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9 Lives

Let's Just embrace the change

I was thinking about it last week, and I figured that I have lived four separate lives/realities in 2013. From January to April, I was an ambitious undergraduate psychological researcher with the discipline to stay in on weekends (despite being 21) and the fortitude to compose a thesis while everyone else seemed to be shooting the breeze. Then I turned in my thesis, and from mid-April to June, I was the young and vivacious college senior who had little care and concern for any fruitful ventures, because my post-grad career had been "figured out" and all duties had been fulfilled- for a time.

From mid-June to the start of August, I was a wide-eyed graduate student, teacher-in-training with no context for understanding what I would be getting myself into from mid-August to now. And now, here I am- still young, still vivacious, still wide-eyed but with more experiences under my belt (at least 4 months' worth), more context, more duties, little to no frozen yogurt meals, and a schedule where very little concerns me or is solely about me.

This shift in roles has brought with it a major paradigm shift. It has me sitting in my living room at home in South Bend, IN where I have written many a piece of writing but feeling and thinking very differently about the world as I know it now in comparison to the world as I knew it last January or April. With every new set of experiences, it feels as though there is a new life, a new world, a new paradigm being discovered. The 4 past "me's" have come with their individual challenges and successes, roles and responsibilities. The ones coming up no doubt Jeter_Blogwill also bring with them the same. These periods in life or, as I grew up calling them in church, "seasons" are God's way of growing and changing us. And I feel that in every season I have grown, sometimes (seemingly) more substantially than others, but certainly, change has been made- spiritually, academically, professionally, socially, economically, emotionally... and in the words of Sam Cooke, "...I know a change gon' come."