I am relatively new to this whole blogging thing. But due to the encouragement of some well-meaning (but perhaps ambitious) people and a promise to myself that I should, would, must continue to write upon graduation, here I am. Based purely on instinct, I feel that the first thing to be done is to explain a well-intentioned but of course cheesy blog title.
Let’s just be honest here: choosing a title for a blog could be the number one reason that I did not start writing one three months ago. Well, that and about 250 pages worth of papers to write that would actually matter for something. But here we are sticking with a name that popped into my befuddled head just this afternoon-- Experiments in Breathing.
I know, weird, right? But let’s take a peek at my thought process. (Lucky you!)
As I sit and actually get a chance to think about this new phase (meaning post-graduation), it seems as though my life will continue to change at a pace so rapid, I’ll barely have time to breathe. At least, that is how any big life change makes me feel. If I may be so cliché, it is a little bit like a roller-coaster, or rather, waiting in line for a roller-coaster at this point. It’s exciting, and terrifying. You’re among friends, and of course you are all pretending confidence like it is your job (even though none of you actually have a job yet). You sort of know what is coming because you read the description and hear other people screaming. You laugh and joke about that last corn dog you probably shouldn’t have eaten (as if eating a corndog could ever be a good idea). And if you think too hard, you might find that you have to recalibrate your breathing.
That fear, that excitement, that falsely bold anticipation is wonderfully choking. That heart-in-your-throat feeling, the I-might-wet-myself anxiety (TMI?) pressing on your chest and lungs with the weight of a small elephant. Well, you get the picture. Sometimes, it’s difficult to breathe.
And this is where the name comes from. I am charging at full speed around a blind corner with my life-source trapped in those spongy bags encased in my ribs. There is a new diploma featuring the seemingly unattainable bachelor’s degree under the clutter on my dresser. A wedding gown drapes the mirror, frustrating the glass’s attempts to reflect the unfinished childhood memories piled on my floor awaiting a trip to Goodwill. My wonderful fiancé is spending this weekend moving furniture into a tiny apartment four states southwest. I browse web sites with recipes and pillowcases to procrastinate the necessary research on grad programs.
So here it comes. Here I sit in the home of my “childhood” working myself up to strap myself in and learn how to breathe over and over again.
Oh Hannah...this is lovely...good for you for getting this up and running right away...looking forward to reading what you have to say...keep breathing (in/out, in/out!!!) ha ha ha...
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