Perseverence
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New song
Tuesday, August 31st, 2010For me, writing songs is like kissing boys. There might be some good luck for awhile, but then, for one reason or another, it just ends. There is always the hope of it happening again, and that when it does, it will be fantastic – but it might take years.
Years.
Anyway.
I finally finished a new song! It’s super sassafras, and I think I really like it. Maybe one day you’ll get to hear it.
As for the kissing of boys, WOULDN’T YOU LIKE TO KNOW.
Wetterhorn
Monday, July 12th, 2010On Friday morning, my dad and I left at 4am and drove for over 2 hours to hike for 6 and see only one other person all day. It’s a very, very thin slice of the world’s population who will ever stand where we were on Friday – between the remote location and the 4-wheel drive roads and the amount of physicality one has to employ to get there, you have to REALLY mean to go.
But we had an opportunity, and we grabbed it. We really meant to go.

The hike was long and steep, but my daily walkoftriumphs have paid off, and we kept a good pace. Nearing the top, the summit looked so close.

But when we actually got closer, I realized that we were going to have to scale this (see here for another perspective):

Now, listen. I’m no rock climber. I have no triceps, remember? Plus, heights and me? We don’t get along so well. It’s not so much the heights that bother me – it’s more of the plunging to my death that really freaks me out. I don’t even like to skin my knees, let alone break bones, lose limbs, chip teeth, etc. And wouldn’t you know, the first really scary part, when my dad assured me that the rock was secure, and if I just put my hand *right there*, I could get a good grip – the rock BROKE OFF IN MY HAND.
But there was only one way to the top, and I wasn’t walking off that mountain without a summit.
Despite my fears, and freezing a couple of times, unable to move or breathe, starting the stressed-out-whistle-breath thing, after a long, slow climb, I made one last quick hand-over-foot movement and scrambled my way onto the top of Wetterhorn Peak.

Fears: faced, engaged, overcome.
Self-confidence: boosted.
First 14er of the season: conquered.
(Now go read my dad’s post about what HE did the next day. AAAAGH.)
Annie Parsons: Ex-Con
Wednesday, February 17th, 2010Although I watched the opening ceremonies of the Olympics last week, I have yet to watch an actual Olympic. However, I must say that I’m liking Shaun White these days. I don’t know why – I never paid him any attention before. But isn’t he so likable? His big smile and happy heart?
Don’t you think Shaun White has a happy heart? He seems like it.
You know who DOESN’T have a happy heart today? Yours truly. The DMV is officially the thorn in my side, the hitch in my get-up. After basically being accused of being a criminal and driving a stolen vehicle, they refused to issue me Colorado license plates. I now have no choice but to make an appointment with a little organization called the COLORADO STATE PATROL to clear my name.
It’s practically the Salem Witch Trials.
Except, come to think of it, not really the same at all.
Forward
Thursday, December 31st, 2009Tomorrow is a new year, a fresh start, a clean slate.
I like markers. I like new beginnings. I like boundaries that separate “this” from “that.” It gives me a sense of control, however misperceived.
2010 is a year of starting over, in almost every way that I possibly could – even in ways that I didn’t ask for and don’t want to. New city. New home. New people. The “new people” part is the part I really don’t like – I’ll be honest, I don’t really want any new people. I like the people that I already have, thankyouverymuch.
But I think back to 2 years ago when I moved to Nashville, and I could not believe that I had left Seattle. I spent the first 6 months with one foot still in the Northwest, convincing myself that the relocation was temporary, and that I would be returning sooner rather than later. I tried to freeze my long-distance friendships – like frogs under the ice, just biding time until the waters thawed and they could once again swim freely.
But that day never came.
And you know what? I’m glad.
I exchanged something very good in Seattle for what turned out to be something very good in Nashville. Incredible friends. Amazing experiences. Growth and challenges and hilarity and LIFE. I would not trade my two years in Nashville for anything I once had in Seattle – not because it was better than what I had in Seattle, but because I have now experienced it, and it’s mine.
You can’t give back what is now yours. I wouldn’t want to. Not even the hard stuff.
So as I head up to Denver today to get the keys to my new apartment, and I wait for my furniture to be delivered next week, and I start working in the office on Monday, and I drive around this massive urban sprawl that seems so foreign and gigantic, I want to be present. I will leave my heart wide open to the people in front of me – not forsaking my far-flung, beloved friends, but hopefully, gracefully, allowing those relationships to change. This is the only way to truly live.
Even though I didn’t really ask for it, I chose it, and I CHOOSE it. I’m excited for what Denver might hold.
But, um, friends? Please come visit me in 2010. I miss you already.
Sooner or later
Tuesday, October 6th, 2009I went to the dermatologist yesterday.
I have an age spot.
At least, I’m calling it an age spot. The doctor called it a “sun freckle,” and I was like, lady, I’LL SHOW YOU A SUN FRECKLE. This spot is 5mm by 4mm – much larger than I am comfortable chalking up to just a “sun freckle.”
(To be fair, let’s remember that I have a flair for the drama when it comes to physical woes.)
I wanted her to burn it off, but she said no. (Why does no one ever indulge my desire for the quick fix? *pout*) Instead, she gave me some bleaching cream to use twice a day for 3 weeks. If it doesn’t help, then I’m supposed to stop using it because if I use it for too long, it could cause paradoxical darkening.
“What’s paradoxical darkening?” I asked, doe-eyed and naïve.
Well, Annie, paradoxical darkening turns out to be exactly what it sounds like. The cream is supposed to fade the spot – but if you use it for too long, it can have the opposite effect and make it worse. Get it? Paradoxical darkening? Get it?
In any case, it made me think of one of my favorite quotes – one that I’ve written about before, but surfaces frequently enough in my thoughts that it’s worth mentioning again:
“Crying is all right in its way while it lasts. But you have to stop sooner or later, and then you still have to decide what to do.”
-C.S. Lewis (The Silver Chair)
Indulging my feelings is all well and good for a moment or two. Everyone needs a good cry. Everyone needs the freedom to acknowledge when they feel left out, or left behind, or unwanted, or unseen, or just tired and sad. But at some point, it’s time to decide what to do – otherwise, the very thing that was supposed to make you feel better only winds up making you feel worse.
I’m making a plan.
And in the meantime, I am bleaching the devil out of this spot.
Stay
Monday, June 8th, 2009Music is never going to pay my bills – and I have no expectation that it should. So why is it important that I dedicate any time, energy, or effort to it?
Because I believe that we simply must do what we love.
But in the last 6 months, I’ve really stopped pursuing musical endeavors. I am not writing. I rarely go to shows. I feel depleted, and uninspired, and checked out. I work long days, and have my evenings booked up with various commitments and responsibilities. So many other things have taken the place of writing. Silence is a rarity, imagination seemingly an impossibility.
How do we keep the thing that we love a priority? In the midst of work and relationships and laundry and grocery shopping and getting a zit INSIDE ONE’S NOSTRIL, how do we stay focused on what we were created to love?
I am grateful for my very full life. But these days, all I want to do is drive away.
I don’t know where to go, though.
And so I stay.
I can blame my lack of creativity on this exhaustion and depletion, thinking that I just need to change something about my day-to-day reality. It’s so easy to live a guilt-based existence, assuming that if only I did this or that differently, I could dig myself out of this hole.
But to think that “success” or “failure” – in any area of my life – is up to ME? That is giving myself far too much credit.
I have to remember that the only true source of life and inspiration is in Christ.
I don’t know where else to go.
And so I stay.
Steady goes
Monday, May 4th, 2009There have been a lot of times in the past several years when I have needed courage. Between the ending of relationships, and a solo cross-country move, and feeling so alone I could barely breathe, and being relatively destitute, and getting roommates, and starting to share my music for the first time, and introducing myself to hundreds of new people, and continually putting myself out there… I have been through a lot of big, dramatic, grandiose transition. Change is scary.
But for me, change is not the scariest thing.
In recent months, a lot of things have fallen into place for me. I’m on stable ground. I have a home, and a Tennessee family, and a great job, and a feeling of belonging. I know my way around the city, and I’m involved in my church and various other groups, and I feel very much a part of the fabric of my Nashville community. Things are steady.
Then why is my first instinct to run?
I’m finding that staying put requires a lot more courage than leaving.
Privileged
Monday, April 27th, 2009I did it. And it was the worst best thing I’ve ever done.
I have started this post at least a dozen times, and am having a hard time putting into words what happened on Saturday.
I could tell you about waking up at 4:30am, and stressing out in a traffic jam on the way to the race.
I could tell you about the last minute visit to a Porta-Potty that had no toilet paper.
I could say that miles 1-5 were fun, and 5-8 were less fun, and 8-9 was really tough, but 9-10 was easier, and from 10 on, it was sheer agony.
I could talk about the heat, and the people passing out right and left.
I could give you the amazing finish times of all of my friends, who I am so ridiculously proud of.
I could report that I came in 8,449th out of the 22,749 finishers, and 3,987th out of the 14,505 women.
Or, perhaps my favorite tidbit of information: I could talk about the friend-who-will-never-be-named who is so hardcore, she PEED HER PANTS in the last mile so she wouldn’t have to stop.
But I think that this is my biggest take-away: what an enormous privilege. To have legs, to have a body that works, to have the opportunity to train for something far more physically taxing than I have ever attempted before. To have the ability to run.
Even in the heat. Even when it’s not fun. Even when I didn’t get the runner’s booty that I hoped for. I am ABLE to run. Not everyone is.
And this girl is getting busy getting grateful.
I am so glad I did it. I am so glad it’s over. And I guess I can’t deny it anymore: once one has run 13.1 miles, she is officially a “runner.”
More to come in the next few days…
Ready or not
Friday, April 24th, 2009One of the East Nasties has a bumper sticker that says “Run Happy.”
I don’t. Run happy, that is.
Some people are built to run – I am not. I really do not enjoy running. Even after dedicating myself for months, pulling myself out of bed every Saturday AND Sunday morning, and watching my mileage go up and up and up, I still don’t LIKE to run – especially because I never got the runner’s booty of my dreams.
NOT. FAIR.
But after months and months of training, the Country Music Half-Marathon is upon us. The starting line is in sight. The gun fires (or whatever it is they’ll do – fog horn? yell really loud? I’m going to yell really loud) at 7am tomorrow.
I’ve been having stress dreams about it – that I show up and don’t have my number, or my shoes have no laces, or it’s 90 degrees outside. That’s maybe my biggest actual fear about tomorrow – that it’s going to be really hot, which is not only a possibility, but the forecasted reality. It is unseasonably warm in Nashville right now. Even though I don’t enjoy it, I can TOLERATE running – unless it’s hot outside. Then it’s truly miserable – if not impossible.
I am terrified that I’m not going to succeed – that it’s going to be too hard, too far, that all of my hard work won’t have been enough. And at this point, it’s truly a case of mind over matter: my body is strong. I’ve put in the training. I know that I CAN run 13.1 consecutive miles. But my brain isn’t so sure about it – and as soon as I let those thoughts start creeping in – I’m tired, I can’t do this, this is too hard – then it’s over. I quit.
But then, I have to remember that before October, the furthest I had ever run was one lap around Green Lake in Seattle. And the fact that I can run 5 miles, let alone 11.2 (which was my longest training run), is ridiculously amazing. I’ve spent the past 4 months training with an incredible group of people of all running abilities – people who have encouraged me and pushed me – and it’s a very cool thing to be a part of something larger than myself.
And there’s no way to say this without sounding completely cheesy, so I’m just going to say it: everyone who has trained for this race is already a winner.
AAAAAAGH I AM SO SORRY!!!!!!!
I hereby fire myself as the writer of this blog.
But truly, ready or not. Tomorrow it is. I’ve worked too hard to give up now. May my will be as strong as my legs.

