On doing your dreams

Today is my Mars return, an event that happens approximately once every two years, when Mars returns to the place where it was on the day you were born. It is a day when you can tap into Mars’ power and energy, and channel it into whatever endeavor that you feel most driven to. This could be work, a creative project, your sex life, etc. I am starting with this because I took today off from my “day job,” or the work that I do in exchange for a living wage, in order to have time and space to channel this energy into working on a writing project. I am starting, instead, with this blog post. It has been a while since I last shared on this platform, and the reason for this pause is that I found myself pushing myself to write about things that I didn’t really want to write about, and so I just didn’t do it. It is also because I have started a long-term writing project that I am very excited about and which is taking up a lot of my “free” time. But today, I want to start my Mars-driven writing spree with this reflection on doing your dreams.

Do you remember the first thing you ever said in response to the question, “what do you want to be when you grow up?”

If not the first thing you ever said in response to that question, then the first thing you really gravitated to, the one you stuck with and repeated to yourself, perhaps until you reached adolescence?

For me, it was a singer/songwriter. I wanted to be like Selena, the icon, the Mexican-American girl from humble Texas roots who changed the world with her powerful voice. I wanted to write songs about love – feeling love, yearning for love. Cute, catchy, poppy songs about love. The first one that I wrote was in a Barbie diary with a lock, a birthday gift from a family member, and it was titled, “Somewhere, Somehow.” I was 7 or 8 when I wrote this ballad about the boy I had had a crush on in my first grade class in San Jose, CA, where I no longer lived. I would gaze up at the moon, like movie-Selena does in the film, Selena, and picture myself on a stage. I held onto this dream until I was maybe 11 or 12, after I had seen more of the world and of humanity, and realized that life was more complex than first grade crushes.

I wonder why adults ask children that question at such a young age. Had I not been asked the question until I was a bit older, what might my initial response have been? After songwriter came journalist. I had started writing poetry but I told myself that it simply wouldn’t be possible for me to achieve the upward socioeconomic mobility that I sought through poetry, and that journalism was a great way for me to get paid to write. I also believed that it would give me the opportunity to write about the many wrongs that I saw in the world, to bring society’s attention to them, and in doing so, solve them. I stuck with this dream from the ages of 13 to 20, when I was getting ready to graduate from Journalism school, and had finally become so disillusioned with the media that I thought I should dedicate myself to critiquing and transforming it, instead.

And then I started working full-time. I told myself I would pursue stories as an independent reporter in my free time, imagining that I would have so much of it compared to my life as a full-time student and slightly-more-than part-time administrative support student-worker. I told myself I would only do the enrollment counselor gig – the first offer I received after graduating – until I got into a graduate program on media studies. I imagined I might go on to be a professor at a prestigious university, where I would spend my days convincing young, privileged minds that the media was a tool of white supremacy and that it must be reconstructed.

Then, in the spring of 2015, less than a year after I graduated from college, a couple months after being rejected by multiple doctorate programs (I honestly thought I could skip a master’s…), came a realization. An understanding that had been several months in the making, but came to fruition in a moment. I was listening to the This American Life episode, Three Miles, sitting at my desk in the enrollment marketing office, processing data on the thousands of students applying to ASU’s online programs, when I was struck by the understanding that the education inequity that is described in that episode, exists everywhere, and sometimes even within closer distances. I realized that in my high school, as I was being challenged and intrigued by my excellent education in Honors & AP classes, three doors down my classmates were receiving a sub-standard education, with classrooms led by teachers who were not invested in their success.

I realized this because I had spent my junior year of high school in a “college prep” English class due to a clerical error, as I had enrolled in my school’s AP English Language & Composition class, but was told there wasn’t enough room. For a year I rolled my eyes in English, in a classroom that was more poor and more diverse than my AP/Honors classrooms, who were treated as sub-human by the teacher, who was actually the school’s athletic director, and who was either not there or would leave in the middle of class 3 – 4 days out of the week. I was so frustrated by the curriculum, which was closer to my 7th grade GATE English class than what my friends were learning a few classrooms away in AP English. I thought, 5 years later, as I listened to that This American Life episode, that this was the wrong that I must right. A year after that episode aired I had quit my enrollment counseling job, moved to California for a brief, failed attempt to enter the EdTech industry, and was getting ready to move back to Arizona to start working at one of the largest education-focused nonprofits in this stolen land.

For a few years I dreamed of starting my own non-profit dedicated to solving the education inequity issue, I even dreamed of one day being appointed Secretary of Education, where I would be in a position to influence broad-sweeping legislation that would once and for all make access to an excellent education a right guaranteed to all.

But I work, full-time, making money for someone else, earning a comfortable living wage. I have undertaken debt in order to secure this comfortable living – financed the portion of my college education that wasn’t covered by grants & scholarships, financed a decent car, took out a mortgage to purchase a home. And the neverending bills keep me tied to this need to keep the money coming in. I certainly never dreamed, as a child, of spending the majority of my waking hours training fundraisers on how to use Salesforce, day after day. This white supremacist, patriarchal, capitalist system in which we live is not very forgiving to the dreams of children.

Several months ago I had a birth chart reading with Yakari Gabriel Torres, writer, astrologer, and Director of Stari Agency. Within minutes of seeing my chart for the first time, Yakari told me that there is nothing stopping me from writing, and that for me, writing was the easiest thing in the world. She said, during that reading, that what we dream of doing as children is often aligned with what we were born to do.

I can just imagine what this world might be like without this system of global white supremacist patriarchal capitalism pushing so many of us to sacrifice our dreams for the sake of surviving, for the sake of having a place to sleep at night and food to eat. What might our collective efforts, channeled toward what we are each born to do, have brought into being? Instead, for over 500 years, humanity has been pre-occupied with this global, exploitative system. It began with European men stealing land, labor, and lives in order to secure all the resources the Earth had to offer. And it has us here, trapped in a vicious cycle of giving our time and energy in exchange for a paycheck, taking home a portion of the wealth that we build for other people.

I want to be brave enough to do my dreams. I have witnessed my husband go through so much change, take so many chances with his career, in order to move ever closer to his dream of helping his community build wealth through real estate. I have witnessed my best friend put herself out there, make connections in a new community, go after her worth, in order to move ever closer to her dream of building a more just world. I have witnessed another close friend move clear across the country, away from his family, to pursue his dream of acting and performing.

I am pushing myself now to do my dreams. I no longer dream of writing songs, but I dream of writing books. Books of poetry, non-fiction books about my life and my family, science fiction novels. I dream of writing television shows and movies, and seeing my characters come to life on the screen. I dream of a life that is safe, full of love and comfort. I dream of having time to teach my children and watch them grow.

This year I am challenging myself to do my dreams, to believe for the first time since I was a little girl that I truly can do anything I set my mind too. I am challenging myself to trust that I will attract all of the abundance that I need to live the life that I desire. I am challenging myself to break free from this mindset that I must sacrifice my joy for the sake of my survival.

A decolonized Christmas

After writing my most recent post on losing my religion, I reflected a bit more on how I have managed to secular-ize my Christmas, which has also been a process of decolonization. In the last several years I have taken a few steps to take both the Christ and the capitalism out of Christmas.

Growing up poor, the end of December was full of mixed feelings. As a very young child, the holiday seemed full – full of gifts, food, family, love, laughter. The illusion was broken the year that I was 5, when my brother and I went to grab something from mom’s trunk and found it full of toys, which we then also found labeled as being “From Santa” on Christmas morning. The jig was up, and as soon as I realized that my parents had to actually pay for the gifts that appeared under the tree, the reality of Christmas set in. While my parents both always made an effort to gift me something special, my awareness of their financial situations always made those last couple weeks of December feel strained. As an adult, I first took these steps out of financial need. When I started spending Christmas with not just my two families but also my husband’s family, my list of loved ones to gift things to grew very long. Out of this necessity grew my own way to celebrate, which I joyously continue and which will shape how I celebrate with my own family for the rest of my life.

1. Make your gifts. This takes time, it takes some amount of knowledge and skill, and of course, a financial investment in supplies. However, I have always found that making gifts for most of my list, as opposed to buying them, is satisfying, special, and so much less stressful than trying to find a parking spot at the mall on any evening or weekend in December. Over the years I have made candles, sugar scrubs, body butters, essential oil roll-ons, and more. I use this time of year to practice making natural beauty and home products that I hope to some day turn into a whole business, but I also like to find new DIY projects to try each year. I also love to bake, and gift lots of loved ones tins of cookies or boxes of a sweet & salty popcorn snack mix. There are so many ideas out there for DIY gifts, and it is usually much more cost efficient to make lots of one thing than it would be to buy something different for each person.

2. Forget Santa. Call me a grinch, but I think Santa is capitalist propaganda. Capitalism took off after the industrial revolution, and one of the ideas that fueled it the most was this myth of Santa Claus and the pressure to buy buy buy things for your family at Christmas, lest your children feel left out and forgotten. This idea that there’s some magical man who can just make the same stuff they have at Toys’R’Us (RIP), pushes people to go into debt to get whatever ridiculous toy their kid asked for that year, for the sake of maintaining this myth. Nah. I cannot wait to not lie to my kids, and am already preparing for that by having as Santa-free a holiday as possible. No Santa/elf decor, wrapping paper, bags, cookie-cutters, etc. When I buy holiday decor and supplies, I stick to a generic winter theme. Snowflakes, pine trees, snowmen, penguins, poinsettias…all festive, seasonal, and cute – without any of the capitalist pressure.

3. Center the Sun. As a secular person, continuing to celebrate a Christian, capitalist holiday could feel hard to justify. But several years ago, I realized that human beings, at least those in the Northern Hemisphere, were perhaps naturally drawn together around this time of year. A few days before December 25th is the winter solstice, the shortest day of the year. This is the day when we are the furthest away from the sun, the giver of life and warmth that we all rely on. After the winter solstice, the sun remains relatively low on the horizon for three days, before we finally begin drawing nearer and nearer to it around the 25th. In the (non-pandemic) days between the solstice and the 25th, it only makes sense that we should be drawn to gather with friends, family, neighbors, to share in each other’s warmth and light as the sun is distant. I like to start my celebration by recognizing the solstice, either by welcoming the sun’s light in the morning or bidding it farewell in the evening, then greeting it with renewed joy on the 25th.

4. Reduce, Re-use, Recycle. One of the most cringe-worthy elements of a standard Christmas is how much waste comes out of this time. Packaging, wrapping paper, tape, tissues, and bows all pile up and end up in landfills or forming trash islands in the oceans. Capitalism runs on cheap solutions that are detrimental to the environment, and I am committed to living my life in a way that limits the negative impact I personally have on the climate and the environment. I only buy brown paper wrapping paper, the kind without any plastic lining and preferably only printed decor (no foil inlays and never, ever, glitter), so that it is actually recyclable. What isn’t wrapped in paper is wrapped in a couple pieces of tissue paper and tied with a simple piece of thread, or packed into a tin that could be re-used or re-gifted in the future. I save whatever gift bags we get each year and re-use them the next year, and try to re-use ingredients or containers for my DIY gifts as much as possible.

These steps are not much, and only the beginning of my journey to decolonize this holiday. Doing these things has made me realize that I have agency in how I engage with this holiday season, and I look forward to expanding these beliefs and practices through the years and eventually passing them onto my own children.

Happy holidays!