T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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182.1 | You must hear a different drummer | AKOFIN::MACMILLAN | | Wed Jun 06 1990 17:57 | 7 |
| I'm not sure what the question is but you sound great to me Carla. Your
path isn't one I'd choose but thats why you're on it and I'm on mine.
Do you hear a different drummer? That's great..sounds like you're
having a great life.
-D-
|
182.2 | Just say no to stability! | TLE::D_CARROLL | The more you know the better it gets | Wed Jun 06 1990 18:05 | 20 |
| Carla,
I understand how your feel. I like constant change...new living spaces, new
friends, new work to do, etc. (I *loevd* school because it changed
constantly.) I also found that recently my dependence on the presence of
others has almost vanished. The thought of spending the rest of my life
"alone" (ie: unmarried) doesn't scare me like it used to, and, in fact,
sounds more and more appealing.
I could never and would never want to give up on people altogether. By
lately I haven't been buying into the "long term stability" myth presented
by society. Stability? Why?
People tell me, though, that I am feeling this way just because of my young
age.
D!
[I'm considering a new apartment, even though I have only been in mine for
about 5 months]
|
182.3 | but I like my chair in this corner | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Wed Jun 06 1990 19:37 | 18 |
| Oh I don't know Carla, I miss you and you've hardly gone. Maybe it's
just us old folks that like stability. ;*)
When I was younger I moved around, changed jobs, was alone, was with
someone, and alternated these patterns numerous times. I rarely stayed
in one place for a year. I lived that way for several years and crossed
several states in my restlessness.
I still feel the desire for periodic change but also find comfort in a
certain stability. I like my current house and the state I live in.
Right now I'm not thinking about moving but it's always possible. I've
been known to make radical changes at a moments notice in the past.
As for relationships, I'm beginning to believe that lifelong
attachments are the exception and not the rule. I'd like another
relationship in my life but I don't think I'd ever get married again.
It seems too binding and scary anymore. Perhaps it's just that I
realised that the stabilty of marriage was only an image. liesl
|
182.4 | me | SNOC02::WRIGHT | PINK FROGS | Wed Jun 06 1990 21:32 | 14 |
| Carla,
Quite simply I just think that "you are you". *I* don't like been
alone, I prefer people around me. Not to depend on just to be there.
I don't even need to have to talk to them. A presence is fine.
I also like stability in my homelife. Somewhere cosy and welcoming to
live that I can settle into. Work is a little different, yes I like
variety, don't we all. I also like sticking to things and seeing them
out and watching things change. It gives me satisfaction.
This is just the way I am. I don't htink Ill change when I get older.
I like me now.
C'est la vie.
Holly
|
182.5 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | fantasia | Thu Jun 07 1990 09:09 | 6 |
| Well, when it comes to change, it makes me nervous, if not downright
scared sometimes. Stability seems so much *safer*, because it's a
*known* commodity.
-Jody
|
182.6 | Hey, *you're* the one with "Changes fill my time" :-) | TLE::D_CARROLL | The more you know the better it gets | Thu Jun 07 1990 10:08 | 16 |
| > scared sometimes. Stability seems so much *safer*, because it's a
> *known* commodity.
Aha! Maybe that explains something. Stability is *not* a known commodity for
me. I have almost never experienced it. When I was growing up, I moved
from town to town and state to state at least every two years. The longest
time I ever spent in one place was at RPI for four years. And that doesn't
really count, below school provides it's *own* changes. A quarter of the
population changes every year, classes change, I moved every 6 months while
I was there, etc.
Maybe I am just *scared* of things staying the same?
I get bored easily. My life has to be chaos...
D!
|
182.7 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | another day in paradise | Thu Jun 07 1990 10:12 | 21 |
| Even if I had the money to move constantly, two conflicts for me
would always be that I'm a collector and I have pets. And, if I
had more money I would collect *more* things. If a person likes
to nice things around, and collect things, such as a lot of oil
paintings, glass things, etc., it can be more difficult to move
often. Also, it would be hard to move often or long distances with
a lot of pets, and would never give up my cats just to move someplace
else. Still, a third thing, if someone owns a home and has worked
hard to plant trees and shrubs and create a nice flower garden,
it can be sad to leave it all. I still miss my rose bush from the
house my ex-husband and I owned. I planted it. I drove by the
other day and it was starting to bloom and I wanted to stop the
car and dig it up -"Give me my rose bush!" I can understand the
appeal of travel and change but my conflict is that when I find
something I like, I get attached to it.
I also prefer to have people around me most of the time, as long
as I have some privacy.
Lorna
|
182.8 | Carla...you're making me think | AKOFIN::MACMILLAN | | Thu Jun 07 1990 11:00 | 14 |
| Carla raises some interesting issues here. I'm sure that all of
us at one time or another has wished to break free somehow. No more spouses,
children, jobs comittments and things which tie us down to one situation or
another.
I've asked myself (more and more as I get older) what did I buy into
here? Is this where I want to be in my life? This responsible family man thing
is it real does it offer meaningfulness?
Do I remain in the situation because of a sense of reponsibility or
is it that I lack Carla's courage and because of it I avoid a greater growth?
-D-
|
182.9 | "and freedom, oh! freedom..." | ULTRA::THIGPEN | T.A.N.J. | Thu Jun 07 1990 11:40 | 33 |
| Hmmm. Being a grownup is awful -- you have to take responsibility for
your choices. And then commit to the choice, and accept both the
rewards and regrets. Two examples.
My older brother chose (in some sense) the path of "freedom". He has
never married. He has studied lots of stuff in and out of school --
anthropology, engineering, ecology. He has lived in various parts of
the country. He has pursued various interests, inclucing his latest
craze, boats, without being restricted by the needs of others. A good
characterization would be that he doesn't make compromises, and will
not give up his freedom. He likes all that part. But he has regrets,
like he would like (probably his fantasy/ideal of) much of what I have:
home, family, stability, etc.
I have also chosen (in some sense) a path. I spent time early on
travelling and working in various minimum-wage jobs. I went back to
college and got a degree, luckily in something practical. Got married
at 25, and got a job in a corporation -- the start of compromises, or
tradeoffs, if you will. After being married for 5 years, I had a
child, and 2 years later another. I love my family, and usually have
fun with them. I often have fun at work too :'). I enjoy my home and
garden, they give me a lot of satisfaction. But my freedom is
constrained, in that I would like to do things that at least for now I
cannot do -- things my brother can if he chooses -- like spend more time
in a canoe for example, or go woods-walking alone, or read till all
hours.
So, my take on it goes like this. There are many paths, and many for
each of us. I have chosen, and committed to my choice, knowing that it
will bring me both satisfactions and frustrations, contentment and
regret, at different times. If it becomes unbearable or sufficiently
unrewarding, I will change it. While I am happy on it, I will stay on
the path. But I may look at the scenery...
|
182.10 | | RAVEN1::AAGESEN | being happy shouldn't be illegal | Thu Jun 07 1990 12:41 | 13 |
|
re. D!
i think i understand what you are saying...
for you, stability would be a change
so you are more comfortable with *change* which you try and keep a
stable occurance of...
(-:
~r
|
182.11 | The only constant... | DELNI::POETIC::PEGGY | Justice and License | Wed Jun 13 1990 18:43 | 20 |
|
stability - thats what comes with old age or something???
I can not move from place to place so I change the place
I stay at - Ask my kids - I move the rooms around all
the time.
The trouble with change is that it is so constant.
I perfer to be by myself more often than not but I do
enjoy watching people interact.
But then who ever said I as a mature, responsible person.
_peggy
(-)
|
She changes everything she touches
and everything she touches changes.
|