What if you could retire before 30?

What if you could cash in a nest egg + profits from selling everything you own (A house? A car? Stocks?) and just… live.

What if you could do what you love most (Writing? Playing your guitar? Painting? Calling the lowest bid on The Price is Right?)  all day.

What if your nest egg allowed you to live comfortably – not lavishly – but still afforded you small luxuries, like brunch with friends, buying that vintage find or even the occasional evening of theater?

What if.

What if, when money ran low, you could just take up a few creative part-time jobs to help boost your Rainy Day Fund.

What would you miss most?

Getting up at 5 a.m.
Warring traffic, twice a day
Superiors who don’t know your worth
Your 10×10 cubicle
Your 30-minute lunch that you eat at your desk
Your desk
Leftovers for lunch, again
Your bi-weekly paycheck

What would you miss most?

What if all this was possible – would you cash in your life you have so that you could live you want?

What if you lived this way, for just one year, only to discover that you miss your old life – the traffic, the cubicle, the boss? At least you’d know what you really want, wouldn’t you? Because how do we know what we really want until we’ve had a taste?

So, if you could retire now, would you?


*This post was totally inspired by something my husband just said. Because maybe, just maybe, we’ve thought about it once or twice.

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Because my heart told me to… (a long post, but an important one)

Joe Brainard.

I promised (promised!) that I would post my weekly assignments from writing class at the end of each Wednesday. Well, I didn’t, did I? It’s Thursday now. But there’s a reason. Yesterday, our assignment was to write a poem that leads with, “I remember” at the start of each sentence – a sort of homage to Joe Brainard, New York poet (died in 1994) who ran in circles with the likes of Andy Warhol and Frank O’Hara. His most famous poem was I remember.

I recommend you Wiki or Google him if you haven’t heard of him, especially all of you artistic types. Joe Brainard is your people.

My poem is rather dark. Totally unintentional. But when I sat down to write, it’s just what came out. I made it all rhyme because I figured it would take the edge off the subject matter. No luck. I read it in class last night and my classmate cried. True story. Then I got a bit weepy when I looked up and saw her, which totally sucks because, even though my professor says that writers live for the raw reaction of a reader, he failed to explain what that does to you when you see a reader react. Well, I can tell you: It moves you to tears, too.

That said, I’m just not sure I’m ready to share my poem with the blog.

Well…  I want to share it, because I said that I would and I know there is nothing to be ashamed of, which is why I felt comfortable writing it the first place. I am not ashamed. Turns out I’m just not sure if I want to be this public with my past. But I promised myself this blog would be a documentary of my road to reinvention – the path to a new me – which would make this post, in particular, an important step on that road.

So, I’ll make you a deal (but I guess we can call it a favor). I will post if:

1. You only comment if you feel you have something to say; please don’t feel pressure to – I know, I know, you lovely people aren’t like that, but I just want to make it clear that commenting is not expected, not now, not ever.

2. And this is really important (this is the favor part), if you know anyone who could use a poem like this one,  I’d like you to pass it on. Experiences mean nothing if not shared. This I know for sure.

You have just read how I rationalize with myself. I negotiate with my thoughts on the regular – that’s how I roll. But it’s a necessary process and, in the end, all you can really do is give your heart the final say in the matter. So, here goes…

***

I remember.
By: sandyb

I remember when I remembered and why I’d chosen to forget
I remember that when I remembered I would break into a sweat:

I remember feeling like I was falling, like the floor was slipping fast
I remember staying strong and brave because I knew it wouldn’t last.

I remember how my knees looked, bent up and in the air
I remember how his body smelled, his clothes, his hands, his hair.

I remember all the whispering and how he said it was “OK”
I remember watching cartoons while he sat there and just “played”.

I remember not understanding that what was happening was sad
I remember that the experience, years later, made me mad.

I remember telling mom and how she at first didn’t believe me
I remember her later apologizing saying, “I know you wouldn’t deceive me.”

I remember the day I decided that it was time to just forget
I remember how hard I cried, but destroy me I would not let.

I remember how the years then passed, the memory just fading
I remember starting to write this down and silently debating

I remember why some memories are best remembered not at all
I remember how much strength it took to get beyond this wall.

I remember why they say some things are just better left unspoken
I remember last night wishing that this seal had not been broken.

I remember though this morning feeling stronger once again
I remember how I can find deep solace just within my pen.

I remember why I remembered and now I’ll remember to forget
But I’ll remember that I remembered here and for this I’ve no regret.

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School books and poems.

I just love thsi picture, but mostly the car. Santorini, Greece.

So, my writing class.

Every Wednesday evening, from 7-9PM, I head to the University of Toronto (affectionately known as, “UofT”) for my Generating Stories class. Well, before I head there, I battle suburban traffic from work into the city, make a pit stop at Starbucks (an Americano and a yogurt or some sort of sugar-laden oat bar) and then proceed to get lost on my way to class. It never fails – there are too many buildings! Oh, and for the last two weeks I’ve had the pleasure of getting not one but three (three!) parking tickets. Awesome. But it’s all worth it when I stroll the halls of the old university and finally walk into that classroom.

I feel whole again.

My worries, my stresses and my job all pick me apart, day in and day out. I’m sure many of you can relate. But when I set foot inside the classroom it’s like getting my second wind. I’m reinvigorated by the idea of transferring my feelings onto paper.

My notebook is the best mirror I’ve ever had, even when I haven’t always loved what’s looking back at me. On those days, I read my words out loud to get the full effect. It’s always cleansing. Never fails.

In my class, there are a few “characters” who help set the scene:

My professor - says things like “cool” after each piece we read; two years ago, he was a student himself – we’ll call him Dr. K
The stockbroker - talk about using both sides of your brain – we’ll call her B
The professional procrastinator (his words, not mine) – we’ll call him A
The gentleman – older, quiet, polite.. we’ll call him M
The musician – sits next to me; is taking the class so he can write better song lyrics – we’ll call him Ex
The kid – in the tenth grade and attends an all-boys private school; positively adorable – we’ll call him Jr.

There are more people in my class – all lovely people with amazing abilities to paint pictures with words – but these people above just, I dunno, stuck out my first day of class. They’re the people I look forward to the most.

Tomorrow will be my third week in the class – there are only five classes in total. It’s bittersweet, really, because it’s a great group. Each week, my professor writes a famous author’s quote (sometimes two) on the blackboard. It never ceases to hit me right in the heart, even if I’ve heard the quote before. My dream is to someday have someone write my words on a blackboard, just like that.

The first day, Dr. K asked everyone to introduce themselves – you know, the usual ice breaker-type exercise – and when it came to my turn I just said, “Hi, my name is Sandy. I’m a magazine editor by day, which might sound well and good, but lately I just don’t care for what I’m writing about. I’m here because I want to learn to love what I write.”

This year, part of my journey to reinvention is learning about who I am, not just as a gal turning 30, but as a writer, too. (fact: It’s hard for me to call myself “a writer”… anyone else have that problem?)

*Tomorrow, I'll post this week's assignment, just like I did last week.
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Stick it to me, baby.

I keep a pregnancy test in the lower cabinet of my bathroom vanity.

Tucked in the back corner, within a tote filled with grooming supplies and feminine hygiene products and body butters that I never use, my just-in-case-we-slipped test sits in an bright white wrapper, inside of a blue and pink box.

Recently, I had to open that box.

The good news is that we’re not picking out baby names this fall. I say good news because making, growing and raising a baby is just not where our hearts are right now. I’m not sure when our hearts will be there, but I don’t spend a lot of time dwelling on the idea of it either. All I know is, I held my breath the whole time I was peeing on that stick.

I’m sure someday, when the stars are aligned and there’s a half empty bottle of Brunello nearby, our hearts will be open to the possibility of a baby. Until then, I have a second pregnancy test tucked away in a safe place for another one of those hold-my-breath moments.

Since we moved to beautiful Roncesvalles, the avenue strewn with as many vintage shops and Polish delis as baby strollers and hipster parents, our social life has been given a rebirth. Our lives changed and grew and brought us closure to the life we never knew we always wanted. We love it this way.

Lately, chatter and baby-speculation flows freely around the diner table with friends. Most recently it happened again on Valentine’s Day. Twelve of us dined at Giancarlo’s on College Street to celebrate love and friendship; and then, somewhere between appetizers and the main course, it came up: “So, who’s thinking about kids?” someone asked,  testing the waters to see who would become the next baby-toting hipster pair.

No one responded. But I’m sure it’s only a matter of time.

Tick-tock.

Maybe it’s living in the city and loving it too much. Maybe it’s fearing things that scream louder than I do. Maybe it’s not feeling rooted since selling our home to move here to Roncesvalles. Maybe all of these reasons keep us from wanting to grow our family of two and half (the cat totally counts as .5). Whatever the reasons, I sure am glad that stick read exactly what I was thinking: Girl, party’s not over yet.

So, is this a topic in your circles, too?

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