Saturday, December 18, 2010

Once Upon a December

I am blessed beyond belief.

I have the habit of complaining a lot on the internet (call it a side-effect of being part of such an unbearably self-centered generation), so I thought now would be a great time to talk about how blessed I am. So blessed.

So here's a list of 10 things, in no particular order, with which I am blessed.


* Music.
* AU Singers.Basically the world's greatest combination of music and awesome.

* Best Friends.
Andie. Kaley. Kasey. What would my life be without y'all? I don't want to know. :)

* Auburn.
Especially Auburn football... especially National Championships (please please let us win)
while I'm making random requests, can I also marry Cam Newton? Oh, and thanks for the float competition win. ;)

* WEGP.
Yeah, we're cool. haha.

* My parents.
* Books.

*My habit of meeting celebrities... (Okay, mostly I stalk them. Same diff)
David Henrie and I are besties.

Brian McKnight is awesome in real life.

Corbin Bleu and I are in love.

Gavin Creel. Seriously one of the most incredible performers ever. and I love his t-shirt.

The DJ had us fallin in love again.

* Coffee.

* Christmas movies.
(without which I surely would not make it through the break)

And of course (this makes 11, sorry) the people who read my blog (all four of them!)

:)

Happy Christmas everyone! Remember our many blessings!


With love,
Shelli

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Hero

People I want to be more like:

* Majora Carter

* George Watsky

* Marian Wright Edelman

I think I'm starting something soon. But I'm not ready to talk about it yet. If you have a chance, you should check out those three people though. They don't really do similar things, but the point is they all do something. :)

With love,
Shelli

Friday, November 5, 2010

Send in the Clowns

I'm angry.

I'm angry and disappointed and frustrated and irritated beyond belief.

In the past two weeks I have been utterly disillusioned about kindness, responsibility, respect, and integrity left in the world. Particularly in America. Particularly in my corner of America.

I'm usually not one to think that things were "better" in the past. Generally I think that there is always change and that every generation has good things and bad things. But in the past few weeks I have been forced to admit that there are a lot of things now that used to be "better."


I wish people would respect others opinions.

I wish people would take responsibility for their actions.

I wish people would not hide behind anonymity to be rude and hurtful.

I wish people would be aware that things typed or texted exist in people's minds long after they are read.

I wish people would let things be simple.

I wish people would read. I wish they would educate themselves. I wish they cared. About anything.

I wish people loved.


With love,
S

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Spark of Creation

I've got an itching on the tips of my fingers. I've got a boiling in the back of my brain. I've got a hunger burning inside me, cannot be denied. I've got a feeling that the Father who made us, when He was kindling the pulse in my veins, He left a tiny spark of that fire smoldering inside... The spark of creation burning bright within me. The spark of creation is blazing in my blood. A bit of the fire that lit up the stars and breathed life into the flood; the first inspiration. The spark of creation.

I see a mountain and I want to climb it. I see a river and I want to leave shore. Where there was nothing, let there be something, something made by me. There's things waiting for me to invent them; there's worlds waiting for me to explore. I am an echo of the eternal cry of let there be! The spark of creation flickering within me. The spark of creation won't let me rest at all until I discover or build or uncover a thing that I can call my celebration of the spark of creation.

The spark of creation - may it burn forever! The spark of creation. I am a keeper of the flame. We think all we want is a lifetime of leisure, each perfect day the same... endless vacation. Well, that's alright if you're a kind of crustacean, but when you're born with an imagination sooner or later you're feeling the fire get hotter and hotter.

The spark of creation.


I have never known a song that I could relate to so strongly. "What are you doing next year?" "I suppose I'll go to law school." And I suppose I will. But what I want is to create and to change and to explore and to discover and to make a difference, key word make. I think what I'm discovering is that to be a pawn in someone elses plan other than the Lord's is never going to be enough for me. There's a fire in me that I recognize from my father to be the one that makes the changes other people talk about. I need that. I want that. I think I'm called to that.

So where am I going now? I honestly have no idea. I've been praying about it, as I've said in past posts, but now that I am "done" with my law school applications, I plan to spend a lot of time looking into service opportunities for next summer, next year, the next few years. Funnily enough, I've had a ton of people say things to me like, "I see you in the Peace Corps" or "Have you looked into the Children's Defense Fund?" I think it's time for me to look more into those things. I have complete faith that God will lead me to the right thing. I know I've talked of nothing but going to New York and working in New York for years... and I still want that. But I want to do His will, and I'll get there. Eventually.


That's where I am. Nothing too exciting to report yet. I imagine those days are coming though. Otherwise, senior year has been a dream. I have the best friends and the best family (and the best football team ;)) and just the best life ever. Which makes me that much more determined to work to give other students the same opportunities that I've had. What is the purpose of being blessed if we never give anything from those blessings?


With love
<3

Saturday, August 21, 2010

7 Things

I blog on Saturday nights a lot. I should probably work on having cooler things to do on the weekends. Oh well.

I haven't made a list in a while, so I thought I might do one tonight. :-)

I started my senior year last week. My senior year. My last year. No more undergraduate institution after this year. What? It's completely shocking and fun and terrifying and exciting and stressful all at once. I've bled orange and blue for the past three years and will for the rest of my life... but after this year it will never be the same.

But I'm trying not to think about all of that. I'm not dwelling on the never ending what am I going to do with my life scenario and I'm trying not to focus on all of the lasts that are approaching. Instead I am thinking about my classes, and my social life and, of course, boys.

I'm not a Miley Cyrus fan, but I'm not a hater either. I did always really like her cute little song 7 Things though, and I've had just the slightest bit of boy drama in my life lately. No details, but I think her list is pretty accurate right now. The grammar in the list is terrible though.

  • You're vain
  • Your games
  • You're insecure
  • You love me, you like her
  • You make me laugh, you make me cry (this is actually 2 different things Miley)
  • Your friends are jerks
  • You make me love you
Love might be a bit strong. The rest is a bit legit. Is it ridiculous that I relate my relationships to songs written about / for / by 15-year-olds? Absolutely. But it could be worse... it could be The Bachelor. ;-)

Otherwise, about my life. Taking some freaking awesome classes this semester that are going to kick my butt. Lots of reading and writing in my future. But, hey, no big deal. Its cool. It's also going to be a semester of impromptu day trips, dinner parties, coffee dates, lunch dates, and Maisonette parties.

Oh and football. Lots of football. :-)


With love,
Shelli

Friday, August 6, 2010

Never Enough

Today I read an unbelievably insightful and honest speech given by a high school graduating senior. It was a brave statement, especially since he must have known that the speech would be publicized and that he (his person and his thoughts) would be subject to the ridicule, hatred, and general lack of respect that is commonplace in America today, particularly in an age where we can all hide behind user names and profile pictures. But if Justin intended on making the people who encounter his speech think long and hard about the state of the American educational system, he succeeded. After I read it I want to cry thinking about how dreadful the school systems are and how impossible it seems to fix them.

I wish there was something I could do. Well, I know that there must be something I can do and I'm praying about it and trying to figure out what that something can be. I've been drawn to law school because it seems true that working with the American legal system is the best and most effective way to evoke any kind of change. Eventually I want to work in education reform, but I have no idea how I'm going to get there.

The thing is... I'm no better than any of the other black girls out there. I won the genetic lottery and ended up with parents who understood how important it was for me to be educated and were willing to sacrifice for me. But I could have easily been born to a single parent household with a mother than simply didn't have time to invest in my education because she had to work two jobs. And if I were as "smart" as I was as a kid, but got dealt a bad hand, I might not be graduating this year. I might not be in school. I might be completely and totally lost in a way that those of us working on college degrees with goals and dreams and future plans do not understand. And it breaks my heart that another girl who was in the same kindergarten class that I was in might be floudering and stuggling in a world where life can be so so hard... just because her mom didn't read to her before she went to bed, so she couldn't read in 1st grade and wasn't put in RTC and was forever labeled and stigmitized as dumb.

Because we all know its the teachers that decide who is smart and who is not. I don't mean for people who have like crazy awesome IQ's or the handful of kids who honestly suffer from some kind of disorder that makes school difficult for them. I mean the rest of us. I'm pretty average. Possibly slightly above, but mostly average. But once a teacher choose the smart kids and the not-smart kids, that sticks with you for life. Partly because of self-fulfilling prophesies, and partly because the teachers will give you more attention, more help, and better feedback if you show more "potential." I hate when people say "potential" as though some people have it and some people don't. By definition, do we not all have potential?

Okay, I'm rambling now. I was just feeling so... touched by that speech and by my own mind and imagination that I needed to write about it. I'm really excited for God to show me what I can do to help the education situation.

With love,
Shelli

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Faithfully

Last week I worked at my Maywood Christian Camp as a counselor. I got the 10 year old girls cabin, which was a huge jump from the 8 year olds I've gotten every other year) and they were absolutely wonderful. It was an incredible week, with I think 22 souls baptized into the church and numerous others that rededicated themselves to the Lord.

But I also had quite an awakening last week. I realized two really important things, and I felt compelled to write about them here.

Over the past year I have been compromising myself and everything I believe in because it is so important to me to be liked. By everyone. Even people I don't particularly care for and who I know have habits I disapprove of. Two years ago I would have never thought that I would push aside my love for God, my belief in His word and desire to fulfill his commands, and even parts of my own personality to compete in a non-existent popularity contest. To everyone who has witnessed this over the past year or so... I'm sorry. I'm working on staying true to myself and to my God, and part of the reason I'm writing this is to hold myself accountable for that. It makes me so miserable that I let one this weakness of mine take such control over my life. But my priorities are back on track, and you can expect quite a few differences in me now.

Second, I realized how much I've been trying to control my own life. Constantly stressing over law schools and graduate schools and what's going to happen over the next two years and whether I'm going to be single forever, and... you get it. I've been trying to do everything on my own, and I need to stop that. I need to let God help me and I need to let the people around me help me. I'm afraid this point will take me a little longer to deal with, but I'm praying about it and making a point to not spend more than an hour a day on anything related to law school or applications or anything like that. Being a control freak is not at all productive and not how God wanted His children to be.

So, yeah. Those are my recent awakenings. I'm also making time for fun things like reading and writing and stuff. That's been great. Loving Water for Elephants, which I started yesterday, and HATED Catcher in the Rye. I know that's a disgrace to every writer in the world. Saw Inception - it was incredible. Absolutely Incredible. And I have fun plans throughout the week.

I guess I'm really learning how to live by my motto: Live to serve, serve to live. I just forgot who I was serving. Now I just need to let Him show me how I can help the people around me too. That's too much for me, but not for Him.


With love,

Shelli

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

She Cries

Lesson of the day: Don't steal sheet music. It really is cheap-ish to just buy the piece you want and download it off the internet (ps: my personal favorite "new" composers are Ryan Scott Oliver and Kerrigan and Lowdermilk. If you were wondering...)

And don't argue with Jason Robert Brown. Or you might get humiliated. Ouch.

http://www.jasonrobertbrown.com/weblog/2010/06/fighting_with_teenagers_a_copy.php

Monday, June 28, 2010

Summer Skin

Summertime and the living is easy...

A little too easy.

I hate to admit it, because I'm sure I complain more than anyone else in the world about being
"too busy" but... I'm bored. It's week 6 of the summer I chose (i.e., staying in Auburn and continuing my internship instead of working in Memphis). Today I have

Worked from 9 - 3.

Went to a meeting with the Layman Group and visited two businesses to ask for their support.

Read 15 pages of Catcher in the Rye (yes it's my first time, yes I'm 21, no I didn't have to read it in high school, get off my case. haha)

Took an hour nap.

Watched an episode of Gilmore Girls (season 5, hands down the best season).

Sent about 7 emails (outside of work emails).

Chatted with my fab roommate for about 30 minutes.

And now it's 9 o'clock. and I'm out of things to do. Well, that's not exactly true. There are tons of things I could do. I could read a psych article in preparation for working on my thesis tomorrow. I could work on the Singers alumni database. I could work on graduate school admissions information. I could write (not blogging style, but real style). But... eh. I'm just not motivated to do any of the above.

It's curious, how one can feel like she needs to do something, but not want to do any of the things that are available to do. Blame it on the culture of busy, one that breeds anxiety and hurried actions. I'm part of an unfortunate generation that feels like we need to go go go every second, but only when something needs to immediately be fulfilled. Perplexing.

What do people do when they have nothing to do? I mean, I have hobbies, I read and write and make baskets out of magazine paper. I blog. I crochet. But once I've done all of these things as much as I can possibly do them... then what?

Sadly I don't have an answer yet. I'll work on that. Meanwhile, I'll try to have something more entertaining to write about next time. :-)


With love,
S

Monday, June 21, 2010

The Long and Winding Road

In the past two weeks I have thought about myself more than I have in my entire life. Not because I'm generally super humble - I'm actually fairly self-centered, at least as much so as every other 21 year old female. No, because I have been working A TON on law school applications.

That's right ladies and gentlemen, it is that time again. I started my law school notebook last week and have been working on resumes, curriculum vitas, personal statements, supplementary personal statements, and more non-stop over the past week. Call it a coping mechanism (as in I'm drowning myself in the aspects of my law school applications I can control, since I can't do anything about my LSAT score now). Call it an obsession (you'd probably be right). Call it a waste of time... but nevertheless it's been my every day for the past 12 days.


Upside, I really like the first paragraph of my personal statement and the format of my resume.

Downside, I'm already tired of applications. And I haven't actually filled any out. Yes, it's partially my fault because once I start doing something (except possibly blogging) I do it obsessively. But still. The application process sucks.

Dear NYU, Will you just let me in? I promise I'm smart, smarter than my GPA makes me seem. And I'm a hard worker and I'm organized and... oh, let's face it. I'm exactly like every other applicant. Great.


Sooo here are my top 5 things that every future law student THINKS is his or her strength:

  • "I really want to help people." Because it sounds bad to say 'I really just want to be able to make money someday, but also to prove to people that I'm smart enough to get a post-graduate degree.
  • "I'm highly competitive, but also personable." Sure, say that to the guy whose self-esteem you slowly broke down each day in gym class by staring at him as he ran around the gym. No one ever knew why he dropped out of the races for class president, mu alpha theta historian, and LAX captain. But you do. Write about that in your personal statement.
  • "I add diversity to the campus." Sorry people, there are only about 4 things that truly add diversity. And unless you immigrated from a land where only 6 people spoke English, saved an entire school building worth of seven year olds from the fire that your local government set to eliminate all education, AND went to Princeton, Harvard, Yale, and / or Stanford... no one cares where you volunteered or what kind of neighborhood you grew up in. And absolutely none of that counts if you're white. Or Asian.
  • Academic Achievement. Okay. That's probably fair. Rock that 4.0 and 175... you're golden.

As for the rest of us... let's just pray for that 14 point curve and / or really low application rates. Here's hoping.

With love,
S

Monday, June 7, 2010

Summer in the City

Today I took the LSAT. It was hard, but perhaps not as hard as I thought it would be. I'm trying not to think about it, because I don't want to convince myself that I did really well and then get like a 152 in three weeks. So I'm going to try to distract myself until I get scores back.

Of course, that's way easier said then done. Everyone who knows me knows I thrive on being busy. And though I have my internship where I work about 5 / 6 hours a day (at a cubicle no less... crazy) and a few good friends hanging out in my college town for the summer too, I knew I would have a hard time filling in the extra time without classes or LSAT-studying.

But God must have known that I would feel that way, because he put the Layman Group into my life. The Layman Group is an organization that exists simply to spread the fine arts. I was impressed by their website and I loved their vision, so I sent the contact person my resume and said that I would like to get involved. In a whirlwind I met with their director, who was a really incredible and dedicated artistic presence, and he basically offered me the opportunity to help. I'll be working with fund-raising / development (naturally) and I'm unbelievably excited about having an opportunity to really use what I've learned working in development for the past 9 months to help a cause that I'm passionate about. The Layman Group is right on in their deduction that in our area the arts are thought of as unattainable and unnecessary. But as I tell my dear engineering friends, no one recites math equations to themselves in the showers. They don't make museums for theorems and you don't cry at the end of a live performance of a thesis.

Art is what we live and breathe for, and our area isn't immune to that. And I'm psyched about helping start a movement to show people how important the arts are to our lives. If nothing else, it's one of the few things that crosses all boarders; there are no cultures, no people, no souls that have no expression of art. So let's make it available here too.

I love New York. And I want to move there next year. But I hate the truth that to experience great art (as in theatre, visual art, music, etc.), you pretty much have to be in New York or a comparable metropolitan area. Or, worse, that the art in our communities is more or less ignored. I would love for middle-school students near my college town to be as culturally educated as students in Manhattan. It's possible. :-)


So, yeah. There's my soap box for the summer. Oh, and I'll probably work on my Honors thesis a little bit. Maybe. ;-)

With love,
Shelli

Friday, April 16, 2010

My Conviction

Wrote this for my Personal Essay class, and I kind of like it. Since it reads like a blog post (though no lists, sorry!) and I haven't updated this in SOO long, I thought I'd post it. :-)



I was born in 1989 and consequently never had the opportunity to see Galt McDermott’s cultural phenomenon Hair in its original controversial glory. I had heard ‘Aquarius’ a few times from our local radio station (edited for questionable content, per the tradition in Alabama) and seen snippets of the movie on television (again, edited for content), so I figured I got the gist: hippies and free love and drug trips and peace signs.

I was born in 1989, so I’m a child of the 90’s and early 2000’s. That could mean a lot of things, but I would argue that being a new millennium kid means that you really have nothing of your own. All of the trends have already happened, all the ideas have been thought of, and you’re destined to read books about better times and try to reenact them all the days of your life. It kind of sucks. Still, if as a Y2K child I had to look back in time and choose a decade that I wanted to reenact, the sixties would always be my first choice. I was pegged in high school as the rebel with a thousand causes, from arts in public schools to hunger in America to psychological health care. For me, the sixties were about passion and dedication and standing up for what you believed in. I would trade that a million times for my peers who cared about nothing and were content to recreate fashion statements of earlier times. My discontent with and disapproval of my generation compared to the hippies of the sixties left me ready and willing to embrace Hair when I discovered the musical.

I saw the revival of Hair in Manhattan’s Hirschfield Theatre the summer of 2009 only weeks after the cast won the Tony Award for Best New Revival. But I had already fallen in love with the musical when I first encountered it a few weeks prior to seeing the show. One Friday morning I had woken up before the sun and hailed a taxi up to Central Park to see the cast perform on the television program “Good Morning America.” Armed with my new camera and limited knowledge about the musical, I joined throngs of other twenty-something’s in line. I was there for about 15 minutes before I noticed something unusual: everyone surrounding me was dressed like they were in the musical. There were hemp bracelets and long hair and bell bottom pants everywhere. I thought that seemed a little strange, but then I started listening to the people around me. “Yeah, I saw it for the fourth time last week.” “Gavin didn’t perform last night, I heard he was sick.” “I hope they perform ‘Don’t Put It Down.’ It’s my favorite song.” I realized exactly how in to the musical the group was, and I’ll admit, I felt a little left out of the excitement. Once inside the gates, we waited for at least 2 more hours, and the longer we waited, the more I realized how passionate the anxious crowd was about Hair. There were signs that said “peace now, freedom now, equality now” and “make love, not war.” People were throwing flowers across the crowd. From a distance it would be difficult to distinguish us from real-life protestors; in Alabama we would have been subjected to many-a disapproving glare.

The band began to set up around 7:00. The sun was lazily drifting up behind the stage, and the cameramen were rubbing bleary eyes and smoking cigarettes (interestingly enough, there didn’t seem to be any illegal substances in the crowd, but I may have been unaware due to my general naiveté). The band warmed up, playing notes that sounded like chaos, but I associated with the beginnings of ballets, operas, and selected Bugs Bunny cartoons. And then they played the opening notes to “Aquarius,” arguably the most famous song in the musical.

When the moon is in the seventh house / and Jupiter aligns with Mars / then peace will guide the planet / and love will steer the stars! / This is the dawning of the Age of Aquarius, the Age of Aquarius!

The voices around me mingled and swelled as the faux-hippies belted out the lyrics. They weren’t just singing tunelessly. There were harmonies and melodies and the long haired boys beside me sang the male parts while the earnest-looking girls sang the female lines. I was absolutely blown away. It was a completely normal thing for me and my musical theatre buddies to suddenly break out into Broadway show tunes; it seemed like a dream when the entire amphitheatre began to sing along fervently.

The young cast of twenty-five virtually unknown performers came on to the stage at the end of the song and sang along with the crowd. They then performed the opener, and the title song, ‘Hair.’ And I got it. For about 15 minutes, I felt suspended into a world that I had never encountered before. The people on the stage weren’t just newly discovered actors wearing costumes and playing pretend. To me they were real people singing about their pain and love and beliefs and fears. Yes, part of it was Central Park and the added authenticity of performing out of a theatre. And part of it was the fervor of the people around me and their leather headbands and flower pins. But that spring morning, when it started to rain and the green-eyed soprano started leading us in a chant of “hell no, we won’t go!” it could have been 1967. I could have been an anti-Vietnam protestor. I could have burned my true love’s draft card and run away with him to Canada. I could have been the true story of any number of characters from movies and literature.

I saw Hair on June 30th, 2009. I like to say it changed my life, and it sort of did. It gave me a greater understanding of some of the issues with the Vietnam War (somehow none of my history teachers ever quite got around to teaching that). It inspired me to be a bit more active with regard to the hot topics of today, like recycling and global warming and marriage equality. And it definitely changed my wardrobe: I now own more peace signs, hemp necklaces, flowered tunics, and crocheted tops than the most nostalgic flower child. My friends explain my eccentric wardrobe choices (I use eccentric loosely, because in Alabama anything beyond blue jeans and a t-shirt is considered outlandish) by saying “she’s a hippie.” Which I love.

I didn’t know very much about hippies, so once I decided I might like to be one, I started doing my homework. I delved into Jack Kerouac books and the more obscure Beatles songs. What struck me the most was the love that hippies exhibited. I don’t think we (meaning me and my peers) really know how to love. I mean, we know how to love our Michael Kors purses and movie stars and Lost. We don’t know how to love each other. Hippies loved each other and they loved their country and they loved life. My favorite line from Hair is “I believe that now is the time for all good men to believe in love; I believe!” But we don’t. I don’t. Fifty percent divorce rates and a solid division in the county over party lines and constant reminders through the news and social media make it difficult to believe in love. The love we believe in is the love of fairy tales, and when we discover that love is virtually unattainable, we refuse to fight for love. After years of trying to use our heads to guard our hearts, it’s difficult to love in an innocent and earnest way. It may be impossible to love like the hippies.

Despite what my yuppie parents try to lead me to believe, hippies were far from useless rebels and they weren’t looking for excuses to be lazy. They were passionate in the most sincere way; they expected nothing in return from their fellow man except for love. They were often disappointed. The hippies of the sixties loved America, and loved mankind unceasingly. I’m not sure my generation is capable of that. We expect a return, tax, emotional, or otherwise, and we consider gifts from your wallet the one’s worth giving. It’s sad. And I may wear flowers in my hair and flash peace signs when I cross the street, but I am every bit as victim to those flaws as my peers. I’m perfectly willing to get on my soapbox and rant about the sad state of education in America right now, or the incredible amount of people who go hungry every day in a country that proclaims to be the greatest country in the world. But those are just words. I’m not staging a sit in or marching on the capital or doing much of anything outside of giving fifteen dollars twice a year to a cause. I’m just as bad as the generation that I complain so much about because, at the end of the day, I’m not doing anything to help mankind either.

It took my seeing Hair to realize that I really was searching for something that money and success and even philanthropic work cannot give me. I’m terrified that if what I’m looking for is passion and love, I may never find that. Not among my peers. Not in 2010. The lead character in Hair, Claude, closes the first act with the poignant words, “Where do I go / follow my heartbeat? / Where do I go / follow my hand? / Where will they lead me / and will I ever / discover why I live and die?” I couldn’t get those words out of my head for weeks. Because I couldn’t answer those questions. And I was sure that the people around me, despite their plans and their goals and their accomplishments, could truly answer either. We’ve lost a lot in fifty years. We don’t even ask those questions anymore. It’s devastating.

I’m not actually a hippie. I’m a pseudo-hippie at best. I can walk the walk, and talk the talk, and vote democrat, and use reusable grocery bags. But in reality, I understand that I’m playing the role of a hippie, not actually being one. I’m passionate about some things, but I rarely act on them. I am virtually incapable of the self-less attitude of the hippies. I’m blinded by my desire for success. I am crippled by my inability to love. I’ll never be a hippie. I try. And I mostly fail. I hope in time, maybe when I have kids, and a fresh group of actors are performing in the third revival of Hair, they’ll be able to truly believe in, and to have, love.



With love,
<3