Monday, November 03, 2008

matriculating, happily

It's been 4 months, nearly to the day, since I last posted here. My apologies to those of you who missed me, and my most heartfelt thanks for your notes, pokes, prods, emails of concerns, messages of interest, and reminders that I once was a scrapbooker who held a blog that people actually read. :)

My life has changed, drastically, in a good way. It wasn't a sudden change, or unexpected, but the kind that gathers force, slowly, long built in anticipation. In some ways, it was a change first set into action in my childhood, delayed and reformed and restructured until it had become something new, and then had to rediscover itself.

I left university six years ago, with a toddler, and a partner headed to graduate school, with not much of a plan for my own future, but an invested interest and much energy involved in creating good futures for these two critical figures in my life. I had never thought I wouldn't finish university, and the expectation of doing great things was an imminent pressure felt from all my surroundings.

Somewhere between high school and motherhood, I lost what I once held precious and true, a desire that defined me, and that had always been there, and taken for granted. I had never really considered life outside of school, an environment of learning. The career path I had once obsessively thrown myself down was a cumulation of all things I loved: hard work, life long learning, creativity, challenges, a goal of contributing to something big and good. Distracted by unexpected and unwelcomed events, and unexpected but welcomed things, that desire was forgotten; dropped slowly, like a sweater that trails behind you, one arm at a time, as it slips off from where you once thought it was tied tightly. And occasionally you think of it, there is a vague recollection of something that once kept you warm, but you can't remember what it was or where you last saw it, but you might remember that it was pink and fuzzy.

Then, one baby became two (not literally, that's impossible, we just added another); a partner remained a partner but became a husband, and I was needed and I defined myself by what I did, and people called me a mother and a wife and a keeper of the house, and those things filled me and consumed me, and I was busy and I was loved, and I did all sorts of things, and some of them some people thought were great. But there remained the sensation of things forgotten, greater things not achieved, and things left finished poorly that could have been done so much better. That forgotten desire smouldered quietly.

The looming end of degrees soon to be finished by one, and school soon to be started for another, and a book consumed in a hot, humid day sitting at the park in the August sun, coalesced together together and I found that desire I had forgotten I had forgotten, and it burned brightly once again.

It seems like a long time ago but not so long ago, that I decided to come back to school. It wasn't even that I had to make the decision, I always knew I would return to finish things I had started and had left in such a poor, broken condition; but timing and life and a really good book pulled it all together and the decision was made.

And now, I'm here.
Sitting in the library, quiet study area, in the stacks of books where I am regularly mistaken for a librarian.

And, the best part? I've totally fallen in love.
I'm in love with something that I loved once before, but it's so much better than I ever remembered or ever could have expected it to be.
I'm in love with a concept, a goal, an idea. I'm in love with a life, with learning; I'm in love with a lab.
Every day I wake up, excited and nervous and anxious to get going, to get here, to sit here, to run my fingers along books and download papers to read, and sit in a lecture hall with 108 kids who are 6 years younger than me, and listen to professors lecture and talk on subjects they too are in love with.
Every night I go to bed with questions swimming in my head, and I dream! I dream about biochemistry and molecules, and pathways and networks, and every morning I wake up with those questions still swimming in my head (they are noisy), and if I am very, very lucky, I even wake up on occasion with an answer.
I know what I want to do, and the funny thing is, I knew it all along.
But the difference is, I'm here now and I'm doing it.
And I love it more than I ever thought I could.


Ashley.

23 comments:

Linda Jacobs said...

Wow, fantastic! Good for you for following your desires and living a life that you find worthwhile and challenging.

And this post is beautifully written! I especially love the sweater simile!

Best of luck in your new schooling and here's wishing only A's for you!

Sharmaine said...

Yay for doing it
Yay for a new found love
and wishing you all the very best with it all

Irma said...

So glad you resurfaced refreshed and driven to live your deam, and yes! there are those that read your blog and savor your layouts every little detail at a time :)

Anonymous said...

Whoohooo, you are back. I've been checking your blog every week. Glad to hear you have found a path of bliss.

tara said...

good for you girl!
i missed yOU!
i would check back from time to time! and now you are here! hope you post again soON! tara

Anniek said...

Glad your back!! I have been checking your blog regularly the last couple of months.
Fantastic that you're back to Uni and having a great time!!

Mickey said...

I'm very happy for you too Ashley!
Anxious to know if you are still scrapbooking?

vintagemoonstudio said...

This is such a lovely post - how wonderful for you to have rediscovered your passions and able to create a new journey for your life...Be sure you save a little time for art! Deb

Busybel said...

Ashley thankyou for posting!! I loved your post - I too have been anxiously wondering whether you would ever post again as I only discovered your blog and your book (one of my absolute fav;s BTW) around August. it has turned out to be quite serendipitous for me as I bought a great book about mothers needing time out too, to discover 'themselves' again, for want of a better phrase than this cliche...and here is a living, breathing example.
Please keep posting and sharing your art and life. Wonderful stuff!!
THankyou xo

emilyruth said...

congratulations!
that's so cool...

what's the book that made it all come together?

emilyruth said...

well, i suppose if i had read the previous posts i would have found my own answer
(there's a lesson in there some place:)

thanks:)

Julie said...

Hi Ashley - I won your Scraptastic book in a scrapbooking competition and wanted to tell you how much inspiration it is giving me. I truly love your ideas!!! I'm so pleased to hear that you're enjoying your return to education. I'm actually making a mini-book right now on how much I love working at a University as I get access to the library in my breaks!! :D

Rebecca Vavic said...

Yah for you, that is fabulous news.
Bek

yvette said...

i love this post. and i'm missing your LOs. :)

Lisyanthus (juliette from Paris) said...

well I'm totally happy for you (and totally understand your feeling about finishing your own accomplishment)
best of luck in your future career as YOU (not mother, not wife, just YOU)
juliette (from Paris)

AMIT said...

Nice post.

Work from home

henzy said...

that is fantastic and i wish you all the best on this wonderful journey you have embarked on.

CD said...

good for you Ashley!
Way to go for following your heart and re-descovering your dreams and a piece of the person that it sounds like you were created to be. cheering you on from Winnipeg, and wishing you all the best.

themitchells said...

Oh Ashley! How stinking exciting! What are you back studying now? I really could have written your post word for word, almost to the end, when instead of returning to school we added a thrid child instead....one day I will get back there though, just as you did.

Our third little boy was born 3 weeks ago, and we are all totally smitten. I hope you, your man and the girls are well. Are you still scrapbooking at all?

Sally M (Scotland)

Donna-chelle said...

Keep up the school work and congrats! I returned to school and am surrounded by kids over 20 years younger than me. The best part, once they realize I too am a student, is that they seem to admire me for being "brave" enough to return. Little do they know it is much easier now. I do not worry about what others think or say. So, it is never too late. You get to willfully make it happen. What a blessing!

Rebecca said...

I was reading your book, and thought to myself, I should see if she has a blog. Wow. What a time to start reading! That was a beautiful post and I admire you for following your heart. Good luck with the questions in your head, may they never all be answered! You never want to stop learning, right?

Anonymous said...

Just picked up your book again tonight and thought I'd log on to see if you'd updated. Yay you! There's nothing like the thrill being in a learning environment can give you. Enjoy every second of it. tulabrass at yahoo dot com

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