Showing posts with label Writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writing. Show all posts
7.05.2011
Pardon Me, I'm Up to Something....
I'm horrible at keeping secrets. I keep the big juicy ones when it counts, but for some reason any secret vaguely resembling good news dwells at the tip of my tongue, struggling to pepper every conversation with premature announcements.
It is for this reason, my friends, that I've been avoiding you like a three way mirror mixed with overhead lighting.
Basically, here's what you need to know: I'm stepping away from Jessica Daily for the next two weeks because I've got something brand spankin' new and a whole lot freakier in the works. I know we've just celebrated our one year blogiversary and we're feeling all fuzzy and stuff but I am taking this party to another level.
I hope you'll join me at the new destination and bring a plus one.
Details and formal invitation to come.
xx,
Stealthy, calculating lady
Labels:
blog announcement,
secrets,
Writing
6.28.2011
One Year Blogiversary
I hope you got me something sparkly because today we are celebrating our one year blogiversary. It's been quite a ride, full of inspiration, learning curves and self reflection.
To anyone that's ever stopped by this blog, thank you for your support, kind words, and just, you know, being here...
I happen to think it's very special to be able to share not only pretty and inspiring things, but also thoughts and musings on the important stuff (and obviously the not-so-important).
Like a good friendship this blog and I have done some questionable things together: OD'ed on caffeine and seriously contemplated the fright of Santa Claus; shared exciting news; questioned the complexity of the female mind; gossiped about what happened to us over the weekend; shared our mutual obsessions.
This past year I've felt more inspired, sartorially excited (fashion boner?) and artistically interested than ever before. So thank you for inspiring me and being a part of that journey.
If, just for kicks, you are like me and like to abuse your emotions with strong doses of nostalgia almost daily, here's where we started a year ago today.
As I said that day, I'll say again on our one year blogiversary: and so, here it goes. Please enjoy.
xx,
J
To anyone that's ever stopped by this blog, thank you for your support, kind words, and just, you know, being here...
I happen to think it's very special to be able to share not only pretty and inspiring things, but also thoughts and musings on the important stuff (and obviously the not-so-important).
Like a good friendship this blog and I have done some questionable things together: OD'ed on caffeine and seriously contemplated the fright of Santa Claus; shared exciting news; questioned the complexity of the female mind; gossiped about what happened to us over the weekend; shared our mutual obsessions.
This past year I've felt more inspired, sartorially excited (fashion boner?) and artistically interested than ever before. So thank you for inspiring me and being a part of that journey.
If, just for kicks, you are like me and like to abuse your emotions with strong doses of nostalgia almost daily, here's where we started a year ago today.
As I said that day, I'll say again on our one year blogiversary: and so, here it goes. Please enjoy.
xx,
J
6.24.2011
Birthday Reflections
I usually make a big song and dance out of this day (aside from Christmas, uh, what day could be more important?) but something in me feels unfamiliarly gloomy about the whole deal this year.
You might say, you’re 23, shut up and get drunk (which I probably will do anyways, thank you), but I can’t help feeling like this year has blown past me like the smoke from my birthday cake, opaque memories billowing around my face, there for a moment, but almost immediately dissolved into the stillness of the present where I stand here, once again the birthday girl, with a whole new year that needs tending to.
I supposed it’s natural to feel reflective on your birthday, and a lot of things have happened in the last three hundred and sixty five days: I’ve flown the nest (as they say), learned how to clean a toilet bowl (never again), watched some of my best friends scatter around the world, come to terms with the word “utilities,” gotten my first “big girl” job doing something I love and spent a lot of time hanging out here, on this blog, with you.
I’ve revived my love of platform shoes (an affair that began in second grade with my trendsetting Sketchers, platform sneakers); exercised patience; started taking vitamins (old age will do that to you); grown to understand my parents more; appreciated my Grandparents more; felt more grateful for the depth and authenticity of my friendships; become a connoisseur of cheap pinot noir.
And I’ve, for the first time, felt myself change. Not from what I was, to something new, but from myself to a further version of myself. I’ve seen interests that always existed blossom into full-blown hobbies, and jobs.
And it’s not that these things never happened in the past, it’s not that I’ve never evolved before… it’s that I’d never noticed it in myself.
Someone told me in college that you will change more from twenty to thirty than you previously had in your whole life. I was highly skeptical when I heard this (as I am whenever I hear a quote that begins with, “trust me”) but I’m beginning to accept this statement.
There’s a cold, overwhelming, invigorating feeling that comes with complete independence; separation from what everyone else in your sorority is doing; removal of the constant opinion of your family; an end to the comfortable and familiar cycle of measuring the years by your school calendar.
All the barometers of success, acceptance, expectation, and even fun are immediately unhinged and centered on you, as an individual. Of course important relationships will always influence your decisions and remain a thread in the sweater of your life, but the freedom to pursue your oddest passions, to wear whatever the hell you please, to eat as much of one food (macaroni and cheese…) as you damn well want… it’s all suddenly there.
A lot of heavy, gloomy things come with aging: deaths, mortgages, broken relationships, heartbreak.
But aging also brings about a unique sense of freedom. Freedom to develop and be your true self, confidence to be your true self, and the power to take on all of the heavy things with the grounding of experience and (sometimes) a little wisdom.
I don’t happen to think I’m particularly wise at 23, or that I’m so mature that I’ll start using cocktail napkins at the bar, but I do feel a changed sense of self and awareness this year.
So (aside from what I’m wearing tonight...obviously) there’s what I’m thinking about today on my birthday.
xoxo,
Labels:
birthdays,
Personal,
Personal Photos,
Writing
4.21.2011
Something I Picked Up Last Week...
... Aside from a Coachella cold and a nice collection of blisters there is something pretty important I picked up last week: a full-time job.
You might recall I've worn many hats in the past eleven months since graduating (figuratively of course, you know that this was the only on-my-head sort of hat I'd worn up until last week) including reporter, actress, writer, blogger, social media guru, and my dog's personal assistant. This job happens to be a lovely combination of just about everything I've been doing and I'm dancing a jig with excitement.
It also means I have "normal person" hours; co-workers (that I see in person); and a sudden need to purchase tupperware (in which to bring my gourmet homemade lunches, obviously).
My first day at work I brought in egg salad and a raging, coughing, sneezing cold. They love me already.
I'll still be here talking your ear off on the intricacies of boob tape and mixed patterns but I figured I'd fill you in just in case you hear me referencing the workplace.
Fondly,
The blonde girl standing next to you in the elevator attempting to wiggle her tights up without you noticing
image via This Is Glamorous
4.05.2011
I'm Getting Around!
Hot diggity, there's happy news over here my sugar plums! One of my favorite blogs, Shop Eat Sleep, has taken me on as a contributor!
If you haven't checked out Shop Eat Sleep yet it's packed with insider reviews of the latest bars, restaurants, shopping, happenings and hotels.
Today my post covered where to shop and what to wear to Coachella. Click here to see my picks and let me know your thoughts!
image via Dirty Blonde
Labels:
Coachella,
Shop Eat Sleep,
Style,
Writing
3.16.2011
Female Friendships: Too Much Fluff, Too Little Truth?
It sometimes seems that the main role of female friendships is to make ourselves feel better; to make ourselves feel like we are not alone in our inability to stop eating girl scout cookies, we are not alone when we worry why it took him so long to call, we are not alone in our unhealthy obsession with sappy, unrealistic reality TV that leaves our hearts thirsting after a guy (preferably a tall, dashing guy) to tell us he wants "our forever."
In fact, empathy just might be the main ingredient in female friendships. Every time we're together we spend bundles of time retracing all that's been bothering us emotionally; "of course your boss doesn't hate you, he was just stressed;" "of course he loves you, he's just emotionally guarded;" "no way, you have not gained weight, you have the best body ev-er!"
Between the listening, the nodding, and the undoubted complimenting we are excellent at building each other up, but where does the need for confidence boosting end and truth telling begin?
A few months ago I watched an interesting moment between my mom and one of her best friends. My mom, mind you, has four brothers that used to pee on her barbie house and a mother that made her get her hair cut at the men's barber shop to save time. She likes to tell me "it's not a fashion show!" when I take too long to pick out an outfit (but, oh life is a fashion show, isn't it?) and often looks at me like I am a different species when I become weepy and emotional at the drop of a dime.
Of course, she does all of this while wearing Stuart Weitzman's, let's not get it twisted.
Well, my very honest mother and her friend were seeing each other for the first time in a couple of months and her friend was worried about the weight she'd "gained." I, naturally, replied that she "looked great" and that I couldn't notice anything (which, I must add, was not a lie). My mother, however, looked at her compassionately and said "nothing we can't work off."
I was appalled. She conceded to weight gain on thighs that were not her own!? I shriveled into the corner like a wilting flower sinking away from the sunlight of truth.
A few months later I've been looking back at this moment curiously. The truth is, her friend knew she'd "gained" weight so anything we said otherwise was (well intended or not) a lie. The other thing is, my mom's response was deliberate. She did not say, "yes your butt looks big," or "maybe just a few pounds," but she instead disregarded the dilemma altogether and offered a solution. No matter what we said, her friend would still feel she'd gained weight, so why not skip the sympathy session and get straight to the finish line?
Instead of sitting around, wallowing in the societal pressures to be thin and wondering whether or not we can ever drop the pounds despite our love of carbohydrates, my mom offered an easy solution to the problem so that we could be done with the negative topic and move on to the important topic of which cocktail to order.
I am not exactly sure I'll ever be eager to tell my girlfriends they look a little plumper than usual, but the strategy of disregarding the negative and focusing on the solution is something that could be valuable in all dilemmas.
As women, we like to talk about our problems, commiserate, lay around in the shadow of rejection and sulk and eat and gab on and on about how we are clearly more stylish (and generally better) than the coworker that go the promotion before us. But what if we became a bit more like men and fast forwarded to the part where we figure out a solution?
What if we disregarded the heaviness of negativity and the repetitiveness of reassurance and just went straight for the jugular of the issue?
Maybe he's not calling you back because you've texted him an unhealthy amount of times and now he thinks you're a little bit psycho. Maybe your boss hates you because you spend the day shopping online and talking to your friends on gmail.
Sitting around, commiserating about issues for hours is sort of like sipping a pina colada: it looks nice, it's sugary and sweet, but it takes a lot of time for it to really get you anywhere and it makes you a little fatter. Honesty, on the other hand, is like a shot of (top shelf) tequila: it's a little rough on the intake, but if taken with a grain of salt, and finished with the sweetness of a lime it takes you to where you're going much faster and with fewer sympathy calories.
At the end of the day I'll never lose my need for the sugary, pina colada aspect of my female friendships. Sometimes I really do need them to tell me I'm pretty or funny, or more awesome than frozen yogurt. And sometimes I don't want a solution to my problem, I only want a glass of wine.
What I'm hoping, is that in between these moments of sympathy, I can learn to appreciate the truth a bit more. It takes a true friend to tell you when you've messed up, and it takes a strong bond to survive the sometimes unflattering light of honesty. But ultimately, it's worth the sting. All those hours we spend wondering why our boss said we look tired or our boyfriend forgot our favorite flower could really be spent talking about important things: like why in the world they chose Ashley (and her crazy dentist hand gestures) as the new bachelorette, or the complexity of pattern mixing.
And, yes, your ass looks huge in those pants.

Between the listening, the nodding, and the undoubted complimenting we are excellent at building each other up, but where does the need for confidence boosting end and truth telling begin?
A few months ago I watched an interesting moment between my mom and one of her best friends. My mom, mind you, has four brothers that used to pee on her barbie house and a mother that made her get her hair cut at the men's barber shop to save time. She likes to tell me "it's not a fashion show!" when I take too long to pick out an outfit (but, oh life is a fashion show, isn't it?) and often looks at me like I am a different species when I become weepy and emotional at the drop of a dime.
Of course, she does all of this while wearing Stuart Weitzman's, let's not get it twisted.
Well, my very honest mother and her friend were seeing each other for the first time in a couple of months and her friend was worried about the weight she'd "gained." I, naturally, replied that she "looked great" and that I couldn't notice anything (which, I must add, was not a lie). My mother, however, looked at her compassionately and said "nothing we can't work off."
I was appalled. She conceded to weight gain on thighs that were not her own!? I shriveled into the corner like a wilting flower sinking away from the sunlight of truth.
A few months later I've been looking back at this moment curiously. The truth is, her friend knew she'd "gained" weight so anything we said otherwise was (well intended or not) a lie. The other thing is, my mom's response was deliberate. She did not say, "yes your butt looks big," or "maybe just a few pounds," but she instead disregarded the dilemma altogether and offered a solution. No matter what we said, her friend would still feel she'd gained weight, so why not skip the sympathy session and get straight to the finish line?
Instead of sitting around, wallowing in the societal pressures to be thin and wondering whether or not we can ever drop the pounds despite our love of carbohydrates, my mom offered an easy solution to the problem so that we could be done with the negative topic and move on to the important topic of which cocktail to order.
I am not exactly sure I'll ever be eager to tell my girlfriends they look a little plumper than usual, but the strategy of disregarding the negative and focusing on the solution is something that could be valuable in all dilemmas.
As women, we like to talk about our problems, commiserate, lay around in the shadow of rejection and sulk and eat and gab on and on about how we are clearly more stylish (and generally better) than the coworker that go the promotion before us. But what if we became a bit more like men and fast forwarded to the part where we figure out a solution?
What if we disregarded the heaviness of negativity and the repetitiveness of reassurance and just went straight for the jugular of the issue?
Maybe he's not calling you back because you've texted him an unhealthy amount of times and now he thinks you're a little bit psycho. Maybe your boss hates you because you spend the day shopping online and talking to your friends on gmail.

At the end of the day I'll never lose my need for the sugary, pina colada aspect of my female friendships. Sometimes I really do need them to tell me I'm pretty or funny, or more awesome than frozen yogurt. And sometimes I don't want a solution to my problem, I only want a glass of wine.
What I'm hoping, is that in between these moments of sympathy, I can learn to appreciate the truth a bit more. It takes a true friend to tell you when you've messed up, and it takes a strong bond to survive the sometimes unflattering light of honesty. But ultimately, it's worth the sting. All those hours we spend wondering why our boss said we look tired or our boyfriend forgot our favorite flower could really be spent talking about important things: like why in the world they chose Ashley (and her crazy dentist hand gestures) as the new bachelorette, or the complexity of pattern mixing.
And, yes, your ass looks huge in those pants.
3.03.2011
So, What Am I Doing With My Life?
Being a writer and all I thought it might be nice for me to spend some more time actually writing on this little blog of mine (in between my life altering musings on fashion week, of course). So, here we go... And, please be a dear and let me know your thoughts... I feel a little bit insane rambling on to no one in particular (not that this would be a rare occurrence...)
So, lately I’ve been experiencing this little, nagging, hooded figure of an emotion that I like to call “life plan paranoia.” It’s a bit of a mood killer, this emotion, as it slips into my mind, drowning confidence and excitement, clasping its little E.T. like fingers around my throat whispering, “What are you doing with your life, Jessica?” “Don’t you know you’re going to end up old and wrinkly (the worst of all) having done none of the things you’d dreamed of?”
I’ve always been told that the twenties are supposed to be a great time: your boob’s are only gonna get saggier from here on out (which is quite depressing but apparently meant to make you enjoy them now... which, how do you “enjoy” them anyways? take nude pictures? wear slutty tops?), you’ve never heard of the word mortgage and your body can still withstand binge drinking Saturday nights.
But amidst this revelry, your twenties are also the time that dreams suddenly deflate. Once you enter the “real” world dreams aren’t just fluffy, abstract things you ramble off when someone asks you what you’re passionate about, dreams are now concrete things to pursue. They’re no longer supposed to be pretty, now they’re supposed to pay the bills. They’re no longer supposed to be imaginative and romantic, now they’re supposed to have good hours and a 401k.
And so, to be frank, this is why I am pissed off at the twenties right now: they have single-handedly smashed and mangled dreams and processed them into what adulthood is all about: practicality, responsibility and anti-wrinkle eye creams.

I suppose its proper place is in between college graduation and finding your “dream job” but as I’ve been listening to friends and acquaintances it seems that some people never outgrow the phase at all. Some people land the job they’re supposed to, the job they’ve taken logical steps to get to, the job with dental and fun holiday parties, but they’re still left wondering to themselves: when does this start to feel like a realized dream?
It has me wondering: is it better to sit around and figure it out, or just start dancing and hope you pick the choreography up along the way?
And, if you’re sitting out, what are you supposed to look for anyways? How will you realize that this job will lead to ultimate happiness and a salary that affords Chanel?
And lastly, how did I ever become entitled to following my "dreams?" What does it say about me, and some may argue my generation, that I feel obligated to only pursue a career that excites me, engages me, makes the most of my talents, and makes me feel sparkly inside?
And lastly, how did I ever become entitled to following my "dreams?" What does it say about me, and some may argue my generation, that I feel obligated to only pursue a career that excites me, engages me, makes the most of my talents, and makes me feel sparkly inside?
Of course, one can only sit around and watch the song and dance for so long before you get thrown into the musical mix, but what if you get thrown into the wrong song? the wrong dance? what if choosing that job, taking that easy route, following the prescribed routine, makes you feel good for now, but ultimately leaves you unhappy?
It feels, as I sit here with frozen toes tucked under my comforter and a hydrating mask on my face, that all of these questions have to be answered right this moment. It feels, as I sit here wondering if the diet soda I’m sipping will give me cancer (or worse, cellulite) like I am sitting in a room where the walls are spinning around me.
I know the optimistic phrases and pieces of advice I'm supposed to know: there's no set way to reach your goals, every one's path is different, do what you love and success will follow (unless, of course, you've chosen creative career paths like someone I know... cough), life's about the journey not the destination, save a horse ride a cowboy, yada yada...
People keep telling me that things work out and opportunities arise. Not only is this the most annoying piece of encouragement to receive, it’s also pretty impossible to refute. Of course things will work out, life will march on, I will find some job that is good for me... but that’s not the principle concern.
The real question is which path will be great; which path will only reshape the romantic and fluffy dreams I’ve always had instead of deflating them altogether? Because that, of course, is the path I’d like to take.
10.20.2010
Daily Quote Dose
“Be yourself. Above all, let who you are, what you are, what you believe, shine through every sentence you write, every piece you finish." -John Jakes
Labels:
Carrie Bradshaw,
quotes,
Writing
9.27.2010
Good News!
I'm excited to announce that I'm now a contributor for The Budget Fashionista website! I will be writing weekly posts on frugal fashion finds for the site which is full of awesome style guides and inspiration. I will be updating (see: self promoting) all with new posts to come, but in the meantime- look! they gave me a bio! Do you think I summed myself up well? I left out the part describing my love of macaroni and cheese and reality TV because, sigh, I am so sophisticated.
Image via Audrey Hepburn Complex
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