Ringing in the new year.

a song to set the scene // auld lang syne by guy lombardo

It was one of my first days back at work after the New Year.

I was stepping up to the register, smiling at the next guest in line, when all of a sudden they gasped.

“Huh! Is that new?”

Pointing to I don’t know what, I looked down.

At my apron? No that’s not it. My work shirt? Nooo still doesn’t feel right.

And then finally, I found what he was pointing to:

My left hand.

Specifically, my ring finger.

“No! No no, it’s not new,” I reassured him.

After explaining that the ring had been my mother’s, and how I’d been wearing it for the last three years, he very quickly started defending himself.

“Oh, well, I didn’t want to assume (wink wink), but it’s that time of year, and my social media is buzzing with proposals and engagements, and I just… I didn’t know.”

Right. So you assumed.

They always do!

Call it the side effects of living in a small town, but he’s not the first to have asked.

Ever since my sister’s wedding and my trip to Italy; heck, ever since I even started dating my gem, I’ve gotten questions about marriage.

Having been with him for just two years, I’ve felt the assumption about our status to be rather presumptuous.

I mean, to me, it feels like we just started dating.

If anyone even knew us that well, they’d know that my gem and I prefer moving at the lazy river pace, not the Grand Rapids.

Making peace with the awkwardness that now lay between my non-marriage ring finger and my presumptuous guest, he then asked me:

“So, if no ring, how did 2022 end up being?”

Well let me see sir: where do I start?

-I went on the best trip with my sister to Disneyland to celebrate her engagement. Even if we were mistaken for the happy couple, it remains one of the most memorable vacations I’ve ever had.

-I saved a cat’s life. Though, I think in a way he also saved mine.

-I performed in The Marvelous Wonderettes. It had been 8 years since I was last onstage. I missed it dearly.

-I got to witness a rare Alaskan thunderstorm at 5am. Like a kid in a candy store, I sat perched by the window as hail fell from the sky.

-I hiked Mt. Marathon for the first time ever! And yes, the views were worth it.

-My sister and I reeled in a sixty pound halibut on a dreary 4th of July. God bless America!

-I had another fabulous birthday, which included homemade ratatouille.

-I watched my little sister get married. Delivered a bomb-ass speech, and thanked the heavens for wearing waterproof mascara.

-Oh, and yeah, I went to Italy with my gem. And though we did not get engaged, we did get fat and happy off of pizza, pasta, and vino.

The most incredible part of 2022 though? Is invisible to the human eye.

It lies deep within me, and only I can feel it.

No! No! It’s not a baby.

Golly gee.

I see how that might’ve come across wrong.

No.

It’s growth.

Counseled and led by the most incredible individual, I have spent the last year or so going through some very deep personal growth.

Unraveling childhood patterns, experiencing triggers and understanding where they’re born from, and accepting and loving who I am regardless of what I’ve believed to be my whole life (that I’m an oversensitive girl who cries too much and needs to “manage” her emotions), I look back at 2022 and feel that the most profound part of that year is something only I can see and feel.

Can’t exactly post that to the ‘gram, but I think that’s what makes it feel that much more special.

Like most of us, 2022 was full of a lot of ups, and a lot of downs. And while most of my reigning highlights have pictures attached with them, the biggest part of that year, to me, was all the growth I went through, which isn’t something you can physically see.

I remember my counselor telling me that change isn’t always something that feels inherently different. You don’t wake up one day going:“there it is! change.” Growth is subtle, and it shows up in ways that aren’t always visible to other people.

Just because you can’t see something though, doesn’t mean it’s not there.

Just like my left hand: just because I don’t have an engagement ring on my finger doesn’t mean I’m not committed to someone I’m madly in love with.

2022 was truly a marvelous year.

But boy am I excited to “ring” in the new year.

With, or without a ring.

my perfect storm.

a song to set the scene // stormy weather by frank sinatra

It was a storm with the likes of which we hadn’t seen in years.

In fact, if you talk to any long-time resident of Alaska, this appeared to be the largest amount of snowfall received in such a brief amount of time, ever.

And it was nothing short of a whirlwind.

19 inches of fresh snow had seemingly buried our town overnight.

In some cases, the snow drifts created by the 30 mph winds were over four feet high.

Around me, I watched as businesses closed and neighbors stayed stuck at home, waiting for that blessed snow plow. All the rest of us could do was hunker down and watch in awe.

And hunker down we did.

In all honesty, it felt as though in the midst of the hustle and bustle of the holidays, I was forced, finally, to just slow down.

Subjected to stay inside and curl up in front of the fireplace with a mug of steaming Abuelita hot chocolate (woe is me), it was as if something out there was giving me this opportunity to actually enjoy the holiday season that typically goes by so fast.

With nowhere to be and nothing to do, it was the first time in a long time that being cooped up indoors was a blessing, a true present.

So I’m telling my counselor this the other day, how much I was loving doing nothing, and I realized something.

While most of the work I’ve been doing is to better understand how and why I respond to emotion, especially the perceived uncomfortable ones like anxiety, worry, disappointment, and fear, I’ve also started to notice and accept the other feelings that come up: like joy, contentment, gratitude, and appreciation.

In this discovery, I’ve also found my curiosity piqued: what are these feelings, and what might they teach me?

I’ve also noticed this newfound opportunity of pausing, which isn’t always so easy to do, especially during the holiday hustle.

I find that it’s really easy to take things for granted, especially when those feelings are so fleeting. It’s easy to overlook the joy, beauty, and opportunity for growth in seemingly insignificant moments, and it’s especially challenging to pump the breaks and sit in whatever sensation you’re feeling and really notice.

Most of us are:

Oh! It’s snowing outside.

Cool.

Whereas I’m like:

Oh! It’s snowing outside.

What a sensation. Just look at the way the snow rages in a fury, collecting intro wildly prominent snow drifts.

It would’ve been so easy to hate this furor of snow, and curse all the havoc it wrought upon our small town.

For me though, it was a gift, a chance to slow down and embrace the opportunity of burrowing in my home.

The “slow” that came with the snow.

Turned out to be my perfect storm.