The mid-twenties crisis is a real thing and
I am living it.
Once upon a time I was a cool, often
inebriated, young thing, that partied all night and ate pizza all day. I had
bleached blonde hair and wore crazy clothes. I sang in strip clubs for money,
drank 4 bottles of Cava and rolled home in a taxi covered in glitter and
McDonalds grease. I slept all day like a starfish in my house-share in
Walthamstow, did every waitressing job possible to pay the bills and stripped
off my clothes at every lock-in while fellow drunks proclaimed me hilarious and
fun.
That girl is no more.
What is it about reaching your mid-twenties
and completely reassessing your entire life structure? I’ve felt it coming. I
slowly went through every hair colour imaginable coupled with drinking in every
swanky cocktail bar I could find. I started feeling more shy and reserved,
spending money on furniture and craving nights in with a cheesecake and a
single fork.
Eventually I have ended up here. Staring at
myself in the mirror like I’m a giant question mark.
Nowadays I have brown hair and I wear a lot
more jeans. I make green smoothies for breakfast and my google history reveals
things like ‘the benefits of quitting drinking’ and ‘how to become a buddhist’.
I realize that both the bleached blonde and
jean-wearing-brunette scenarios sound completely bonkers and like an idea for a
Bridget-Jones-meets-Girls sitcom but I think I’m onto something. And I’m not
alone. I only had to mention to the other girls at work that I couldn’t really
drink anymore without turning into a suicidal snap-dragon and everybody my age
completely agreed. The girls over thirty looked at me with a knowing smile.
They knew. They’d been through all of this and come out the other side realizing
that there’s more to life than trying to find out what will happen if you
finish an entire bottle of tequila. But how do we get to that comfortable
30-year-old place? How many more embarrassing nights out, hair colours, fitness
routines, religions and sparkly Asos mini-dresses do I need to get through
before I become a well-rounded, stable individual who doesn’t overthink every
waking moment of the day?
I think the problem is this: I am an adult
now. I have a proper job and a house and a fiancé and I often feel broody and
think about which shade of beige will look nice in the en suite. But by letting
go of my past wildness I feel like I am losing a part of myself and like I
never really knew who I was in the first place. Was I always just playing a
role? Am I now just playing a new role? Who the HELL am I anyway?
How do we get back to ourselves? How do we
pursue true happiness? Answers on a postcard, please.
Personally, despite the fear I have about
change and the fact that sometimes when people I ask me a question I feel like
I no longer have the skills to answer truthfully because I JUST DON’T KNOW HOW
I FEEL, I know I am on the right path. I am forever trying new things to explore
who this new me should be. And instead of moving through it with obsessive fear
I should try to enjoy these new discoveries about myself. I enjoy learning, so
why not make myself the new project of ambition?
I have given up social media to see what
that was like.
I have died my hair back to my natural
colour to see how that makes me feel.
I have stopped drinking and challenged
myself to a big night out with only hilarious sober jokes with which to
entertain.
I have searched for solo trips to India to
spend two weeks doing nothing but meditating.
I have written a list of all the places in
the world I suddenly want to go.
I have looked at maternity clothes online
even though I’m not even thinking of getting pregnant.
I have planned out my whole life one day
and then scrapped it and made an entirely new plan the next.
I’ve looked at masters degrees, new
careers, volunteering, borrow my doggy, life drawing classes, tree-houses in
the woods, piano lessons and becoming a vegan.
I think the point I am trying to make is
that this mid-twenties crisis is actually a real thing and you are not alone.
And that instead of putting pressure on yourself and questioning your every
motive just go forth and learn. You are suddenly realizing what a big, huge,
enormous world this is and how much possibility there lies within it. You are
not this ‘thing’ that you labeled years ago with a fashion or a personality.
You are you and you are ever changing. Ever evolving and learning and growing.
And how exciting is that?!
Turn that frown upside down and jump in.
Then tell yourself it’s ok to go home, stick on your PJs and have a nice cup of
tea.
No comments:
Post a Comment