Monday, October 3, 2011

Conscious thought is the tidying up at the end

Every increment of consciousness, every step forward is a ‘travesia’, a crossing. I am again an alien in new territory. And again, and again. But if I escape conscious awareness, escape “knowing,” I won’t be moving. Knowledge makes me more aware, it makes me more conscious. “Knowing” is painful because after “it happens” I can’t stay in the same place and be comfortable. I am no longer the same person I was before.
-- Gloria Anzaldua

This applies to my daily life in many ways. I am constantly reading, growing, discussing inequalities, victories, theories. I change from day to day, my identity expands, my self-definition and self love transforms.  My heart grows big with excitement because I constantly discover literature meant to empower and free those formerly silenced and rendered dead, but then my soul also aches with the added pain that consciousness always brings. I cry for more people, I cry more easily, and cry for the parts of myself that are just now beginning to surface. 

But it is necessary? There is never a final level of consciousness that we meet, a level that declares us officially ‘grown up’, unable to process anymore knowledge, or unable to move to a ‘higher plain’ because we have reached it.  We never stop moving, shifting, growing.  Sometimes we wish we could hold still and be in a single place forever because it is safe.  But that place of safety will never bring about revolution whether internal revolution or external nothing will happen if we become immobile.  

I get excited for tomorrow, yet somewhat afraid of it.  But, as I stay afraid, sometimes alone, sometimes confused, I do so while moving forward.  It is through conscious movement that freedom occurs; no one ever found liberation through inactivity.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Ever Lasting Victories


Two years ago I came to realize that I was extremely over weight. At my heaviest, I weighted 250lbs. I was not happy with my self and I wanted to change so badly. One lazy afternoon I decided that for now on I would work out and eat healthier to see if I would loose any pounds.

Surely enough I started to shed the pounds, my hard work was paying off. Now I roughly weigh 195lbs give or take a few. I continue to exercise on a regular bases to this day, but now my work outs include biking along with my routinely work outs on the treadmill.

I soon came to a revelation of sorts.  

If I stick at it long enough, I eventually get lucky. I will get what I wanted.

The other side of the story is, if I enjoy success long enough, I will make mistakes, and I will blow it.


Lasting success requires more than luck. Lasting success requires learning from mistakes and using what I have learned to move on to greater victories.