The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up (your life.)

Marie Kondo, Marie Kondo-ing the place.

Hi everyone – it’s me, the Sparkly Single Girl, version 2019. I’m launching back into the blog with a topic that now makes everyone’s hearts pitter patter with “joy” (omg, get it?!).

Unless you’ve been living under a rock for the past month, you may have heard of Marie Kondo and her book/new series on Netflix, “The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up”. Since the series’s release on January 1st, donation centers around America have been over-loaded with our clothes, books, Ikea furniture, and general knick-knacks, after having been inspired by Marie to de-clutter our homes and our lives.

I, too, was inspired by this new way of living – get rid of my size 6 jeans that will (sadly) never fit again, you say? Bid adieu to the old bridesmaids dresses (sorry ladies) that I actually won’t ever wear again, you encourage? Exclaim adios to 100 tangled cords from electronic devices that will only be antiques to my future children, you demand? Well Marie, you didn’t have to tell me three times – I was on board from the start!

The tiny jeans, out-dated bridesmaids dresses, and knotted cords are easy for us all…but then it comes time for the harder stuff, the bigger stuff. The stuff that doesn’t necessarily fit so easily in a box.

Luckily for us, Marie has a tidying method that even includes those hard things.

1. Commit to tidying up all at once.

This is the crucial beginning to the tidying up process – when you only do things a bit as you go, you don’t always make a big enough dent in the issue. Marie says, “the ultimate secret to success is this: if you tidy up in one shot, rather than little by little, you can dramatically change your mindset”.

She was right. I tried bit by bit for quite sometime, but things tended to spill over to just more things. Eventually, it was time to sit down, make a list, and just try to save all the important stuff in one sweep.

2. Does this spark joy?

Next, Marie requires that you remove everything from your drawers, closets, and hiding places, put it all in a pile on the floor, hold each item in your hand, and ask yourself…”Does this bring me joy?”.

If the answer is yes, you keep it. If the answer is no, you don’t.

For me, when it came time to put all the “non-joyful” things together in a pile, the sheer weight of it was overwhelming. It just wasn’t right to continue living like that, and looking at it all as a whole, it was honestly terrifying. How could I have been living my life for so long with so many things that didn’t make me happy?

3. Thank you, next.

The simultaneously most simple and complex of Marie’s steps: get rid of it. Take all those things that didn’t bring you joy, thank each item for its service, and rid it from your life.

For me (and I think, for most) this was my hardest step. Deciding what no longer brought me joy was easy – I think naming what doesn’t is surprisingly uncomplicated for most people, once you really set out to do it. The hard part for me, though, was the gratitude. Thanking these things for taking up space in my life? For only bringing me more clutter, more sadness, more pain?

I may not have been able to genuinely thank everything, but I tried as best I could. I suppose for me, the transformation didn’t happen as I said goodbye to the things in my life that I no longer wanted, but rather as I could noticeably see all the things in my life that did spark joy.

4. Organize by category.

This is it, the final step. All that’s left is to decide where you’re keeping whatever you’ve decided is most important to be kept. Store everything of the same type and of the same size in one, same place.

As I packed up my boxes of my most precious, joyful items, I thoughtfully organized what was left. My beloved coffee table books full of beautiful tablescapes and wedding gowns went into one pile, and would easily fit on my bookshelves. My size 14 jeans (go suck it, size 6 jeans) and precious jewelry into another box, ready to fit seamlessly into my closest and dresser drawers. My diplomas and many client files into a third, ready for walls and cabinets, and on and on, until the very biggest, most beautiful, hard-to-fit items – my dignity, my strength, my generosity, my friendship, my honesty. All desperately trying to make it’s way back into one comfortable me-sized body, which had felt cluttered for so long.

It’s been 6 weeks, and all in all, I’m feeling much better than I was when I started this process.

Tidying up your home, or your life, is hard. It’s so easy to get to a point where you’re honestly just comfortable living in the mess you’ve made for yourself, because it’s scarier to admit anything different. I think Marie’s ultimate point is just letting us all know that it’s healthy to occasionally evaluate the things that take up space in our lives, for better or for worse.

And at the end of the day? Sometimes you just have to throw all your shit in a pile on the floor, face the facts, and ask yourself the tough questions.

When it comes to relationships, although the right choice may not always be as easy as getting rid of an old pair of jeans, sometimes you may need to step back, put it in the palm of your hands, take a deep breath, and ask yourself:

Does this bring me joy?

This is why I’m single (and a little bit lighter).

All The Things Non-Single People Say to Single People About Being Single (and how to respond).

Happy Valentine’s Day to all!!!

I'm Single Photo

For the record, I am not bitter about being single during Valentine’s Day – I completely love this made-up, money-making, silly Hallmark holiday, because for me, it’s hard not to love a day filled with pink, sparkly things and lots and lots of hearts and flowers.

However.

After the previous, slightly more intense post, I thought it might be an entertaining Valentine’s treat for you all to read about all the fun catch phrases that 2016 singles hear from 2016 non-singles (with some colorful commentary on how those singles might like to respond, but just smile and nod instead).  These are all very real things that have actually been said to me, or to other singles I know, and I couldn’t think of a better time to write about them than on this weekend full of love and hand-holding and hearts and wine and kisses and flowers and candy and hugs and social media posts about how much y’all truly love your best friends, bla bla bla drink.

Non-Singles:  “Don’t worry about that last one – there’s plenty of fish in the sea!”

Singles:  Yeah, umm…

 

Non-Singles:  “You should try smiling more!”

Singles:  What?!?!!!!  People like it when you smile?!?!!!  OMG WHY HAVE I NEVER THOUGHT ABOUT THAT IF I JUST SMILED AT THE BAR/WITH FRIENDS/AT WORK/IN MY ONLINE-DATING-PROFILE-PICTURES MAYBE SOMEONE WOULD LIKE ME BUT UGHHHH NOOOOO I HATE SMILING AND BEING PLEASANT AND HAVING FUN AND WHEN I MEET NEW PEOPLE IT’S LIKE A PERSONAL RULE THAT I DON’T SMILE FOR AT LEAST THE FIRST THREE HOURS BECAUSE IT’S SO IMPORTANT TO JUST BE YOURSELF AND FOR PEOPLE TO TRULY LOVE ME FOR WHO I AM ON THE INSIDE WHICH YOU CLEARLY THINK IS MISERABLE AND SO SMILING WOULD JUST GIVE OFF THE WRONG IMPRESSION I MEAN I’VE GOTTA JUST DO ME!  Revolutionary advice.  Said no one…..ever.

Non-Singles:  “You’ll meet someone once you start doing the things you love!”

Singles:  Thank you for insulting my current job/career/hobbies/home/free time activities/friends/philanthropies/family/pets that make up this little thing that I call “my life”.  You are super right – all of those things suck.  What I actually love is to sit at home in my sweats watching Netflix and old Friends reruns, drinking beer, eating Kraft mac’n’cheese and pouring SmartFood white cheddar popcorn straight into my mouth from the bag, so there is no doubt that those are the things that are going to help me find my partner.  Amen sister!  Oh, and can you make yourself useful and pass me the Doritos bag?

Non-Singles:  “We’ve got to get you a man/woman!”

Singles:  The government has already punished me by not giving me a tax break for being single, and my married friends still force me into some sort of humiliating bouquet/garter toss at their weddings.  Please do not also punish me through this cup of coffee by telling me what I need.  If dating someone is something I want, guaranteed I’ll already be working on it.  If not dating someone is something I want, I won’t be working on it.  And that should be totally okay, either way.

Non-Singles:  “You’ve just got to play the game.”

Singles:  It’s suuuuuuper cute that you like to look back on your current relationship and think you “played the game”, because I remember the major-excitedness, instant obsession, and double-texting that came with the start of that relationship my friend.  And the true beauty of this lie is that not only were you just yourself, but so was your partner, and guess what?  You loved each other for it!  So why anyone would ever want to brag about “playing the game” well is beyond me.  You should want to be yourself, and be proud of that.  If “playing the game” means I have to actually waste hundreds of minutes waiting to respond to text messages, pretending to be cooler than I actually am, or faking that I’m only so-so interested…then holy cannoli, that person isn’t going to be the one for me.

Non-Singles:  “Why do you have to be dating somebody?”

Singles:  I don’t have to be dating somebody.  Am I surviving on my own?  Of course I am!  But if I’m trying to date somebody, that means I would like to be.  Why isn’t that okay?  You’ve been in a relationship for a certain number of weeks/months/years – do I ask you why YOU have to be dating somebody?  Nope!

Iphone Sync Oct-Nov 2015 003

 

Non-Singles:  “So…have you ever thought about what you’re going to do about having kids?”

Singles:  Yes people.  This is a real question we get asked – all.the.time.  WHY – WHY do you ask us this?  Because of our age?  What would you like us to do about this?  March on down to the sperm bank?  Tell you we’re considering adoption/fostering?  Would we then get asked (judgmentally) about deciding to do that as a single parent?  If there is anything I’ve learned as I’ve come into adulthood, it’s that fertility is a very real and extremely common issue in so many people’s lives.  I don’t think I know anyone who doesn’t have someone in their life who hasn’t been effected by this issue.  Do you honestly think your single (most likely female, as clearly this is the group that this question is directed towards) friend hasn’t already thought about this possibility, including their age and current single life as a factor?  Then you should probably stop.talking.  If it’s something we’re worried about, and we want to chat about it – we’ll bring it up, and we’ll let you know!  Until then, I’m sorry – just, no.  No.

Non-Singles:  “How old are you?  Oh….you’ve got time.  Oh…no you don’t”.

Singles:  Again, I assume this has to do mostly with women, fertility and child-rearing.  See above.

Non-Singles:  “Have you tried online dating?!”

Singles:  “OH MY GOSH YOU ARE SO SMART THIS IS A BRILLIANT IDEA!!!!!” also said no one ever.  I honestly do not know a single single-person who has not tried online dating.  This is probably because, ya know, we’re living in a time where all of our daily processes now happen through the internet (communication, paying bills, music, shopping, education, current events, collaboration, health care, reading smart and witty blogs).  So yes – we have tried it/are trying it/taking a break from it.  It’s fun, and a lot of work, and exciting, and exhausting.  We’ll keep you updated!

Non-Singles:  “I have a friend/sibling/child/cousin/neighbor/dog’s godmother who was on match/jdate/tinder/plentyoffish/eharmony/happen/christianmingle/okcupid/bumble and they met the man/woman of their dreams!!! You should try that!!!  It’s SOOOOO different than all those other apps/sites!!!”

Singles:  Actually – no, it’s not different at all.  Those success stories make us happy!!  We are so glad for your friend/sibling/child/cousin/neighbor/dog’s godmother!  That’s why we’ve signed up for these things in the first place!  They’ve all jumped off the bridge, so we are too (because when we were little our parents told us it was cool to jump off bridges when our friends were doing it) – but don’t tell us that any of the people on these sites are different from any of the people on the other sites, and that’s what makes them “better” or “more successful” – especially if you have never had to go through this online dating experience yourself.  I know this because I myself have been on multiples of these sites, and I was the same “me”, with the same intentions on each site.  It’s up to us to decide if the person we meet has the same motivation for being on the app/site as us, and we go from there, but I believe the chances of us meeting the person we’re looking for (whatever that may mean) are the same across all of these platforms.  It’s all about finding the platform that works best for you at the time – and most likely, the single person you’re talking to has already done the “research” and is using or not using the sites that have the right process for them.

Non-Singles:  “You’re sounding so negative about all of this.  Maybe you’re not trying hard enough!”

Singles:  Fuck.  Off.  (Sorry, there’s no polite equivalent.)

And my ALL-TIME, ABSOLUTE FAVORITE….. 

Non-Singles:  “I promise, you’ll meet them when you’re not looking!!!!”

Singles:  Iphone Sync February 2016 248

Alllllrightyyyyy then – how ’bout now?

This is why I’m (supposed to be a fisherman, a dentist, a dream-follower, a damsel in distress, a strategist, an independent woman, a mom, a racer, an internet expert, a motivator, a blind spinster, and) single.

You’re A Fat Bitch.

I have both desperately wanted to write this, and been dreading the writing of this post since the beginning of September.  I have gone back and forth about whether it was “appropriate” for the internet, or maybe too much information, or if anyone would even care.  But after talking about this story – at length – with a few great and very supportive friends, I’ve decided that I think it’s important enough to be shared, and I guess since I’m the author of this blog, that’s good enough.

This story starts with me on a first date with a man I met through a dating app while living in London.  We talked for about 4 days before we decided to meet for a drink at one of my local pubs.  I was having dinner with a girlfriend beforehand, and she even met him for a brief minute before leaving us to our date.  He was 29, and worked in finance at a prestigious firm in the city.  He seemed intelligent, charismatic, polite, and looked cute in his pictures.

We talked about our families, our jobs, our friends, and my program at university.  I had one glass of wine, and he had two beers.  It was a bank holiday Monday (Labor Day) and so the pub closed pretty early.  He asked if I wanted to come back to his flat, where he lived with 5 other flatmates, for another drink.  I said yes, because I was having a nice time.  Although apparently saying yes to this question has a bad rep, for some men and women, this actually doesn’t have to mean anything besides wanting to have another drink and continuing time with this person.  BTW.

We left the pub and he ordered a cab because it was too far to walk.  When I began to chat with our cab driver (a favorite pastime of mine and my sister’s – great cultural opportunity!) he was out-rightly rude to him.  It irked me a little – I cannot tell you how strongly I disrespect someone who doesn’t treat a person in the service industry properly.  There is no better sign of character.  Anyways, as soon as this started happening, I started to get that bad feeling in the pit of my stomach, you know, when you start to feel a little nauseous, because you know something is just “off”?

We pull up in front of a building in the middle of a block in central London that looks totally normal, just like a normal apartment building, with the number on the door.  We walk in, and still, just like a normal apartment building – some doors, some mailboxes, some stairs.  We walk up the first flight of stairs, and come to a small chamber at the landing – a desk, with an open window.

This is because we are not in an apartment building.  We are in England’s version of a motel.

He gives the clerk his last name, because he has a reservation.  A reservation people.  Because apparently this was something he had planned.

Words cannot even describe my shock value here.  I won’t even bother to try, except for repeating the facts, that he had said we were going back to his flat for a drink, which was supposedly not too far from the pub, because we both lived locally.  Supposedly.

Here comes the scary part for me to admit to internet-land:

Although I was shocked, and starting to feel slightly terrified about the situation, I was so worried about being rude and feeling embarrassed in front of the hotel clerk, I didn’t say anything (at least not right away).

Tina Fey’s brilliant Netflix series “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” begins with such a witty, interesting, and what I believe to be very truthful commentary from Matt Lauer on The Today Show, where he interviews women who (in the show) have been falsely held captive for most of their lives.  He says, “I’m always amazed at what women will do, because they’re afraid of being rude”.

Whether anyone else believes that to be true, I can’t tell you how much I felt that being in this situation – and how stupid I feel because of it looking back.

After we walked away from the clerk, I felt brave enough to say:

“I’m sorry – I’m so confused…I thought we were going back to your flat??”  And he explained, saying that because he had so many flatmates, he thought we would just have better “alone time” being at a hotel.  There are so many things wrong with this statement, but the biggest, and most important part, is that he didn’t ask or tell me that this was what was happening.

I told him that I was sorry, but I actually just needed to go home.

His response?

“Are you fucking kidding me?  I fucking paid for this you fat bitch!”

His personality all of a sudden became clear, and it was a complete 180 degrees from the person I had just had a drink with at the pub.  All of a sudden the reality of the situation flooded through me.  I did not know this person at all.  I didn’t know his parents names or his best friends.  I couldn’t remember the company he worked for.  I didn’t know where he lived.  I didn’t know what neighborhood I was in.  I didn’t know the name of the hotel.  No one – no one – knew where I was, or who I was with.  It was seriously like I was in some awful movie and things were moving in slow-motion.  And it was completely, fucking scary.

How did I respond?

With silence.

I turned around, and literally ran down the stairs, outside, and around the corner, and thank God there was an uber just one minute away.

This man called me 18 times in a row after I left, with text message after text message that said, “You fat bitch.  You’re such a fat fucking bitch.”  I never responded or picked up the phone calls, and that same night I finally blocked him on my phone, where then he moved over to calling and texting on WhatsApp, before I blocked him there as well.

How do I wish I could have responded?

“You actually don’t know anything about me, so let me help you out:

I am the daughter of Paul and Michelle, two loving parents, who have raised me to try my best and work hard at things that are important, like school, a career, and friendships.  Sometimes I take off one pant-leg, and sit there for 15 minutes before I take off the other.  My sister is my best friend and the coolest, strongest, most bad-ass person I know – she makes me want to be a better person every day, and helps me focus my attention on the people in my life who truly deserve it.  I let old coffee cups get moldy in my room for a month.  I have more amazing friends than I deserve, from so many different locations and stages of life.  I don’t wash my sheets often enough.  I am creative, and love to do things that make people feel special.  I take things too personally, and am not good at letting go.  I am smart, and passionate about music, events, dance, literature, fashion, and prosecco.  I worry too much about being proper or following etiquette, and sometimes that keeps me from having fun or being honest.  YEP, I don’t work out enough, and I don’t eat as healthy as I should, but I am bright like fucking glitter, and bubbly like champ-fucking-agne, and if after all of that, I’m FAT too?????  Well fucking good-for-me!  Also, tell your Mother I said hi!”

Iphone Sync January 2016 153

 

But I didn’t say that.  I couldn’t.  Would it have been smart to say those things?  To take the time stuck in that situation?  I really, really wish I had been brave enough to say something like that.  But the truth is, it’s not realistic when you find yourself in a situation where you feel unsafe.

When I look back on it, not only do I feel anxiety about experiencing this, but I also feel curiosity about this very strange concept of “fat”shaming.  Why, WHY would someone feel like “FAT” is the worst insult a woman could receive?  Trust me, there are many,

M A N Y, other truer insults that could apply to me before someone telling me that I’m fat.  Here are some other interesting examples, exposed by one of my favorite Instagram accounts (@byefelipe) of other people who think this is an acceptable practice in online dating:

Iphone Sync January 2016 055Iphone Sync January 2016 057Iphone Sync January 2016 058Iphone Sync January 2016 059Iphone Sync January 2016 060Iphone Sync January 2016 064

 

I cannot attempt to explain this phenomena, or why anyone would think it would be effective in attempting to meet someone (no matter what definition of “meet” you’d like to use).   What the hell does being fat, if that’s even true, have anything to do with who you actually are as a person?   While these examples are all situations where this happens to women, there is no doubt in my mind that this type of unkindness happens just as often to men.

This online dating process that has slowly become the norm for singles brings on an added level of complexity – anonymity.  I suppose this is just a symptom of the internet, because you don’t just see it with dating, but also in cyber-bullying in every other environment you could think of.  I wish I could understand why the people who act this way don’t choose kindness, and how saying something unkind actually helps them to feel better about themselves (which is doubtful).  When I experience these situations or hear about them from friends, I always think: “Who RAISED these people?”.   Surely all of these people weren’t raised in a barn (that’s what my mother would say), so then I wonder…is it us?  Is it our society who has taught us all that this behavior is acceptable, and works?

Or more importantly, I wonder…how can we change it?

I can’t explain the reasoning from the people who choose to use these statements as a weapon, but I can, however, say that it’s unacceptable.  That no one, absolutely no one, deserves that kind of disrespect.  That no one deserves to feel small, everfor anything, when the person has just met you, and doesn’t know you at.all.  That no one ever deserves to feel unsafe on a date, where they’re just trying to meet someone cool.  That no one deserves to be brought to a hotel, without agreeing to it, on a first date – or any date, actually.  That no one ever deserves to feel unworthy simply because they’re not interested in you.  That no one ever deserves to feel like they’re not already fan-fucking-tastic all by themselves.

I had the major benefit of talking this out with a few friends, where we talked about the topic of fear vs. shame.

How a person who acts this way counts on you to either have enough fear to continue in the situation, or have enough shame not to talk about it.

Looking back on this situation, although I wish I could have said all those things, the actual fear doesn’t bother me.  The “fear” I felt helped me to eventually leave, and kept me rational and smart in a situation that potentially could have escalated.

And the shame?

I refuse to have it. 

For anyone who has ever felt badly about themselves as the result of a romantic interest:

For anyone who has ever had someone made them feel like they weren’t worth something:

For anyone who has ever felt like they were less-than:

I wrote this for YOU.  Because you ARE worth something great.  Because you DO deserve to be treated with respect.  Because you are a HUMAN BEING who is completely FABULOUS.

Maybe I can’t understand why someone would act this way, or how they came to believe it was acceptable to act this way, but I CAN write this blog post to try to help change those thoughts.

Also – abs are nice, but have you ever tasted donuts?  And BTW, Amy Schumer, Taylor Swift, and Emma Watson told us we all have this little thing called “inner-beauty” – and I’m pretty sure that yours, and mine, fucking rocks- even if it does take us 15 minutes to take off our pants sometimes.

“You’re stronger and you’re better and you’re ready for whatever.”

So, apparently:

This is why I’m (fat,) single, (and shameless).