Wednesday, February 12, 2014

The Price of Contentment

I have dreamed at least a dozen dreams since the newest year began.

I have made plans and lists and schedules, ready to try new things, learn new things, start a new path.

I do this every year, every month, every week almost. I come home from work to declare to my mom or a sister or Tom exactly what it is I am going to do next.

I plan trips, parties, dates, projects, business ventures.

And I almost never do any of them.

But I no longer care.

I am no longer embarrassed by my flightiness, by my excitement, by my temporary obsession that just leads to a search history and entertainment for my commute.

I am not a perfectionist. I am almost always happy with good enough. And I mean it-- I'm happy. My hair and house are always in a mild state of dishevel. I have never owned a pair of jeans that fit. My car is full of coffee cups and discarded toys. I don't know how to use my camera. I have at least six half finished projects patiently waiting for me to make them whole.

I have no anxiety driving me. I don't need to be much of anything to be content. My contentment has led to mediocrity. I live a conventional life.

My best friend Joanna lives in New York. Everyone is a slash. She works with clowns, composers, aerialists, and novelists, who all make their money in a perfect little restaurant void of pretense. Everyone is busy and endlessly fasicanting. She says no one has time for dinner parties.
I really like dinner parties.

Like my father, I enjoy the road of least resistance, but like his father and my mother too, I am a dreamer. A dreamer without drive.

Maybe I am a perfectionist after all. Maybe my version of perfect simply doesn't involve details.


My schemes can keep me company and then move on, and I'll welcome the next with open arms. 

2 comments:

  1. Preach it, sister! I like dinner parties and not givin' two toots, too!! ;)

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  2. Sounds like me too! Give me disheveled happiness and fancy free daydreams any day!

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