Do You Ever Feel Not Enough?

Yesterday I found myself fighting the little "I'm not enough" demons, which is insane really because I just spent an entire week working on an assignment and putting all my efforts into doing an outstanding job. Regardless of what may come of it, it felt good to submit a package of hard work that Friday morning. So why was I focusing on my shortcomings when the last month has been nothing but passion and drive?

Too often we focus on the other end of the line, creating an endless string of goals and living from one milestone to the next. It's always good to be ambitious and to work towards self-improvement, but sometimes I feel like I want to just be loved and wanted for who I am in between all those transformations. Yes, future me will be much more awesome than my current self, but that doesn't mean that I'm any less wonderful right here and now. The same goes for you. I forget that sometimes. I forget that while better would always be nicer, I can live with what I have and who I am now. If I decided to stop morphing today because in my heart I felt that I had become the person I'd envisioned for myself, the world would truly just carry on.

But I'm not quite there yet and beyond following the dots of goals leading me through the next decade, my life has also become a dance between striving for better and being gentle with the person who's taking me there: me. If I don't take care of her now and let her know how much she's appreciated, then where would that leave me in the future? Some people might respond to tough love, silently berating themselves to get them through that next mile, but why hate on the person who's out there sweating and putting in the effort? Don't they deserve some love, too?

Even if there's something more you're aiming for, I think it's okay to say that we're just doing the best we can with what we have and who we are. That's got to count for something.

Image: pinterest.com

Burning Man: Self-Reliance + Self-Expression

Every time Halloween comes around I always wish the day could last forever and find it funny that the process of dressing up in a different character gives me more liberty to be myself. Perhaps it's because under the guise of being something else, I give myself permission to act how I wish I normally could - silly, playful, joyous, loud - but with limited liability for embarrassment. Basically, I wish I could dress up like Strawberry Shortcake if I felt like it and not be met with odd looks on the street.

In August I'll be heading to the annual Burning Man festival in northwestern Nevada. For an entire week, I'll be camping in the temporary Black Rock City with tens of thousands in an expanse of desert and heat. It sounds intense, it sounds inconvenient, uncomfortable, and rather rough, but after A.'s initial trek there last year I knew I wanted to go and see what I could gain from the experience. In the beginning, it was just to add it to my list and check it off as an accomplishment (because no lie, I'd never even heard of this hippie fest until a couple years ago), but as the date creeps closer, I'm starting to really think about why am I investing into this.

To me it's a personal challenge. It's not just about whether I can live in a tent for seven days, battle the daytime blaze and the cold each night, whether I can handle the blinding dust storms, or if A. and I will emerge from the desert with our relationship still intact. It's more about if I can allow myself to be genuine, curious, and selfless without that fear of what others might think. It's about discovering something about myself that I can then carry back with me...even if it's just the permission to be happy and a realization that everyone's just trying to do the same for themselves and therefore are too busy to spend much time judging you.

I know these are things I can learn here and now without a 10-hour drive or eating PB&J's for a straight week, but I hope this wholly different environment will become my playground and spark something within me. I hope that being surrounded by others who allow themselves to be free and express their character in any myriad of creative ways will make me feel comfortable to explore my own inclinations. If I want to run through Black Rock City in a makeshift bee outfit, then you'd better believe I'm doing it. I'm going to Burning Man to see what comes out of Dorkys, see what transformations I can nudge out of her, and what bits can be left out to disintegrate under the Nevada sun. And I guess seeing some major art installations burn in to the ground in spectacular fashion would be pretty cool, too.

Here's a little taste from last year's Burning Man:


Image: Courtesy of Andrew Gonsalves

Work + Life Imbalance

Most Thursday afternoons from 1pm-2pm EST, I participate in a weekly tweet chat with a community of creatives led by Oh My! Handmade Goodness. Yesterday's #omhg convo revolved around how we sometimes work ourselves to the ground, but don't feel comfortable enough to take a break or nurture ourselves. Some of us feel that unless we keep chugging 24/7 we're never going to get anywhere or that the work we already put in will somehow unravel while we sleep. We live in a society that applauds the overachievers, the ones who pull the all-nighters, and clock in for over-time. I'm not going to lie, I admire those who go above and beyond for their careers and passions and even possess some of those workaholic tendencies when I'm working on something I love. There have been times when I've found myself deeply entrenched in a project only to come up for air hours and hours later and realize that I haven't eaten and it's past my bedtime. And yet those have been some of my proudest moments.

Relaxing and sleeping just raises my anxiety levels because I feel guilty and lazy, which allows me to enjoy neither. (In fact, sleep deprivation and anxiety are quite connected.) If I'm not making progress, I'm standing still and standing still means I'm not propelling myself anywhere. In New York City, it feels like the entire world is in perpetual motion. You're rushed along with the rush regardless of whether you've someplace to go or not. You're speeding, running, zooming, breathlessly weaving your way through the crowds to get to...where? Sometimes I feel that if I just stand still, I'll either get trampled by the masses or just watch the world leave me behind.

I grew up with the notion that I'll have to work until the day I die in order to survive in this country. This work ethic, instilled in me by immigrant parents who wanted better for their children, can be a killer, but also satisfying. For the past month leading up to Porcupine Hugs' market debut at the Artists & Fleas in Brooklyn, I had been up to neck in card designs, display props, packaging materials, and getting the word out about last weekend's event. Last week, I thought I'd lose my mind from the stress and doubted my ability to even become a successful entrepreneur when my medical bills keep piling on. "I've no business owning my own company when I have other financial concerns," I told myself. In my mind, it would have been better to stop investing in this thing I loved in order to be a "responsible adult." Besides, who decides to start their own business when they're slowly descending into debt?

Who the hell cares.

This past weekend I realized that I was in my element. Not only did I see all my hard work and long nights come together, but I spent two whole days chatting with all kinds of interesting characters. People from out of town who stopped in on their way to the Renegade Craft Fair up the block, foreigners with tales of markets overseas, and stories from other creatives who wanted to know more about my process and in turned shared theirs. Jenelle Montilone of TrashN2Tees, whom I'd only recently "met" through the #omhg chat, even popped in for a visit while she was in town. My spirit was zooming just after the first day. I was proud of myself and elated that others appreciated my work because it made the insanity that preceded it completely worth it.

That said, I really need to get on that whole work-life balance dream. While I had no problems holing myself up in my apartment, I also craved oxygen, exercise, sunlight, play. Yet I consistently deprived myself of these things because I'd convinced myself that work was more important than those frivolous pursuits. I know for a fact that had I attempted any or allowed myself a moment to do nothing in the middle of the storm, I wouldn't have felt the calm. I would have just wanted to dash right into the winds and continue ignoring my spirit's yell for quiet.

Mohawk Project

Would you ever visit an art gallery under the sea? The USS Mohawk, a World War II warship turned artificial reef off the coast of Sanibel Island in Florida, is currently hosting the works of photographer Andreas Franke. For his latest underwater experiment, titled Mohawk Project, Franke has installed 12 images within the sunken ship's inner spaces.
He imagined what life would have been life for the sailors aboard the ship and superimposed images of models in 1940s clothing onto haunting photos of the decaying ship underwater. The 2.5 by 3.5-foot-long images - each of which is encased in steel-framed plexiglass - will also grow to inhabit marine life and transform over the next three months. Divers exploring the Gulf of Mexico will get to enjoy the view surrounded by whale sharks and exotic fishes until Sept. 15. Afterwards, those of us who prefer to remain firmly planted on solid ground can view the photographs when they're put on display at the Lee County Alliance for the Arts galleries in Fort Myers, Florida from Oct. 4th through the 26th.
Between 1942 and 1945, the USS Mohawk launched 14 attacks against enemy subs in the Atlantic and rescued more than 300 survivors from torpedoed ships during WWII.

"I imagined these sailors waiting in the North Atlantic for a German sub to attack them," Franke told CNN. "So in these images I tried to make their lives a little bit nicer with the girls on board."

"If I was there, what would I want? It's a dream, a fantasyland for sailors."

Images: thesinkingworld.com