Underneath my yellow skin

Tag Archives: self-reflection

New year, new me, who dis? 2026

As a new year is approaching, I am musing over my goals. I don’t like to make resolutions, but I am all about setting goals. In this post, I want to talk about the different goals I want to set for next year. They will be moderately lofty goals, but with the realization that I may not fulfill all of them–or any. I will start with the ones that are the most pressing on my mind and then move mey way through the rest.

1. The novel. As in writing it. I have fallen off since my sleep was greatly disrupted last weekend, and I want to be get back to it. My inertia is bad right now along with my depression.  I can barely muster the energy to do anything. I was talking to K today, and we were commiserating about being depressed. It’s been a hard almost-year, and we were incredulous about *waves at the world around me*.

I want to get a rough draft done by April 1st of the new year. Ideally, I would keep up with 2,000 words a day until I get it done. My biggest problem is that I tend to get bogged down in the middle of writing AND that I get stuck editing as I write. I have a hard time just letting shit be shit, but I know that’s how shit gets turned into diamonds. (Well, no, it’s not, but I can’t be fucked to change that metaphor.)

I do have the novemoir (what I’m calling it for now) well in hand–in my mind. Meaning, I have it sketched out and some of it written in my brain. I get too lost in the sauce as I’m putting it down to paper, and I have to try to let that be what it is.

2. A year of refinement. Taiji and Bagua are a big part of my life, obviously. I’ve been working hard on the Double Fan Form, and I’m so close to finishing it. But, I’ve noticed that I already have things to refine in it, which I’ve done a little of, but I’m resisting it until I’ve finished teaching the form to myself. I thought I’d be done with it by now because no other form has taken me more than three months to teach myself. This one, we’re going on seven months with one month break for when I got my triple shots. So, six months I’ve been working on this, and it has felt at times that I would never finish it. I am three postures away from being done (maybe four?), and I can barely believe it’s true.


Continue Reading

The difference between can’t and won’t

My mother and I have a fraught relationship to say the least. We actually don’t have a relationship to speak of, but that’s not what she would  say. She wants us to be close because mother/daughter, blah blah blah. As you can probably tell, I don’t give a shit about that. Here’s the thing. I am not anti-mother/daaughter. I’m anti-prescriptive roles based on gender. Actually, I’m anti-prescriptive roles based on anything.

I’ve mentioned before that I’m libertarian with a small ‘l’. Basically, I’m for whatever you (general you and specific you) want to do as long as it doesn’t harm others. It’s interesting because at Ask A Manager, there is so much talk about what is normal in terms of at work. That differs for different industries and companies, of course, but there are some general things–like wearing pants at work, for example. It’s pretty universal for all blue-collar and white-collar jobs.

You start getting into heated debates when you branch out from there. Like bras. Do they need to be worn at work? Depressingly, many women seem to think so. There was a letter at AAM about someone whose…coworker? Intern? One of those built a blanket fort at work. The letter writer wanted to know how to address this with the…new hire. That’s what it was. The letter writer wanted to know how to talk with the intern about not doing this. Alison gave a great response about how she would want thing s to be and how they actually are. She said while theoretically there was no reason the new hire shouldn’t work from a blanket fort, well, it would be viewed as strange in most offices.

This is assuming there’s no medical reason for it. But it underlines the silliness of professional norms. I do all my work from my couch. I’m lying on it with my back propped up on one arm and my keyboard on my lap. The laptop itself is sitting on the coffee table. My cat is sleeping on my legs. This is how I type most days.

I did not read all 500+ comments, but there were several who were sympathetic to the new hire. And pointed out that it might eb a medical thing. I didn’t expect to find so many people pro-pillow fort, but it was heartwarming. I am pro-pillow fort myself, obviously. However, in reading more of the comments, there were plenty disparaging ones, too, including one who said she would consider firing the new hire for being so far out of the norm.

I mean…fire her? Come on. How are people supposed to just intuit business norms if they had never been in an office before? This was her first job post college, and we just went through a pandemic. It was very possible that she had never been in an office situation. Why would you even consider firing her without talking to her first? The letter writer hadn’t seen the fort for themselves, which was the first step they were going to take.

I think the bottom line is how comfortable you feel going against the grain. As several people pointed out, someone in her first job wasn’t goingto have the political capital needed to be the weird one. That comes with seniority, ounfortunately.


Continue Reading