Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Opening up about college coming to a close

My graduation from Oklahoma State is a month away! I feel like I need to say something about the past three and a half years of my life. My first instinct is to say they were hard and that I’m glad they’re over, but that’s just my habit of keeping my guard up. I spent the majority of my time in college hiding because I didn’t know how to be honest and vulnerable. I didn't really open up to anyone, even my friends and roommates. I'm sorry they didn't get to know me the way I wish they could have. I'm naturally a happy and energetic person, but I really didn't let anyone see anything else. It's not like I struggled with depression or anything--I was happy but I wish I could have been deeper with people. I don’t know when I decided enough was enough, but I’m sure glad I did. Life when you’re shutting people out and being judgmental is hard and lonely. A lot happened since I moved away from Keller and embarked on this strange (and in hindsight, beautiful) journey. My hair grew. I had a few hospital visits. I made and lost friends. I learned how to make amazing enchiladas. I fell in love. I grew up. I opened up. When I first started college, making new friends seemed impossible. “How are these supposed to be the best years of my life? I’m miserable!” was a recurring thought of mine. But now, as I am preparing to walk across the stage and into a new stage of my life, I realize something. They weren’t the best years of my life in that I met my best friends and had so much fun and freedom. I didn’t go on a wild spring break vacation or study abroad. But they were the most important years of my life so far because I learned how to speak up, what I am passionate about, and how to take care of myself. That is what makes them valuable. I spent so many nights crying and having anxiety attacks during my first year (and maybe a little during my second and third years) that those feelings became familiar companions on the journey. I remember one night, in the midst of a panic attack saying to myself “just wait for it to pass—they always do” as if anxiety was a summer thunderstorm that rolled through and then the clouds would part and the puddles would dry. I didn’t feel like I was close enough to anyone to ask for help, so I did everything the hard way—on my own. I even struggled to find God in all of the mess sometimes. I just had to believe he was there, working behind the scenes (and of course he was, and now it’s so obvious. Thanks God). I didn’t realize it at the time but those instances made me so much stronger. I now know that my feelings don’t control me. This is so important.

I didn’t expect to love learning so much. I did fine in high school but it’s not like I was known for studying like, ever. I never knew I could be “the smart one” in any situation. Until I left home, my brother was always “the smart one” and I was “the creative one.” When I got to college, I realized I could be both. But what’s great about my college experience is that unlike high school, being successful was not about just being “smart” and memorizing stuff. That was a small part of it, but being successful was also about being PASSIONATE, taking initiative, and diving into every learning opportunity. I could always tell the difference between the people who memorized stuff and the people who actually cared. We may have all gotten similar grades, but you can’t put a letter or number to the way a person lights up when they talk about their passions. Human Development and Family Science just makes sense to me. I remember one day thinking to myself, “Maybe it’s not that I chose an easy major, maybe I’m just good at it. Maybe there is a possibility that I CAN be a smart girl and a funny girl and a creative girl...” And that was pivotal. It changed the way I approach learning and the way I carry myself. I could go on and on about how much being an HDFS major has transformed my life, but it can be summed up like this: before college, my passion to help others was like rising dough. It had potential, but it was raw and formless. College was like an oven—literally because those Oklahoma Augusts were brutal and metaphorically because it developed my passions into something useful: something that could really be used to feed others. My amazing professors and advisers were like bakers who added seasonings and butter and all the good stuff. They made my education delicious, and I owe them unending gratitude.

To Dr. Jennifer Jones, who taught me that women can be professors, mothers, stylish, brilliant, passionate, caring, kind and advocates. Being in her class and having the privilege to be on her research team not only opened my eyes to how much I love working with and learning about people with disabilities, but also taught me to DO SOMETHING about causes I care about. To not sit back or turn a blind eye to human needs.

To Dr. Ginger Welch, who from day one taught me to be ambitious and DREAM BIG. She’s done it all when it comes to human services, and that’s what I want to do too. I will be a better mother one day because of the things she taught me about child development, as well as a better employee because of what she taught me in my internship courses. I was so lucky to have her for three semesters!

To Dr. Brandt Gardner whose classes about relationships and marriage were so much fun and taught me how to love—I never expected to learn how to love in a college class! He also, without even knowing it, said the most wonderful things about HDFS that kept me from transferring schools sophomore year.

To Dr. Glade Topham, whose class helped me heal from family wounds and taught me how to take care of myself in the midst of helping others.

To Dr. Whitney Bailey, thank you for letting me run out of your class when we were watching a live birth video during my freshman year. You are one of the smartest, most humble, and most compassionate people I have ever met.

{and a piece for Regina George...she fractured her spine and still looks like a rock star}

These people and so many more went above and beyond for my education. I am so thankful that God put them in my life.

God called me away from Stillwater for my last semester, and it has been nothing short of amazing. He’s so mysterious in the fact that everything always makes so much sense when you look back. If I knew what my life would be like now back when I felt alone and overcome with fear and loneliness, everything would have been different. But I would never have the life I have now without those experiences. HE makes all things work together for our GOOD and He lets NOTHING go to waste. I didn’t think I would come out on the other side so happy and so confident. But this is just the beginning, and I am PUMPED for what’s to come.




Friday, April 10, 2015

Kaki's Favorite Things: It's Friday, have a cookie

Happy Friday everyone! Man I've had an awesome and busy week, which gives me a ton to blog about. But I figured I'd talk about cookies (again, wow.) today. But this time they aren't metaphorical cookies, they're literal cookies and they ROCK. I just discovered these cookies on Wednesday, but I decided to hasten the Kaki's Favorite Things stamp of approval process with all deliberate speed because they are awesome (side note, "with all deliberate speed" is one of my favorite expressions. You get an extra cookie if you know what moment in history this is from without looking it up).

I bought Grace's Best Sunflower Seed cookies at my local health food store, which obviously makes me really hip and the cookies super trendy. They're interesting because they have sunflower seeds in them and as far as cookies go, they're pretty healthy, being made from oats, sunflower seeds, butter and brown sugar. But they're full of flavor! And a serving size is FIVE COOKIES (130 calories). That's definitely a number I can live with. Delicious by themselves or with tea/coffee. But beware, they are super addicting. There were free samples of them at the store and I ate like 2 or 3, at which point I caved and bought a bag.
This is my second post in a row about cookies but I don't see anyone complaining. Plus, this is my blog and I do what I want. But tomorrow I'll be talking about another awesome book I've just finished so stay tuned!

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Faith and cookies: The most important thing I've learned about being a Christian adult

When I was a senior in high school, a youth minister whom I have always admired gave a talk at a retreat I was attending that has been so meaningful to me as I have navigated my way through college and the first few years of young adulthood. I was in my last semester of high school at the time and the talk was about developing an adult faith life, so he had my attention. My parish in my hometown was my home--I was so involved in everything and it fed me so well during my high school years (both literally and spiritually). But it was all I knew, and I was about to move. He talked about how when you're in high school, there are so many opportunities to go on retreats and be involved in a youth group, and how God provides us with so much consolation during that time. Its a beautiful experience that draws us close to God and shapes us in faith, but faith, he said, is like a chocolate chip cookie.
The sweet moments of consolation we have in prayer, the times when we really feel close to God and encounter Him in an emotional way, those are the chocolate chips. But a chocolate chip cookie is made of more than just chocolate chips. In fact, the bulk of a chocolate chip cookie is actually flour. The flour represents the hustle and bustle of adult life...work, bills, assignments, the things we don't normally think to see God in. But if we're only seeing God in the chocolate chips, we're missing out on the whole cookie and not seeing the Lord in the bulk of life. And honestly, school, work and struggles are the places we need God the most! So the message was to recognize that in adult life, there might be a lot more flour than chocolate chips, but we have to know that God is present in both and that prayer and being faithful are important in those sweet chocolatey moments of consolation and in the not-so-sweet moments. You can't have a chocolate chip cookie without both ingredients.
He also talked about how the chocolate chips flavor the rest of the cookie, and just so, those moments of sweetness with the Lord should "flavor" the rest of our lives. Not only should we look for God in our every day lives, but we should bring him to others as well by showing love at our jobs, in our communities, and to our families.
I hope you have lots of chocolate chips in your life, but I also hope that you look for God in the flour because I promise you He's there.
And if you're craving a cookie after reading this, the best ones are at Whataburger.

Sunday, April 5, 2015

Kaki's Favorite Things: My Year with Eleanor

I'll be honest, I'm not a reader. I like the idea of reading, and I can definitely appreciate good literature, but I'm too impatient most of the time to read an entire book or I lose interest or just am simply too busy doing things (haha.) to read. But recently, I read an entire book the whole way through! For fun! And it was great! (!!1!!!) My Year With Eleanor by Noelle Handcock is a memoir about a 29 year old pop-culture journalist who loses her job and soon realizes she doesn't really have a life and is afraid to step out of her comfort zone that seems to have shrunk since before her job started consuming her social life. One day in a coffee shop, she sees a sign with the famous Eleanor Roosevelt quote, "do one thing every day that scares you," and is inspired to take Eleanor literally. She dedicated the next year of her life to facing all of her fears. From sky diving to shark diving to confronting ex-boyfriends, she does things (hey look!) that take her on a journey of self-discovery. She even climbs Mount Kilimanjaro! Throughout her journey, she faces fears that a lot of people face--public speaking, karaoke, making hard decisions, and finds that there is "nothing to fear but fear itself" (another famous Roosevelt said that one).
Its a really good book, ya'll. And, as cheesy as this is, by the end of it, I was doing more things that scared me--I went to the weight room where all the buff guys work out, I wore red lipstick to church, I started being more honest with people. I discovered the same thing as Noelle in the book--most of the things we fear aren't actually that scary. Looking our fears straight in the face makes us stronger people. We gain more self confidence in knowing that we have conquered hard things before, and that brings motivation to keep pushing, keep facing, keep growing.
This book was light-hearted, easy to relate too, SO funny and just so good! My roommate Anna had to read it for class, and I read it after she did. Once I finished it, our other roommate read it! We loved it. Now we have this sign hanging in our kitchen:



This book gets the very first "Kaki's Favorite Things" stamp of approval so do something and check it out!!



Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Master, to whom shall we go?

I am THE MOST nostalgic person ever. I save old pictures and letters in boxes and look through them on rainy days, remembering fun times with my friends and encouraging words they've given me. I get emotional just looking at my current laptop wallpaper because I love my sweet best friend Cali so much:
Miss you, Cal!
 So anyway, I love nostalgia and memories. There's this app called Timehop that brings up what you posted on social media on this day 1,2,3, or however many years ago, and for people like me, its so much fun. Today on Timehop, one of my favorite Bible verses came up because I had made it my Facebook status 2 years ago when I heard it for the first time:

 
 
When I first heard this verse (John 6:68), I was a freshman at OSU, trying to figure out what college was all about. "How do I be Catholic in college?" was a major question on my mind, along with, "why do I feel so alone without all of my friends?" Being lonely is a rough feeling, and we all experience it at some point--the beginning of this new part of my life was the first time for me, and all I wanted to do was be sad about it. I really missed my best friends from home, and I just wanted to go back to them. I wasn't thinking about loving the Lord, but about the loneliness I was feeling. 
 
To provide some context, John chapter 6 is the Last Supper, more importantly the bread of life discourse. This is when Jesus is telling his disciples that He is the bread of life and by eating His flesh and drinking His blood, we will have eternal life. Many of the disciples found this hard to believe and left, returning to their former way of life (John 6:66). Jesus turns to the twelve and asks if they are going to leave as well, which is when Peter gives the response that so profoundly spoke to my heart two years ago. It made me feel sad for those who had left. They were probably a little sad to be leaving as well...I would be sad if one day I decided to go back to how I was before following Jesus. But I felt as if Jesus was asking me this question as well, which made my heart fill with love and compassion for Him. I realized that there are so many things that I could have done because I felt as if I was alone and being Catholic was "getting harder" because I was getting older. And how many people, when they get to college, stop going to church and stop following Christ because it suddenly takes more responsibility on their part? I knew that Jesus is the Truth and nothing could ever take the place of that. Just like Peter, I realized that there was no beating eternal life, and after everything I had been through with Jesus, there was no way I could leave Him now.
 
When being a Christian gets hard, when I (so foolishly) start to think that I could be having more "fun" doing what I want with no regards to my faith, I think of this verse--where else could I possibly go, what else could I possibly believe in, that is better than what Christ has to offer? Life in Christ will involve suffering, but it also leads to eternal life.
 
Every year around this time, I remember this verse. Just 2 days ago I wrote in on the top of my calendar so I could remember it when school, work, and life start to get busy.
So that's my favorite Bible verse. I hope everyone's school year is off to a great start! Mine sure is! #kakidoesthings

Monday, August 18, 2014

The Best of Summer 2014

Today starts my third year of college! Summer is almost officially over, (it will be over when I go to my first class, which isn't for a few more hours) and I wanted to do a highlight reel of the most exciting things I did this summer.
 
I got into kayaking! It was really fun. I met some nice hipsters and saw some turtles.
I worked at a day camp for 3-6 year olds. They were sourpatch kids if you know what I mean...first they were sour then they were sweet. Then they were sour again, and then they were sweet sometimes. But it was fun...it kept me busy and entertained, that's for sure.
Meagan came home from Europe! I love my best friend more than I can explain, so I was so happy to get to see her this summer.
Collin asked me to be his girlfriend! *swoon.* He left for drum corps, but then he came back and we basically partied all summer. In this picture, we were in Dallas and had just eaten some AWESOME queso.

These pictures are from my New York/New Jersey adventures. My aunt and uncle live right by the beach in New Jersey so my family went to visit. We also spent a day in New York City (bottom right, I'm standing on the 86th floor of the Empire State Building). The best part of this trip though was the FOOD. The "pretzel nugs" (Top right) and pizza (bottom left, in case you don't know what pizza looks like) were out of this world. Not pictured is the AMAZING philly cheesesteak I had in Philadelphia (Oh yeah, we went there too). The cheesesteak was probably my favorite thing we had on the #foodvacation.  


I took a roadtrip to Austin with Collin to visit Cali. Cal has been working at a camp all summer and I missed her a ton! But she was doing big things and I'm so proud of her. On the way home, Collin and I seriously befriended a baby giraffe. As soon as we walked up to his barn he came right to us and let us pet him! And that was before we gave him any food ;) But even after we fed him he still wanted to hang with us and let us take some selfies with him. I also got to visit Brittany in Dallas when she was on her way home from The Pines. This sweet friend is so great. We met last summer when we were both working at the greatest catholic camp in all the land and I am so glad we've stayed friends!
 
Honorable Mentions not pictured: Summer softball, Catholic girls night, causing a scene at Whataburger when I was surprise-reunited with chase, and dancing at Billy Bobs!
 
I'm all moved into my house in Stillwater and so ready for a great year. Its already off to a great start--I love my roommates and my friends and I can't wait to start my job as a research assistant for one of my favorite professors. Hopefully it will be a great year of doing things. Go pokes! Bye summer 2014!
 

Monday, July 28, 2014

Its been two years and I've learned four things in college

I have survived proudly completed two years of college. After moving four hours away from home, two hospital visits, one stray dog, multiple cookie cakes and several nights spent alone in coffee shops discovering myself, I feel like I might possibly be qualified to offer some advice to those of you about to embark on what everyone is telling you is going to be the best time of your life. I can't say weather or not this is really going to be the best time of your life, because I am not yet old enough to look back on it (thank God), so we're in the same boat on that one. But hey, since we're all sitting in this boat, let me tell you what I have learned so far.

Things other blog posts won't tell you about going off to college:

1. It's going to feel weird for the first few weeks.
You can prepare yourself for it all you want. You can imagine what its going to be like, but its a huge change and a long transition, so embrace it as so. Everyone else might seem like they move away from home every day, but don't buy it. They feel just as awkward as you do. This extreme vulnerability that occurs during the first few weeks allows for friendships to form because everyone wants people to feel awkward with. I remember when my parents left after helping me move into my dorm, there was this feeling of "they're gone." It wasn't sad or scary, and I didn't immediately run out and get a tattoo, but it was a weird feeling. I felt independent in my 12x10 dorm room. Be patient and take it all in because its gloriously weird. The "weirdness" (which is really just newness) becomes your life and you get used to it.

2. Please, go to church.
The only reason I say this is because...well I guess there are multiple reasons, the first one being that I care about your soul and I know that Jesus does too. The second one is that it makes me so sad when people stop going to church in college for whatever reason. Since I'm Catholic, I never had to go through the whole "church hopping every Sunday for the first few weeks" thing like other people do, but if that's what you need to do, then I encourage you to do it and find a church that you love. For me personally, Saint John's University Parish became my home freshman year. I study there, I worship there, I take the occasional nap there and frequently raid the fridge there, and I met some really great people there who are some of my favorite faces to see on campus. The church people will hold you accountable and help you discover what it means to be a Christian young adult. They also sometimes offer free meals. You get to take ownership of your faith when you move away....don't be afraid to dive in--You'll be surprised at how present The Lord can be on college campuses.
Women's group!



3. College friendships are different
Your friends really do become your family. My roommate rode with me in an ambulance and held my hand when they were poking me with needles. One of my other friends helped me move everything out of my dorm and make it fit into my VW Beetle. If you have a car, you give people rides to Walmart or pick them up from sketchy situations without judgement because there's this unwritten code among college friends that you just have to have each other's backs....Maybe its not like that for everyone and I just got lucky, but either way, look for people who stick by your side when you need a ride to the hospital because three mouth anesthetics for a filling made you pass out at the dentist. (Thanks, Em!)
Numb life...I can't believe I'm putting this picture online.
 
4. You might not love it right away

I didn't grow up in Oklahoma, and no one in my family went to OSU. It took me a while (my first three semesters) to actually feel some sort of pride in my school. But doesn't that make sense? I had no connection to OSU when I first got there. If this happens to you, don't sweat it. Buy a few spirit shirts and focus on the things you love about your school. It doesn't have to be a sports team. For me it's my major! (I'm a nerd, its fine, go pokes) (But football is cool too)

College is weird. College is fun. Its hard and scary and exciting and awesome. You'll be happy-free-confused-and-lonely-at-the-same time. (Itsmiserableandmagicalohyeah...I just had to finish the lyric) I'm going back for round 3 in a few weeks and I'm really excited!!

Game day outfits are important but game day friends are even more important