The Flossy Flossy
Keeping it “on the real” the best I can.Archive for making friends
Crap
I don’t know why it always ends this way. I have so much trouble keeping people in my life. All it takes is one mishap and I lose that connection with them. It’s so simple.
I know I used to call Americans flaky and superficial in the way they make friends, but I’m not really any different anymore. Sometimes I think I’m much worse, much more blatant and manipulative.
I’m defensive, stubborn, and have my head too high, I know. I hate it, and I don’t know if it’s something I can ever change, so I try to watch myself. But watching doesn’t change a damn thing if you don’t act.
I get worn out easily by people; there are disappointingly few that I can hang out with for more than 48 hours in a row. I suppose that’s why I never had a fixed group in high school, or here for that matter. I get tired of hearing about the same things from the same people. It’s repetitive. (Which I guess would be pretty ironic because I would make an educated guess that that’s what most people think about me.)
I think I treat most of my friendships as checkpoints rather than something that is constantly fluctuating. In the end, I inevitably push them away because I can’t understand how to handle the dynamic of how it shifts and changes, or it becomes too much too fast and I end up recoiling. And don’t me started on the denials. I played Peter; I would know.
Just working my brain out. It’s been a tiring day alone amidst the people. And I miss my family, which is the most probable explanation for this downpour of crappy sentiment.
Tomorrow will be a better day.
Se Non Ami
So after falling into a hellhole today, I am finally feeling a bit better. I’ve got Zaiko kosing himself on my lap; I think I’ll miss him more than leverpostei. Which makes me wonder if the damn thing will even remember me after I leave, never mind miss me. That’s the only thing dogs have over cats, you know; their blatant loyalty. You can never tell what a cat is thinking ‘cause it acts so damn nonchalant all the time.
Har akkurat kommet hjem fra Engler og Demoner med Anniken. Hun kom hos meg, vi spiste litt Grandis, og så dro vi til kinoen. Jeg må si at jeg føler så mye bedre etter å ha vært ute med henne. Det var en pust av frisk luft å kunne endelig få snakke med noen om disse følelsene jeg har fått i det siste, og det føles like bra å få høre hva som skjer i hennes liv. Vi snakka om masse, både seriøse og dumme greier; det var i allefall en skikkelig bra fredag kveld.
Filmen, forresten, var innmari bra. Selv om jeg har lest boka allerede var det likevel spennende. Og den skuespiller’n, Ewan McGregor, fyttikatta han er kjekk ass! (Selvfølgelig spilte han rollen sin veldig bra også, men det hjelper jo at han var deilig å se på òg, haha.)
今天晚上带给我了心的希望. 我会继续努力的. 虽然我跟学校一大部分的人不会有设么结果, 我还有时间和机会去交一两个好的挪威朋友. 嗯!
I’m going to leave you with a song that I’m beginning to like very much. (It’s by Nek, no surprise there; I am so taken by him.) Its lyrics, though simple, are poignant, a hopeful yet cautious reminder of l’importanza di amare.
Puoi creare un grande impero intorno a te
Costruire grattacieli per contare un pò di più
Puoi comprare tutto quello che vuoi tu
Ma se non ami, se non ami
Non hai un vero motivo per vivere
Se non ami, non ti ami
Non ci sei
[You can build a great empire around you
Construct skyscrapers in order to matter a little bit more
You can buy all the things that you want
But if you don’t love, if you don’t love
You don’t have a true reason for living
If you don’t love, you don’t love yourself
You don’t exist]
La Solitudine
I feel so out of touch with people. Honestly, bonding is a concept that has eluded me for years. Growing up, I always secretly wondered if I was genuinely socially retarded. (In fact, I still do sometimes, but only to humor myself now.)
See, I didn’t really have friends in elementary school. I moved to the United States when I was 6 years old. The only English word I knew then was “dog.” (I learned “cat” a couple of months later, I think.) And I couldn’t even pronounce it right. And it’s pretty hard to get friends at that age if you can’t even keep somebody’s attention.
I suppose it was quite hard on my mom too, she didn’t have any friends either. In fact, I have no idea what she preoccupied herself with in those days before she had a job and I was at school. We learned to lean on each other.
Anyway, a lot of unpleasant things happened after I moved to the US, and while I don’t blame those reasons for everything that is wrong with my life, they affected me very negatively–inverted my personality, if you will. I became very shy, very cautious, and very self-conscious as I grew up.
Our family didn’t have any play-dates, and during recess I would busy myself at the tetherball pole. I would always buy my lunch and sit with the other kids, but only to sit with them. I was the wallflower…that wore immigrant clothes. (“Why wouldn’t you want to wear these clothes? They’re top quality, and cost so much in China! The American kids at school will never get the chance to wear something like this!”) And at home, of course, there was nobody else around–Mom had enrolled herself in beauty school. I was alone every day; I learned to entertain myself.
I think that fostered a lot of my traits. I learned to like being alone, and to this day I still do–being around people for an extended period of time still tires me out. By myself, I could be myself. I could sing as loud as I wanted, I could cry at cheesy lines in movies, I could walk around and not worry about how big the slits of my eyes are right then and there, and I could dream. (And dream did I ever! I was the hopeless romantic. Too much time alone and your mind starts creating hallucinations on its own.) I learned to be individual, and to like what I like and not be influenced by what other people think I should like. (My favorite music artist in junior high? Tori Amos.) But I also learned to appreciate friendship and togetherness because I so rarely felt it. I loved watching Friends because in a really twisted and pathetic way, I didn’t have any and they relieved me of my loneliness. And I still like romantic comedies the best–but for other reasons now.
There’s lots of bad things that came with the solitude: I was very out of touch with my contemporaries–and walking around with dyed bangs and a tweed jacket sure didn’t alleviate me from my condition–which brings me to my current déjà vu. I’ve always found it so difficult to really get to know a person. In fact, I downright dread it when people ask me, “So, what do you like to do?” Well, I like singing, learning languages, trying new foods and drinks, and having the occasional frolick with men twice my age. What about you? Sports, chicks, video-games, cars? Cool!
I’m going to do a little thought-trainhopping now by asking this: Have you ever wondered what exactly keeps people together? I’m sure you’re friends with your friends for different reasons: similar interests, similar experiences, or maybe just because you live close to each other. It’s kind of scary to think about how fragile a relationship can be. Sometimes, I feel like it’s not enough.
Well, if you read this far, congratulations. I don’t think I had a point in writing this post other than to just get some personal history out. I don’t remember when it became so much harder to express myself. Blogging much easier back in junior high. I was angsty then. Now I’m just humdrummy and–well, as of right now–in dire lack of sleep.









