full circle.

I find it strange that, despite being agnostic, every time I finish a meditation I almost invariably bow my head and say thank you…to something…
Just an odd little musing to begin my little today’s writing with.
I’m really meant to be finishing off an essay for one of my Chinese modules this evening, but as I was walking home from my weekend-ly shop and coffee shop reading stop, I decided that what really clinched a higher point on the importance ladder was actually writing something on the web again.
I’ve been at uni for around 2 months now, and i’ve spent that time breaking the rules of being a student. What on earth do I mean by that?
Firstly, there is a myth that all first years do not in fact do any work.
This is almost true.
There are however some that end up working all the time, and it appears that a happy combination of German and Chinese (with a module in Arabic on the side) kind of forces your free time to take a holiday without you.
I’m actually loving being so busy though. It feels great to never even have a chance of being bored. Sure, I’ve had no time to write this poor, ignored, blog, among other hobbies, but to spend every hour doing things that interest you is awesome.
And that thought brings me round nicely to an interesting fact…
I believe one of the first things I ever wrote about online was the importance of doing what you believe in/have interest in/ are passionate about and how empowering that is. It seems that ideas move in circles, but beautiful, expanding circles that somehow meet again points where they are poignant .
What is poignant about right now for me then?
It’s common (at least for me) for beginning uni students to be asked a difficult questions by their peers on an almost daily basis – “so what do you want to do in the future?”
Some have a clear goal. Other’s have a rough idea. Yet more have no idea whatsoever.
It’s a good question though, and one that I’ve answered with numerous answers, depending on what feels right. Sometimes the answer of “I don’t really know” seems right. Sometimes to declare my goals as “either being in academia, journalism or politics” is my response.
Other times the answer is ‘I want to be happy’.
Just so you, as the reader, know, I ‘ll interject on my own writing here and say that I didn’t begin writing today with any set goal as such on where my writing would lead, so apologies if this all seems disjointed. I will post this as soon as I’ve finished writing rather than proof-reading. It just seems right today to do so. This is therefore a semi-disclaimer for disjointed content!
The truth is, I have many loose goals, enclosed by the last one – to be happy.
and that, is perhaps why everything around me currently seems so poignant. I’m at university – it’s a big change. I’m doing something I really care about – that’s a big deal. I’ve come back from life changing experiences from living in far-western China for a year – that’s of huge important. I’m now also in the position to look back on that in retrospect – that is definitely, without a doubt a huge deal.
So yes, it seems that in hindsight to the beginnings of this blog i have come full circle. But that would suggest that i’m back at a rhetorical ‘square one’, surely?
I’m not ashamed to say that when I started writing this blog, I was in a dark dark place. I used to suffer from severe depression, which I only ever told one person the majority of. I didn’t even tell him everything, as despite not being depressed anymore, I keep some secrets to myself (as some of my friends will be aware of – trying to work out the enigma that is me!). I’m definitely not back to this point, and although I would never try to erase my days of depression – it made me who I am – I don’t want to ever go back to that abyss.
I have however held onto part of my depression – melancholy. Melancholy makes me happiest. Perhaps it’s seems totally wrong for that to be the case, but even great artists of the past have accepted melancholy as not just an interesting concept to explore, but essential for expression. In a way, I see my years of depression as now being essential to being as happy as I can be. Whether you can share this opinion or not, there is no way you can have such an intense form of happiness without melancholy. So I hold that it seems things have come full circle, but those
circles are growing wider, more open, more all-encompassing.
Like a good, deep meditation.
And so this post too comes full circle.
Which makes it the perfect time to end.
I leave you with a picture of this time last year. Near the edge of western China, where it meets the stans. Yining, Xinjiang province.

Yining, Xinjiang province China
Yining, Xinjiang province China

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Thank you for reading, have a wonderful day.

5 thoughts on “full circle.”

  1. I didn’t find it melancholy, but I didn’t finish listening to the entire piece, so I saved it for later. It’s beautiful – to me almost relaxing/meditative – bar the very determined anticipation within the music as to what’s coming next. Hugs Tim xo

    1. Hi there, thanks for your reply and for checking out the blog! I don’t know how, but I think you posted on the previous blog – the song is on the next post, not this one!
      But I do agree that it has meditative qualities – I use that kind of music for exactly that.

  2. Hi there, thanks for your reply and for checking out the blog! I don’t know how, but I think you posted on the previous blog – the song is on the next post, not this one!
    But I do agree that it has meditative qualities – I use that kind of music for exactly that.

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