I pray

Well my last post was about spilled milk, and unfortunately this one is about melted butter. Apparently dairy products have a vendetta against me.

Last Friday, the second most fabulous day of the week (right after Thursday) became much less fabulous when I arrived home from work only to find an entire stick of butter had melted inside my Tory Burch purse. It’s a strange story as to why there was butter in my purse in the first place and I’d rather not elaborate on my careless shenanigans, but I can now say that I am probably the only person on this planet to have a stick of butter bring shame to their Tory. (Yes, it’s a fake Tory that I bought out of a man’s suitcase, but it looks just like a real one and I’ve even had several real Tory shoppers admire it! So despite counterfeit-ness, I will always treat it like the $500 gem that it looks like.) And thus you can imagine my distress upon its greasy demise.

I’m not sure if you’ve ever tried to clean butter off anything, but let me tell you, it’s not easy. I bathed credit cards, a lipstick tube, a pair of earrings I forgot I owned, a tiny bottle of Jack, a USB port, a Swiss army knife, and a plethora of writing utensils. I wish that list would have had at least one of those typically strange purse items but I guess my bags are not very interesting.

But I did add an interesting set of shoes to my collection- hot, and I mean hot, pink tennis shoes. And I’ve never been a pink kind of girl. I wanted the hot, hot yellow ones, but the yellow ones were white…and I can’t keep white shoes white any longer than it takes for me to wear them out of the store. So I settled for the hot, hot pink ones because they were gray. And I have learned to love, love their hot hotness. Maybe I’m not a pink girl, but I can work with being a hot, hot pink girl. After walking the soles off the last pair, it was way past time for a new set. I had worn them so long that I didn’t even realize the loss of support on the outsides of the soles (I’m a chronic side-walker). I thought the new tennies made me feel knob-kneed, but it was actually just the strange adjustment to standing on a level surface again. Now I’ve got support all the way around and extra pep in my step. There’s just something about a new pair of good shoes that’s good for the soul as much as the sole…. Maybe I’ll start running again. Maybe….

Speaking of running, guess who doesn’t get to make last minute beer runs- this girl. Even after begrudgingly turning not 21, not 22, but 23 years old, I still get carded everywhere. Last Friday, after my butter meltdown, I walked into a sketchy, podunk , hole-in-the-wall gas station in the middle of nowhere and tried to buy my favorite strawberry flavored Abita beer (it’s seasonal, so get it while you can), and I got carded. As if my afternoon couldn’t get any worse, my id was not with me, but rather at home in the sink taking a bath. Apparently the gas station attendant didn’t buy my butter story. Or even believe that I was of age. I wouldn’t have been so disappointed had we been in the middle of anywhere, but don’t they know that no one needs proof of age in the middle of nowhere? I had better luck in high school than I do now…

Today is the nationally recognized day of prayer. I found this article that pretty much sums it all up. I ask everyone to please read it: http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2013/05/02/on-national-day-prayer-america-needs-prayer-like-never-before/

I couldn’t have said it better myself. Our nation needs prayer like never before. The answers we need cannot be answered through politics and our deepest needs cannot be met by any form of government, but rather spirituality. Our problems we face every day as individuals and as a nation are never going to be fixed until we turn them to God. He is the only one that can fully satisfy our every need. He made us to need Him and instead our flesh wants to need everything else. Let’s start being a nation of the Spirit rather than a nation of substance. We’ve gone so long without a good support system, just like my tennis shoes. We think we’re just fine without it….and then one day you are standing on a reak support system and realize what you’ve been missing. Don’t let God go out of our nation like worn out shoes. Keep your souls supported.

One of my biggest demons is a time that I simply call “writers block.” I find peace in writing and when I can’t find inspiration or the push to write, I fall into long periods where creativity and thought processes beyond the everyday “what do I want to eat” and “what should I wear today” completely leave me. I never like these times and it’s a struggle to get back on into my “swing”. Sometimes when I’m in the slumps, it’s even hard to compose a prayer. A conversation with God should be easy, but I’ll be the first to admit that I sometimes struggle. I’ve been in one of those times recently, which is why I pushed myself to blog today. And will push myself to write in my prayer journal tonight as well. I think that everyone has their own personal slumps of different sorts and sometimes you just can’t wait for the spark- you have to push yourself. Go run, even though you hate it. Fight out a prayer, God will hear it. Stop criticizing yourself and start loving. Pick the phone and make that call. Eat that piece of cake…I said it’s ok.

Today I challenge you to write down your prayer. I believe that my prayer journaling (despite my writers block moments) has led me to a deeper faith and stronger relationships in general. The key is to have faith in your own faith. Pray for our nation. Pray for the world. Pray for yourself. You are a more powerful force than you know. Imagine what can come from an entire nation that shares a prayer. Imagine if every day was National Prayer Day.

I wish everyone a wonderful Thursday. It is, after all, the best day of the week.

And don’t cry over spilled milk. Or melted butter. It may not be an easy fix, but it will get better.

Love always,

Addie

“Despite the fact that we, as a nation, have largely forgotten God, the good news is: God has not forgotten us.” –Pastor Greg Laurie

this is getting ridiculous…

I could start this blog with another apology for being so behind in writing, or explain how busy I really have been since coming back to Murray between getting back in the “groove of things” and figuring out my schedule…but quite frankly, no one likes to hear excuses. So instead, I’ll just start by saying: “Welcome back! Thanks for tuning in once again and for not losing faith in my return.” (Also, props to Aunt Laurie who never ceases to let me know when my blogs are getting behind at approximately the same time my writer’s itch begins to kick in.)

I’m sure you’ll be shocked to know that I’ve become a regular at the gym (as of last week, anyways). And I have to say that it’s never really as bad as I think it will be. After I get up the motivation to drag myself to the gym and force my feet onto the treadmill, it’s only a matter of minutes before I begin to feel the spike of endorphins in my system and actually start enjoying it. And the weigh machines have become my “friends” because in the wise words of Jordi: “Sikeston girls don’t do anything half-assed: we like to taste our alcohol just like we like to feel our workouts.”

Needless to say, the blizzard that occurred in the MKY yesterday put a damper in my healthy lifestyle after class was cancelled and my schedule was suddenly free. It’s like the book If You Give a Mouse a Cookie, but instead, the title is If You Give a Girl a Snow Day. The rendition goes a little something like this: if you give a girl a snow day (and the girl just happens to live in the most convenient part of town), her friends will want to stay with her so they don’t have to try to battle the icy roads the next day. And if her friends sleep over, they’ll want to watch a movie. And if they watch a movie then they’ll have to make brownies. And you know the rest of the story….but brownies weren’t the only diet killer. For dinner last night, I ordered a calzone from Baldy’s. I know this is bad enough in itself, however I was not expecting the delicious pizza pocket to literally be the size of Mamie’s head. Literally. We have pictures to prove it.

I never anticipated the move back to Murray to be this tough. I guess I just thought that I would leave for a semester and upon my return, everything would be exactly how I left it. Except I forgot that when I left this place, I was not only running to Starkville as fast as I possibly could because I am absolutely in love with the place and wanted to give my originally chosen alma mater a try, but I was also running away from my current situation. The MKY has a lot of memories for me and last year was a year of rebuilding and remodeling Addie from the inside out. It was a great year to say the least but the mortar and brick of that building centered around several very important people that I knew were leaving. I guess I assumed that if I got away for a semester to some place new and exciting, I would learn to live without seeing them everyday. I did- but now that I’m back, this little town that once seemed so ideal to me has turned from a story book ending, into more of a “once upon a time…”

Starkville is freedom to me because it was the first place I’ve ever gotten to really be me, all on my own. I’ve never been all on my own in Murray, so it’s taken me a while but I think I’m finally getting the hang of it. Don’t get me wrong, I still have amazing friends here and love each and every one of them dearly, it’s just a little different without my “stand-in boyfriend” and the other two-thirds of my amigo trio. Fortunately, I have learned that life can, and will always be summed up in three words: “it goes on”…so we too must follow suit.

Random: all the driving I’ve been doing makes me think about music. I love those old familiar songs that grab your attention and that you can recognize even before the first few measures are played out. But even more, I love the few special songs that grab your attention and make you recall the memory in the first few chords. Gotta love em.

I know I’ve talked about my pet peeves before, but I realized that I left one out: besides dirty dishes, people putting condiments on the meat instead of the bread, and clutter, one of my all time favorite peeves is when people go out on a date and sit on the same side of the table, leaving one whole side completely empty. Are you that pathetic that you can’t stand not touching for one meal? You can’t even carry on a serious conversation with that kind of set-up. Eye contact is crucial in a good conversation and if I had to turn my head 90 degrees every time one of us was speaking, I would be going to the chiropractor after every meal. Either you have nothing to talk about or you are way to clingy. Either way you look at it, it seems to be a toxic relationship. Just sayin.

As most of you may know, I love a good movie. (I was even voted most likely to always related my life to a movie in high school…not sure if that’s something to brag about but just thought it seemed fitting for this point.) But unfortunately, I am one of the most movie-deprived critics of them all. I see a preview, immediately want to watch the movie, yet seldom ever actually make it to the theater to see it. But I’m trying to change that- I have now watched 7 movies over the last ten days. Impressive, huh? Last night we watched “Easy A”. Funny movie but probably not one that I’ll bother to watch again. However one quote from the movie stuck out for me and I MUST share it: “Whatever happened to chivalry? Does it only exist in 80’s movies? I want John Cusack holding a boombox outside my window. I wanna ride off on a lawnmower with Patrick Dempsey. I want Jake from Sixteen Candles waiting outside the church for me. I want Judd Nelson thrusting his fist into the air because he knows he got me. Just once I want my life to be like an 80’s movie, preferably one with a really awesome musical number for no apparent reason. But no, no, John Hughes did not direct my life.” No further explanation needed….

I would also like to say that I am officially obsessed with the Southern way of life. (Just for the record: I was born south of the Mason Dixon line. The Bootheel is considered to be the South, however we have a lot of Midwest traits mixed in there as well.) I am proud to say I’m from the Missouri Delta and wouldn’t change my upbringing for the world. I had an idealistic childhood and high school years that people could only dream about. But after living in Mississippi for only one semester, I have notices small changes within myself and I like it! I remind myself daily of lines from Emily Post, I have learned to curl my own hair and routinely tell myself that “the higher the hair, the closer to God,” I own cookbooks and even more kitchen appliances, I’m thrilled with my sorority’s emphasized value on “women of poise and purpose” and the fact that we rep pearls, I now have multiple shades of lipstick, my eternal obsession with decorating/entertaining/wedding planning has reached an all time high, I have a closet full of clothes but often “nothing to wear”, I have recently become obsessed with shoes and Lilly Pulitzer, and I even caught myself saying “bless your heart” two days ago. Dear Jesus, help up all. The true Mississippi mud has worked its way into my soul and there’s no shaking it. I think I knew all along that I wanted this to happen but I never expected it to happen so fast. Now the only thing that upsets me is the fact that one final semester is separating me from the place where I have always dreamt of being. 95 days and counting….

That being said, I feel the need to explain to you the epic battle that has been going on deep inside my heart for as long as it’s been beating. As many of you know, I was (and still am) the true, die-hard Barbie fanatic; nevertheless I was raised with dirty, smelly, no-good, rotten, mean boys and was forced to be “tough.” I got picked on a pushed down in the dirt more times that I can count. I even had rocks thrown at me! I cried and whined, but no amount of pleading would make the boys disappear so I learned to deal. I knew if I wanted them to accept me, I had to be just a rough as they were, but this created a huge dilemma in my head that I unknowingly would cope with for the rest of my life. When I was young it was ok to play tough with the boys because as soon as I got home I could put on my dress up clothes and be a “Barbie girl” until bed time, therefore making the “on/off switch” to my personalities distinct. But once middle school hit, girls simply couldn’t play with boys anymore without having everyone assume that they had a crush on them, once again leaving me at a cross roads. I was forced to put up my dolls and dress up clothes because I was “too old for them” and wasn’t able to play with the boys, meaning things were no longer black and white like they had been for so many years.  Now, 21 years old (almost), and I’m still having trouble with the distinction. This is exactly the reason that I have different little “personalities” that live inside me and take turns coming out and showing themselves. (I have discussed these “personalities” in a previous blog but had not yet realized the reason for their existence- now that I have discovered a clear definition of their creation, I felt the need to revisit the topic.) To clarify, the “personalities” are all different, yet can all be classified into two distinct groups- hence the basis of the war within me. One group is pushing me to be a poised, full-fledged cooking, cleaning, entertaining, dainty, vixen of a lady and leave the dirty jobs for the men. After all, that’s what they’re here for, right?  Contradictingly, the other side is saying “anything boys can do I can do better” (in a very animated, elementary school voice while sticking her tongue out…and yes, I made up the word “contradictingly”). It’s pushing me to rebel against anything ladylike just to prove a point. One minute I’ve got a pie in the oven while I’m teasing my hair, the next minute I’m changing a tire with horse crap on my boots- reluctant to ask for help with either task because women are supposed to cook and look good, but I also don’t need a guy to help with changing a tire because my dad taught me how.

Honestly the battle is more amusing than frustrating. I like that I have a good taste for both sides of the fence, figuratively speaking. I heard a quote (yes, another quote…) from Sex and the City the other day that stood out to me and I think that it fits pretty perfectly right here: “Later, that night, I got to thinking about fairy tales. What if Prince Charming had never shown up? Would Snow White have slept in that glass coffin forever? Or would she have, eventually, woken up, spit out the apple, gotten a job, a health care package, and a baby from her local neighborhood sperm bank? I couldn’t help but wonder: Inside every confident, driven, single woman, is there a fragile princess just waiting to be saved? Was Charlotte right? Do women just want to be rescued? I guess sometimes a woman absolutely has to be rescued…and sometimes, a woman absolutely has to rescue a man. I am someone who is looking for love. Real love. Ridiculous, inconvenient, consuming, can’t live without each other Love…..Later that day I got to thinking about relationships. There are those that open you up to something new and exotic, those that are old and familiar, those that bring up lots of questions, those that bring you somewhere unexpected, those that bring you far from where you started, and those that bring you back. But the most exciting, challenging and significant relationship of all is the one you have with yourself. And if you can find someone to love the you you love, well, that’s just fabulous.”

Well I think that’s enough for now. I am pretty sure that the tangent I just rambled off about my “personalities” is enough to scare you away for a while…but it was just another one of my unruly thoughts that I felt the need to get out. Until next time, keep on keepin’ on.

Love always,

Addie

“I’ll keep making the sandwiches as long as he keeps bringing home the bread.”