Realistically, every day each one of us makes decisions that affect our lives. Little tiny choices that intentionally or inadvertently calibrate the directions we’re headed and the places we’re going. Do you choose to put that project off again, further damning it to never get done? Do you call that person you haven’t seen in months and realize you’ve missed them? All sorts of these little things shape people in subtle unconscious ways.
But I know that looking back in my life there have been moments of major upheaval, times when I made decisions that had major, long-term impacts on my life that I can’t quite imagine what in the world I would be if I’d made the decisions differently. I sort of feel like I’m in one of those periods right now (accepting a job offer! buying a home! trying to sell a book!), and so I thought it might be good to look back at some of the big ones in the past.
December 1993: Leaving Boston
I dropped out of college after my first semester and moved back to Seattle, where I transferred to the UW. I managed to snag a dear friend out of the three months I spent at Emerson College (hi Megan!), but what the fuck would have happened if I’d stayed in Boston and finished my Musical Theater degree?
August 1995: Leaving Chris N.
Ah, my first boyfriend. We spent 3 years cycling through some very bad patterns. We bickered constantly, broke up and got back together many times, and were totally codependent. We held each other back and used the other as a security blanket rather than grow up. We finally broke up in late ‘95, and thanks to some rare determination on my side, stayed broken up. He lives in Issaquah with his wife and is a nice guy, but my life would look nothing like it does today if I’d stayed with him.
April 1996: Going to my first rave
What would I have dedicated 5+ years of my life to if I hadn’t gone to that rave that took place in a barn in Monroe? I only went on a whim because I was itching for a party and got an invite from the friend of a coworker. Raving birthed my writing career, my relationship with my now-husband, and pushed me to peak joy-capacity for a really long time. What if I’d been busy that night in April of ‘96 and not gone to “Back to the Bubble Beats”? Would I have been a Phishead? A swing dancer? A loner? Who knows!
Early 1997: Avoiding addiction
I spent almost a year in close contact with people doing a lot of really addictive, dangerous, disgusting drugs. Somehow I managed to come out of the experience with only one rock bottom weekend, no addictions, and no lasting physical harm. (No comment re: lasting effects on short term memory.) The irony here is that part of why I stayed safe was because my then-sort-of-boyfriend advised me to “steer clear of white powders” — and he eventually died of an overdose. Close call.
June 2001: Attending Columbia Publishing Course
Marked the end of an era (quit Lotus, and realized I didn’t really want to run a magazine any more) and the beginning of connections that are still playing themselves out and being revealed. What if I hadn’t taken the advice of that random dude at Burning Man (honestly, I didn’t even know his name) and apply to CPC?
…And now, here we are in Spring 2005 and it feels like I’m making decisions that will affect my life for a long time. I’m committing to projects and places and people and ideas in ways that are going to require some major follow through and shape things to come for years. It’s sort of exciting, but at the same time I’m trying not to think about it too much because otherwise my head might cave in, like a deep sea jellyfish brought up to the surface of the ocean and oh no! the pressure, captain! Its head — it’s inverting! Sad deflated-brain jellyfish. Back to the bottom of the subconsciousness sea for you! That’s where all the really interesting personal development stuff happens, anyway.
Hey there. I'm Ariel Meadow Stallings, a native Seattleite who's written my way up and down the Left Coast. Electrolicious is where I post daily randomata, but I also write for a living. My first book, Offbeat Bride, was published last year.
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Maggie
March 30th, 2005 at 7:20 am
Ahh yes, this *would* be a year of major manifestation, wouldn’t it? For me as well, and from the sound of things, it’s been happening for lots of folks. Glad to know all of us making major life-shifting decisions can find solace in one another when we suddenly find a bit of anxiety and lots of excitement before us!
Melinda
March 30th, 2005 at 1:38 pm
Ariel:
I’m enjoying reading about your life changing events this year. I’ve also had those times and in fact, am at a crossroads again in my life with an exciting career venture ahead. Such an interesting thing to take time to look at the decisions we’ve made and see where they’ve led us, isn’t it? One of my life changing decisions 5 yrs ago was leaving Bainbridge Island, where I’d lived and worked for 8 yrs. I was pleased to find your website a few months ago and catch a glimpse of Seattle and Bainbridge through you. Best of luck to you in all your adventures to come. Visit Bloedel Reserve for me sometime!
Melinda
paisley jane
March 30th, 2005 at 9:14 pm
i think about this topic almost daily and im amazed by
the choices that shape our lives ..
life is a wonderous thing..
im also having one of “those” years
best wishes on your journey !
ivy
March 31st, 2005 at 8:15 am
I hear that! I have had a crazy, unconventional, at-times exasparating life. It’s funny how I can trace my life back through events (duh, isn’t that life?). I was just talking about what my life would be like if I had my fancy Georgetown international relations degree (instead of dropping out). It would be so, so diff, but would I want to trade any of my crazy, random experiences? I’ll get back to you on that.
In one of my creative studies classes we had to do a mind-map. Basically you have something in the middle and you make a spider-y diagram that traces all the tangents of the thing in the middle and how you got to the thing in the middle. I recommend doing it. It’s crazy seeing it all laid out, yo!
daisy
April 1st, 2005 at 7:56 am
have you seen that movie “What the BLEEP do we think we are” …
Ariel
April 1st, 2005 at 8:19 am
No, I haven’t seen What the Bleep Do We Know? yet, but it’s already in my Netflix queue, and it comes out on DVD in a week or so!
esther
April 3rd, 2005 at 9:08 pm
oh god. What the Bleep is soooo cheesy! do you know about Ramtha?
It is kinda worth it for the entertainment/local angle (Ramtha being a pillar of the Yelm community, and if you know Portland there’s lots of local scenes in it)
Ariel
April 13th, 2005 at 11:14 pm
Wow, I just saw What the Bleep. While I agree with the main moral of the movie (we can each manifest our own realities) other than that it was just AWFUL. The cheezy dramatic plot line was embarassing, the weird animated dancing cells gave me the creeps, and there was way too much Ramtha and not enough of the actual scientists. I’d much rather have watched a good PBS special about quantum physics.