, different yoga studios, Peace Pagoda in Leverett and towards Albany, and whatever else comes up.
6. Make bread. I've never done this before. Also: soups, banana bread, cookies, bean burgers, etc.
7. Finish leather journals.
8. Knit. Find more patience with it.
9. Read a lot. Books on the lineup include: The Science of Yoga by William Broad, Galapagos by Kurt Vonnegut, and Ishmael by Daniel Quinn.
10. Play the ukelele. At least once a day.
11. Walk around Northampton and meet people. Make eye contact and smile at them.
12. Write letters to people I love. Tell them I love them and why.
13. Try to blog everyday, even if it's just a teenie weenie little thought bubble.
So yeah. That's what I've got planned. Join me if you're interested, and don't if you're not :-)
What's on tap for today:
Favorite breakfast. Eggs, refried beans, onions, and salsa on a tortilla. yum.
Yoga time. Included: hula hooping to this throwback, laying in a supported backbend on a big yellow bouncy ball for a while, and lighting some incense.
Cookie party!
Crockpot soup--lentil & sweet potaters yum.
Dying hair with henna
a jam for your earbuds:
until next time, amigo.
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Goodness Mel, what a breath of fresh air. I've been so immersed in sadness from all that has happened in Connecticut, it feels so good to add a reminder of joy and love to this mixed up emotional swirl. I'm so happy for you, enjoy your newest phase of living well :)
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