The library of my life, minus the card catalog.

Embrace Life

Posted: February 22nd, 2010 | Author: Jacky | Filed under: Life | Tags: , , , | 2 Comments »

The last time someone tried to stress to me the importance of using seatbelts was my first NYC trip to the doctor in 2008 (because I didn’t understand my health fund, and therefore didn’t use my health insurance, the first year I lived here). The conversation came from nowhere, just like the decree that she wouldn’t perform a pap smear unless I was registered to vote. I kind of wished I hadn’t been registered to vote and didn’t think it was her place to say otherwise.

We sat in her office — which was more like a stuffy study, crammed with art work and books — and in addition to my family history, she grilled me on whether I wore a seatbelt in cars. I told her I didn’t take cars in New York (cab drivers had trouble finding my home in Brooklyn, so public transit wound up being easier, faster and much cheaper). She kept grilling me though. I told her that when I drove at home, I always wore my seatbelt, but I couldn’t absolutely confirm that every (rare) time I entered a cab (for a brief period) I was buckled up.

She proceeded to tell me different ways people were injured in taxi cab accidents. The one I remember most vividly was when the person in the back flies to the front, smashes the windshield and loses their teeth. She referred to it as “The Cup,” or something similar, because of how your teeth would all fall out together (maybe in the cup holder?).

I wanted to run out of the office right then. Somehow I made it through the rest of the visit knowing I would never go back to this woman.

So when my friend Matt e-mailed me a seatbelt public service announcement while we were on the phone last night, I wasn’t sure what could be so great about it. Let me tell you though, I was captivated from the first frame. I proceeded to stop talking, watch it twice, talk to him about how beautifully done it was, then could hear him watching it again, so then I started watching it again, and then we watched it again a couple times together.

Now it’s your turn to watch (for as many times as you feel necessary. Go ahead. I’m not judging).

Right off the bat, the music had me. If I knew what song this was, I’d download it from iTunes. The music perfectly conveys the almost lyrical movements of the family, especially when the daughter and mom reach around the dad. And the way he flew forward had me wondering what sort of stunt appartus was involved to make everything look so realistic – maybe a trapeze or harness so that he could propel forward?

If it takes imagining the seatbelt as a hug from me in order for you to wear it, by all means, imagine away (though maybe it’s best for you to imagine it as hugs from other people, especially if we don’t know each other). Because believe me, you don’t want “The Cup” to happen to you.

SAFETY FIRST PEOPLE. BUCKLE UP.


Notes from the Universe

Posted: February 16th, 2010 | Author: Jacky | Filed under: Life, Quotes | 2 Comments »

I started subscribing to Notes from the Universe after I read one on Penelope Dullaghan’s blog. What’s been particularly ironic is how tailored the notes have been to my life the past few weeks — acknowledging all the fear and anxiety I’ve felt in the job search. The uncertainty about how I want my career to progress. Worrying about money and having a real income again. Each morning I look forward to reading them, and each morning the past few weeks I have felt a sense of relief and encouragement at the end of each note. That what I’m going through now will make me stronger. That it is not for nothing. That things will be OK. That I do not need to worry so much.

“Would you ever take a journey, Jacky, if you knew ahead of time that you’d become hopelessly lost, have your heart broken into pieces, and sometimes wish you’d never been born? Now, how about if you knew ahead of time that on that very same journey you’d also find yourself, fall passionately in love, and live happily ever after? Yeah, I know, you made the same choice a long, long time ago.”

What’s also great about signing up for the daily quotes is that your name is always included right in the message, so you feel like it was meant just for you.


Happy Anniversary to New York City and me

Posted: February 8th, 2010 | Author: Jacky | Filed under: Life | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

(I wrote this post on my three-year anniversary in New York City — January 27, 2010 — but didn’t get around to posting it then. A couple days later my mom reminded me that I moved to New York on January 26 — and she would know, because it’s her birthday. Regardless of the date, the feelings are the same).

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Three years ago today, I moved to New York. It was the day after my mom’s birthday. My family and I woke up very early in the morning to say our goodbyes. I cried a lot. My dad and I went to the airport. I was thankful that it was dark because I couldn’t stop crying. Then my dad and I got on a plane to New York. A few days after that, I cried again when I said goodbye to my dad. Then I opened a gift my mom had sent with my dad, the book “Love You Forever,” and started crying even more. Moving to New York meant a lot of crying for me and I wondered what I was doing to myself. Growing pains are hard.

Three years ago I moved into my first apartment with a stranger in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. I started my first real job. I wore tennis shoes to work and then switched into heels (eventually I ditched the heels, but I was totally Melanie Griffith Working Girl for awhile). I picked out which health insurance plan I wanted, even though I really didn’t understand the process. I filled out forms for my life insurance beneficiaries — my best friends and my sister. I hoped I wouldn’t die by getting hit by a cab or mugged by one of the 15,000 scary people out on the streets or internally combusting from all the noise or catching a rare disease from touching a subway pole.

Three years ago, I moved to a city where I knew only two people — my cousin and a friend from college, Lindsey. I got confused on the subway and sometimes wound up on Canal Street when I thought I was going to Times Square. I wanted to cover my ears because everything here was so loud. I said “Excuse me” when the situation called for it and people looked at me funny. After depositing my first paycheck, I bought my first iPod.

Three years later I am living with my cousin in an apartment that feels like home. I’m a pro at navigating the subway. I still get excited when I see celebrities. I’ve actually been tapped by a cab when I was going through a crosswalk and managed to walk away just fine (though with some nasty bruises). I realized that the people here aren’t scary, just different from the people I grew up around, that their vibrance and diversity is what makes New York City the way it is. The magazine I worked for ran an article called “25 Reasons I Love New York” compiled from reader submissions. This one particularly sums up what New York means to me too:

I love New York because it’s inconvenient. It makes you work a little harder. It wears you out. It forces you to interact with life. With the street musicians. With taxi cab drivers. Hot dog vendors. Hipsters. Baristas. Pigeons. Trash. Trees. Graffiti. Flower shops. Coffee shops. People riding the subway. People riding bikes. People talking on cell phones. People talking to themselves. You can’t hide from life in New York. Poor. Rich. Dirty. Ugly. Hungry. Spectacular. Honest. Unforgettable. I love New York. Unconditionally.

Three years seems like such an incredibly long time ago, especially considering all that has happened in the last six months. I was laid off (on my dad’s birthday). I started a freelancing job on my birthday (starting to notice a trend of life events coinciding with birthdays…). Then I traveled for five weeks. Had jury duty for three weeks. Was able to spend a solid amount of time at home for the holidays. I dog sat.

Three years later I am unemployed, trying to find a job that will keep me happy and keep me in New York. Funny the irony that life throws at you sometimes. Now I’m trying to figure out what to do with the rest of my life. Suggestions and job offers welcome. Just try me. All ears over here. I think there are jobs out there that I would love, but I don’t even know they exist. I’m open to a new experience, preferably one that pays all my bills with leftovers to fund my retirement, buy eclectic picture frames and purchase a unicorn.

Today I felt an intense urge to clean out my closet. I’m spending most of my days hunting for jobs, hopefully the next place where I can meet new people who will eventually become my friends and a place where I can learn new things, and if it happens to be somewhere I can see celebrities, well even better. But the hunt can be pretty overwhelming. So I decided I needed to clean. That whole feeling that maybe if I get my closet in order, everything else will have an easier time falling into place.

And what did I find but the customer receipt from Bank of America from when I deposited my first paycheck. A paycheck for seven days instead of the normal 10 since I started mid-week, which initially freaked me out when I didn’t realize this because the amount was not what my dad had budgeted and used in the Excel spreadsheet that basically said after taxes, health insurance, rent, utilities, student loans and food that I would have a whopping $5 of fun money each month. Thankfully I didn’t spend as much on life as my dad budgeted and I was able to have more than $5 of fun.

I have absolutely no clue what the next three years have in store for me. And that scares me. Because for so long I knew that I wanted to be in magazine journalism. I was on the yearbook staff all through high school and knew I would major in journalism in college. I worked on the yearbook, newspaper and magazine through college and new I wanted to end up at a magazine in New York. By some stroke of magic, I was offered the first job I applied for in New York shortly after graduation. I worked at that magazine for two and a half years, received a promotion, became incredibly close with co-workers and could see my career path clearly charted out. Then I was laid off in August 2009 and everything changed. I remember thinking afterward that the lay off was an opportunity. Which is much harder to grasp now that my career path is waiting for a new direction, one that I can’t chart out at the moment. For as long as I thought my future was in magazines, this economy is making me think otherwise.

But if these first three years here are any indication of my next three, I will make it through everything good, bad and scary just fine, thanks to my friends, my family, a couple cries and a good run.


Hello again.

Posted: February 6th, 2010 | Author: Jacky | Filed under: Life | No Comments »

I know I’ve been very quiet here for awhile. I’ve been so consumed with looking for and applying to jobs that things like writing and looking at blogs made me feel guilty — though I did reach some breaking points when I realized those were the exact things I needed to make me feel better, recharge me and inspire me. I haven’t been writing because the place where I am in life is confusing to me, sometimes overwhelming, and I was worried about sharing that publicly. Worried about looking fragile and totally unsure about my place and my future. But as I’ve been writing in notebooks, I’ve realized the sharing part is what makes things better, what helps us connect to others who can remind us that we are strong enough to handle this and things will work out in the end, even if this wasn’t the intended path.


Best of 2009 recaps

Posted: January 7th, 2010 | Author: Jacky | Filed under: Life | Tags: , , | 1 Comment »

A word that encapsulates your year? Unexpected. The magazine I worked for went through massive layoffs in March. Then I got laid off in August. My parents got a second dog. I was a freelance designer for the first time. Then I traveled for five weeks. When I returned from Costa Rica, I served on jury duty for three weeks, after which we found two men each guilty of four counts of murder and five counts of criminal possession of a weapon (dear readers, please stay away from MySpace and Far Rockaway, Queens. Thank you). And I finally succumbed and got a smart phone (not an iPhone, mind you, but I’m in love with it nonetheless).

What’s a gift you gave yourself this year that has kept on giving? Blank notebooks and pens. Even when I have writer’s block, there’s still something magical and therapeutic about backing away from the computer and putting an actual pen to paper.

Did you meet someone you used to only know from her blog? Senior year of college, I had an inkling to work for a magazine in South Africa. In the midst of my research, I came across Bridget McNulty’s blog. I followed her for quite awhile before finally sending her a note, because more often than not, the things she was writing about were the same things I was pondering. When she came to New York in May to promote her book Strange Nervous Laughter, she suggested meeting up. I about peed my pants.

When our lunch date finally arrived, I wore one of my favorite dresses, a light blue button-down with pockets and a sash at the waist. I told my then-boss (hi Amy!) that I had a dermatologist appointment during lunch and might be gone a little longer. I felt like sneaking out of school as I met Bridget and her friend Dan in the West Village at a little French restaurant called Cafe Henri.

The rest of the afternoon flew by, partially because I was a bit starstruck and still giddy from meeting someone I’d found online who wrote interesting things. I continue to be envious of Bridget, as she and her fiance are traveling the world now. You can catch their adventures over at The Sweet Life.

What advertisement made you think this year? Now that I’m unemployed, I sometimes turn on the TV in the afternoon for background noise while I’m organizing or making lunch. I never knew how many different TV court shows were on the air now. For the record, divorce court is actually pretty entertaining. The episode I caught involved a woman claiming that her soon-to-be-ex, Mr. Norwood, wasn’t nice to her dog. Mr. Norwood claimed his woman treated the dog better than him. Verdict: She definitely did, making steak for the dog but not her husband, and making Mr. Norwood sit in the back of the car because the dog’s car seat was in the front. Yes. Dog car seat. Because apparently the previous dog died when Mr. Norwood was driving and the dog flew out.

ANYWAY, the kinds of commercials that come on during the day are pretty ridiculous, much like TV court shows, and the one that left me flabbergasted was for the Liberator.

There are so many things wrong with this. Like washing a catheter and being afraid to talk to strangers. I am in no way saying that this was the best advertisement of 2009 — far from it. But it’s the most memorable, and shocking. People like this actually exist. And other people think they make good spokespersons. Whoa.


Home for the holidays

Posted: January 6th, 2010 | Author: Jacky | Filed under: Life | Tags: | No Comments »

After my eavesdropping experiment at Thanksgiving, I decided to continue the tradition while I was home for Christmas. Technically it wasn’t even eavesdropping, just remembering ridiculous things my family said so I could publish them on the internet. Except this time they knew what was in store for them. And they continued to open their mouths. And for that, I thank them.

Dad watching a KU game, before a 3-point shot: GRILL IT BABY!
(swoosh)
Dad: Put the steak in!
Me: Did you really just say “Grill it baby. Put the steak in”? … Now we’re cooking!

Dad, after a 3-pointer with 12 seconds left:
Twist that dagger! … Hey, don’t write that down.

Sister: Do they have wireless internet on airplanes? … That’s probably a stupid question.

Mom repeating a Jane Seymour jewelery commercial in a British accent, and adding her own ending: Leave your heart open. Learn to let love in…and buy necklaces.

Sister on the never ending drive to Christmas Eve dinner in a snow storm: I think I may be in grave danger of dying from hunger.

Mom to Zoe as she attacks the advent calendar, again: Baby Jesus isn’t there anymore. You ate him. What, do you think he reappears? … wait, he does. After the third day. You are a religious puppy!

Grandpa opening a scrapbook all the grandchildren made for our grandparents: Oh an album. We have about 15 of these at home that we never look at.

Mom, responding to an e-mail about a recipe I said I wouldn’t make because it requires cooking chicken: I was thinking we need to have a chicken intervention when you’re home next. Really, you need to get over that. Repeat after me: Raw chicken is my friend. It will not hurt me as long as I wash my hands after touching it.


Switch it, change it, rearrange it

Posted: December 19th, 2009 | Author: Jacky | Filed under: Life | Tags: , , , , , | No Comments »

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December 13 What’s the best change you made to the place you live?

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I have a love/hate relationship with my room. I love being in my room, surrounded by books and cards and pictures. I hate that I have a diagonal wall, and it’s hit or miss whether a nail will go through or just force the unknown materials to crumble to the ground. It makes decorating and positioning things difficult. So for the first, oh, nine months that I lived in the place, I just didn’t try. My walls were empty. It was a little depressing.

After I saw a blog post with a new spin on the clothesline concept, I bought some thin wire and more clothespins than I knew what to do with and hung cards and photos on one wall. Better in theory, because my cards weighed the wire down, and the clothespins wouldn’t stand up straight and looked freakishly large compared to the cards. So I abandoned that idea and returned to the Jacky Carter decorating staple: cork board squares, which I use to tack up notes, post cards, autographs (Hello, Hillary Clinton), hand drawn comics, photos, prints, cards…

But before I left to travel this fall, I took down everything on my walls and packed up everything in my room to store in my closest (which is in the living room…that’s how crazy New York is! As if the diagonal wall wasn’t enough) while another girl sublet my room. It was a pain, but coming back from such a life-changing trip felt like the perfect time to rethink how I wanted to decorate my room.

The big change I made, which really isn’t that big at all, was to take all the clutter and crap and toiletries off my dresser and put them in the top drawer instead. I downsized my pj collection to make room and put my socks in a basket. Now the top of my dresser is clean. I can’t tell you what a refreshing feeling that is — to have space and openness after two and a half years of make up mess.

Then I rearranged the contents of my bookshelf, transporting three small piles of books to my dresser and propping a “Keep Calm and Carry On” print on top of the books. Dudes. It was like “Extreme Makeover Home Edition” came in and Ty Pennington screamed “Moooooooove…thaaaaaat…buuuuuuussssss!” That’s the happiness I felt by that tiny little change. Which I think was more indicative of a shift in thinking and perspective after my trip. Of looking at the same stuff in my life, but just in a different way. I’ve managed to let some papers and a tad of clutter come back to the top of the dresser, but my “Keep Calm” reminder stays on top, so that’s just what I do…carry on.


Catch up

Posted: December 18th, 2009 | Author: Jacky | Filed under: Life | Tags: | 1 Comment »

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•••

New food
I forbid myself from buying a few things because most of the time I know as soon as they are in my kitchen, I will not be able to stop eating them until they are gone. Forget portions. Forget servings. I have no willpower in their presence. When it comes to dark chocolate with almonds, chips and salsa, and cheese with cranberries, oh watch out.

I’ve known the chocolate weakness for awhile, that’s why my cubemate Michael was responsible for storing our M&Ms, because I didn’t trust myself to not eat them all. Chips and salsa came as a surprise this year…it was always my BFF Natalie’s weakness, and every time I devoured a jar of Tostitos salsa in record time, I let her know, because she could understand. The cranberries and white cheddar cheese combo entered my life after evenings over at my friend Rebecca and Tamara’s homes, where they had nice little plates to hold the cheese and cute little bowls to hold the cranberries, and I hovered over the table combining them, debating whether it would be totally rude to eat the whole thing. I erred on the side of not being a complete ass and left some for everyone else.

Best place
Jet Blue airplanes. After flying on Jet Blue for five weeks with my All You Can Jet pass, I quickly became attached to the entire experience. All the free snacks I wanted (which was nice on a travel budget. My fav drink concoction was Diet Sprite mixed with Orange Fusion. Wild!). Satellite TV in each seat (I don’t even have cable at home. It was crazy!). And I love staring out the window at clouds, water and towns below. The Caribbean was gorgeous to see from overhead, which got me as close to Cuba as I will probably ever come.

There’s also something about the transition of going from place to place. The anticipation of a new experience or seeing old friends. The possibility and unpredictability of what’s ahead. When you’re up in a plane, the whole world is ahead of your (or below you, if you want to be all technical. WHATEVER).

Shop
My favorite shop was a lovely little place my friend Sammi took me to in Houston called ph design shop. It’s a stationery/paper goods store with a design studio in back. I loved all the products they carried (Sammi and I got really excited anytime we recognized someone’s work from Etsy) and I did not want to leave. Literally, I could have lived there. ph design shop was where I purchased my 2010 planner (yes people, I still use a paper one, in conjunction with my Google Calendar). My planner is the prettiest one in existence. The design shop also got me thinking of maybe one day having my own place like that — where I would sell adorableness and do custom designs too.


Location independence

Posted: December 9th, 2009 | Author: Jacky | Filed under: Life, Writing | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

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December 7 That gem of a blog you can’t believe you didn’t know about until this year.

•••

I would be lost without my Google Reader. Besides storing all the blogs I read every day, it also suggests new sites. Which is how I found A Life in Translation by Jamie Varon. She’s like Dooce for the younger generation, with some international flair. Jamie started her own business, moved to Italy and is basically living my dream life. At the age of 24. Boy do I feel old.

I found her site one day at work, right before I was laid off. I read every post. Then I e-mailed an annoying number of them to friends (let’s face it, they’re used to me flooding their e-mail with this kind of stuff). Her writing is hilarious and honest, and it makes me want us to be BFF.

She moved to Italy a day before I started my five-week travels, and I felt a sense of companionship as we both flung ourselves into new lands and experiences. I read her posts throughout my travels and became more jealous of her life as the end of my trip grew closer.

My jealousy eventually turned into inspiration — she had figured out how to do what I wanted: live and work abroad as a designer by starting her own business. Hello. Genius. (don’t worry, mom. My life plan currently allots a year abroad, not the rest of my life). And there’s an actual name to what she’s doing (and what I aspire to) — location independence. I was on a plane to Houston when I had the urge to figure out my two-year plan and how to get abroad. And this was when I realized that starting my own stationery business (which was a dream I was scared to admit earlier this year) was the key to my own location independence.

I could almost kiss my Google Reader for this introduction and the resulting revelation (but I don’t even touch my computer screen, so that kind of contact is out. Respect the electronics, peeps).


Dreaming big for the journey

Posted: December 6th, 2009 | Author: Jacky | Filed under: Life | Tags: | 1 Comment »

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December 6 Was there a conference or workshop you attended that was especially beneficial?

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I like to learn. After I’d worked at my old job for a year, I was eligible for tuition reimbursement. This was a big perk to staying at the job — that’s how much I wanted to take design classes (for free!). In the year leading up to this, I requested course catalogs from design and publishing schools in the city and would carefully highlight every class I wanted to take. Sometimes I would highlight and then flag. Then plan in my head when I could take what. New catalogs came three times a year and I did the same thing every. single. time. Even though the all same classes were offered. That’s how exciting this was for me.

My first semester, I enrolled in a typography class. The next semester I took a letterpress class (which was fun because I made T-shirts!). But leading up to my lay off in August, work was so stressful this year that I was only able to fit in a two-weekend class, which just wasn’t enough learning for me.

So I enrolled in some e-courses, for fun. The first was Marisa of Creative Thursday’s class, In the Fishbowl: Life as an Artist. At this point, I was just dipping my toes into the online world…not posting on the blog very much (not even telling many people about it), not sure what direction I wanted to take in my creative world or how to get there. The online community was incredibly supportive and encouraging. Right as the course wrapped up, I was laid off. Which felt like some sort of connection I couldn’t forsee but found comfort in. Marisa was also the one who introduced me to video blogs, which became a large part of my five week travels after I lost my job.

A few weeks before I was laid off (and still had a regular paycheck!), I enrolled in another e-course, Mondo Beyondo: An online class about dreaming big, with Jen Lemen and Andrea Scher. Unintentionally the most amazing thing I could do. Two weeks after I lost my job, this class started and along with it lots of thinking about what I really wanted to do in life. The lessons, love notes and podcasts were exactly what I needed as I entered this new phase of life — this very big unknown, filled with as much possibility as I’d allow. I didn’t take as much advantage of the course and community as I would’ve liked since I was traveling, so I signed up again for the January session (thank you alumni rate).

As for an official workshop though…I have that to look forward to in February. I’m taking Jen Lee’s Companions for the Journey: A Voice and Story Retreat in Brooklyn. I think it’s going to be magical and I’m really looking forward to having the benefit of in-person instruction and community. There is solid chance I will cry at some point during the retreat (good tears though) because I know it’s going to be that amazing and transformative. And we have tickets to see “Wicked” on Broadway. I get giddy just thinking about it.