On the Road to Find Out

I have always looked young, felt young, sounded young.  I have always been mistaken on the phone for a child, been taken less seriously in work settings, been carded and looked at with squinty eyes at bars.  I have a happy and youthful air.  It happened before I was aware of it… I was dubbed ‘perky Perkins’ in middle school, ‘squeaky E’ ever after… I often prompt the word ‘aww’ and get that face, that ‘she’s so cute!’ face.  I have loved it, I have been frustrated by it..

photo copy 4I hit the ground running pretty hard when I moved to the city.  I knew I had a little voice, and quickly got going with a voiceover demo and auditions and work… I found my avenue pretty early on, and have channeled my inner 12-19 year old to the point where I convince myself onstage that that is who I am.  I forget I am anything else.  I become that vulnerable… and I like it very much.  It releases something inside of me that I tend to suppress in my everyday.  It lets me go to that place where fairies could very well be walking on my pillow.

I read a fictional something somewhere where they wrote about age in heaven.  It was about how people in the afterlife aren’t specific ages, but instead are their whole lifes self.  They are simultaneously 2 and 62.  It talked about what a parent goes through with their child…How a parent, in this life, mourns their infant once they grow.  They mourn their little one’s 5 year old self when they turn 10.  It happens in friendships and relationships, too. Time gone by. But this story gave hope.  It said that in heaven, when you re-meet your long lost friend, you will meet all of the parts of them that you loved so much here on earth!  All ages!  All essences!

I am going through a huge life change right now.  I got the acting job I have been working towards my entire adult life, (I got to spend a week working on an incredible play by Bekah Brunstetter at the Eugene O’Neill Theater Center.  What else could I want?  What else could I need? To work like that all of the time, of course!  But still…)  Things are actually coming to fruition in my career, slowly.   I am getting in shows and recording voiceover work, I booked my first commercial.  I am coming to understand that dreams come true, and what an amazing idea that is.

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a particularly beautiful and reflective moment at the O’Neill.

And I am leaving the restaurant industry!   After about a 7 year stint.  7 years!  I was a child when I started!  I am a woman now!  I feel deeply sad to leave my friends there… working day in and day out with artists and thinkers and true friends.  it is a difficult thing to give up.   I am leaving the most beautiful people… tears in my eyes.

I am going to move home to Virginia for one month to take care of my grandmother.  She is 93 (Born in 1920! Can you believe!?).   It is a big thing for me.  To take that career risk… (leaving the city for a month… you lose so many jobs, and you worry and worry that those opportunities will never come again! What if I miss IT!?). She fell and broke her pelvis and needs in home care.  I am going to spend some time with her, get to know her, learn from her, serve her, and save up some money and move onward and upward, out of the service industry and into something else to pay the rent, something unknown!  I will hopefully be helping her as well… help her and my mother figure out their next step.   Three generations of women, all together! I think it will be quiet, hard,  wonderful and epic.

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My grandmother and me at my brothers wedding.

My mom told me once that she didn’t feel that she had aged inside.  She said she felt the same way she did when she was 16… of course she gained wisdom and confidence, but that she still felt young.  Nanny says she still feels young.  She looks in the mirror and doesn’t recognize herself.  She is going through a big life change, too.  And it is as life-altering at 93 as it is at 22!

So I guess I match.  I feel young.  I feel afraid! I feel vulnerable! Change!  Decisions!  Adulthood! Choices!  Pain!  Joy! I am inspired, excited, moved and motivated.  I feel that the world is in front of me.  That there is so much left to uncover.  A whole life to live.

“Can the child within my heart rise above?”

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Easy Orchid Care

Can you see the orchid there behind us on our wedding day?  They are so romantic!

Can you see the orchid there behind us on our wedding day? They are so romantic!

Since I started dating my husband four years ago, his ideas about life and love have definitely rubbed off on me.  he loves to recycle, repurpose, and reuse!  For example, we don’t have paper napkins and rarely use paper towels… we use grocery bags as trash bags, and compost our fruits and vegetables. (There is a compost pick up every Sunday here on the UWS!) When we were planning our wedding, he really hated the idea of lots of cut flowers being thrown away at the end of the night.  We decided to have potted orchids at each table, and to keep some, and give the rest away to family and friends!  It worked out beautifully!  Ever since I have been obsessed with my six potted orchids!  I think I have watched every video available on youtube, spoken to every green-thumbed friend I have, and read every blog to find out how to keep these beautiful creatures alive!  I found out a few truly useful tips, and would highly recommend that everyone get one of these beautiful blooms!

  1. Make sure your orchid is potted in moss or bark, or some sort of pre-mixed orchid ‘soil.’  They are used to growing in trees, so their roots want to breathe!  Also, get some fertilizer for them!  20-20-20!
  2. The easiest way to kill an orchid is to over water her.  Water once a week.  The best way is to have your orchid in a pot with holes in the bottom, and to let the water run through.  Don’t let water sit at the bottom!
  3. They like indirect sunlight.  They don’t want to be on a sunny sill, or in a room with no window!  Luckily I have a sill that gets indirect sunlight… hopefully you do too!
  4. If you are comfortable, they are too.  Orchids don’t like to be too hot or cold!  Usually room temperature is best.  Try to keep away from heaters during the winter!
  5. If you’re going to re-pot her, try to only do so after she has flowered!  Also, never re-use old moss.  You also don’t need to ‘pot up.’ You should find a pot that is just big enough for your roots to fit in!  They also love to stick out and soak up the moisture in the air.
  6. If your orchid has flowered  and no longer has any blooms, look on its stem.  Are there any parts that stick out?  If so, you can cut just one inch above the sprout.  That way the orchid will focus on growing and flowering again! If you don’t have any sprouts, you can cut all the way at the bottom of your stem, and wait until she grows back.  Don’t throw away your orchid just because she has stopped blooming!  Her leaves are pretty, too!
  7. ENJOY! I truly have!
the same orchid today!

the same orchid today!