For the Love of Words: John Green

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In celebration of one of my favourite authors being named one of Time Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People in the World in 2014, I thought I’d share some of my favourite excerpts and quotes of his. John Green is a 30-something young-adult fiction writer from Indianapolis, IN. He is a Printz Award-winning and New York Times bestselling author, his most well-known books being Looking for Alaska (2005) and The Fault in Our Stars (2012). He is also involved in several projects with his brother, Hank Green, including (but certainly not limited to) the Vlogbrothers YouTube channel, VidCon, and Project for Awesome – a community-building project that takes over YouTube once a year to raise money for charities (their fundraising goal last year was $100,00 and they ended up raising $869,171!)

Shailene Woodley will be acting in the lead role of the film adaptation of The Fault in Our Stars (set to be released June 6th!) and wrote a short article for the Time 100 about John Green. She completes the piece with true and beautiful words: “He sees people with curiosity, compassion, grace, and excitement. And he’s encouraging a huge community of followers to do the same. What a gift to be alive at the same time as this admirable leader.”

Here is a collection of some of my favourite John Green quotes:

I’m in love with you, and I’m not in the business of denying myself the simple pleasure of saying true things. I’m in love with you, and I know that love is just a shout into the void, and that oblivion is inevitable, and that we’re all doomed and that there will come a day when all our labor has been returned to dust, and I know the sun will swallow the only earth we’ll ever have, and I am in love with you.

– The Fault in Our Stars

Thomas Edison’s last words were “It’s very beautiful over there.” I don’t know where there is, but I believe it’s somewhere, and I hope it’s beautiful.

– Looking for Alaska

Here’s my advice: study broadly and without fear; learn a language if you can because that will make you life more interesting; read a little bit everyday. But most importantly, try to surround yourself with people you like and make cool stuff with them. In the end, at least in my experience, what you do isn’t going to be nearly as interesting or important as who you do it with.

– What To Do With Your Life | vlogbrothers

Maybe there’s something you’re afraid to say, or someone you’re afraid to love, or somewhere you’re afraid to go. It’s gonna hurt. It’s gonna hurt because it matters.

– Will Grayson, Will Grayson

But it is the nature of stars to cross, and never was Shakespeare more wrong than when he has Cassius note, “The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars / But in ourselves.”

– The Fault in Our Stars

I hope you take the time this summer to familiarize yourself with John Green’s writing and projects. He’s really just an incredibly admirable and inspiring human being. Happy Tuesday!

| alex

A Walk in the Park

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We have yet to have a nice, heavy rainfall in Calgary. Although I’m slightly disappointed because I want so badly for everything to be clean and green again, our city doesn’t experience the loveliest of rainy seasons; it can get a little too cold, a little too dark. So after drifting in and out of sleep well into the late afternoon, Adam and I took advantage of the sunshine and clear skies on Sunday and decided to go for a walk in Fish Creek. We entered the Shannon Terrace area from 24th St — I think that’s one of my favourite areas of the park. It’s quite dense, has the perfect picnic and fire spots, and is right by the river.

Anyway, Adam and I are huge dorks and love wearing matching clothes. We happened to stumble upon a dress and men’s collared shirt with matching patterns while we were out shopping the other day and just had to get them. We decided on Sunday to put on our new threads and have ourselves a bit of a photo shoot while we were out wandering through the park. It made for such a beautiful afternoon and I’m completely in love with how all the photos turned out! Here are a couple of my favourites:

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I hope you had an equally relaxing, fun, beautiful weekend and I hope you also spent it with people who mean the world to you. Happy Monday!

| alex

Drop Everything & Travel: In Defense of Young Recklessness

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My first real experience with travel was after I had graduated from high school. I hadn’t decided what my direction in life was going to be; I thought 17 was far too young an age to decide what I was going to do for the rest of my life. I decided to take some time off to figure out who I was, learn more about the world around me. So while my friends were picking out which university courses to enroll in, I was picking out which countries I was going to go to. I ended up spending three months backpacking through South East Asia with two of my friends. We spent time in Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Laos, and Brunei. Since then, I have spent a month in Costa Rica by myself, a couple of weeks in London with a friend, two weeks road-tripping to California, and a month in Vietnam with my boyfriend. All of these trips have been beautiful, fun, revealing, enriching. They have all been amazing in completely different ways.

I went for coffee with Alana, one of the girls I went to Asia with, a couple of days ago and we started reminiscing about our trip. It’s been four years since we went; naturally, a lot has changed. We talked about the time we had no plans on Halloween so we decided to get tattoos; how our only plan was to walk around and find the cleanest looking studio for us to get them done in; how we went swimming again only a couple of days afterward. We talked about how often we partied, how we were drunk for the majority of our trip. We talked about all the strangers we met, stayed with, kissed. We talked about the night we completely blacked out and got separated and spent the next two days sick and exhausted. We talked about how completely absurd all of that sounds to us now.

We’re both still in our very early twenties; we haven’t become boring (well, she hasn’t at least) but we have grown up a little bit. We’ve both travelled since then and our experiences have been different every time. My month in Costa Rica was solitary and a time of personal exploration; while I did meet a couple of people in different towns, I spent most of my time on my own. I read, wrote, fell asleep on beaches almost everyday. Alana and I went to London together as well; we spent a lot of time walking around the city, sightseeing, visiting all of the historical landmarks (and Harry Potter filming locations, obviously). We made friends in our hostel, met up with old ones. We stayed in the same hostel the entire time, walked down the same street to get to the tube every morning, bought coffee at the same cafe. By the end of the trip, we felt like we had a new home there and we loved feeling that way. Adam and I spent our month in Vietnam wandering around different towns, trying to find the best used bookstore in each one. We ended up loving one of the towns so much that we stayed there for half of our trip. And for the first time since I’ve started travelling, food was an important aspect of our trip; we loved trying new dishes, looking for different restaurants to try every night.

My point is, travelling often changes as you get older. At the least, it changes depending on which stage of your life you’re currently in, what you’re going through, who you’re with. You’re going to have a different experience with every new adventure. Alana and I talked about how there are so many people who disapprove of taking time off school to travel, how there were so many people who looked down on us for doing so, and how they doubted our ability to live (what they thought was) a productive and successful life afterward. Almost every single one of those people have told me that their plan is (and my plan should be) to travel after they’ve graduated from university, that it’s more mature, reasonable, smart. It’s difficult to argue against that; it does seem more logical. And while I obviously haven’t experienced waiting until completing a degree to travel, I do have the experience of deciding to go beforehand. And it’s been an incredible one. So as a 20-something who’s been traveling steadily for the past four years, allow me to argue in favour of travelling before you go back to school or taking time off from school to travel. Allow me to defend young recklessness and wandering.

I can’t provide you with percentages and surveys and I can’t tell you with absolute certainty what is statistically accurate. But I can tell you what has been true of my experience. I can tell you this: I know of too many adults in my life who waited to travel the world and never have. I can tell you that I speak to more people on a daily basis who are envious of my travels than people who can relate to them, that I hear far too often of how fast life progresses after university toward real responsibilities, a career, a family. I can tell you that I have never once spoken to anybody who has decided to cast off responsibilities, step out of their comfort zone, go against what was expected of them to travel and regretted it.

I can tell you that stepping onto a plane going to the other side of the world when you’re 17-years-old is an incredibly unique experience; that it is both terrifying and thrilling; that you will feel so brave, so invincible; that you will never forget the texture of that moment. I can tell you that there are fears and inhibitions that you have not yet developed at seventeen and that you should take advantage of that; sometimes the best memories come from not thinking twice, from not looking before you leap. I can tell you that sunrises on a beach in Thailand, while not any less marvelous, will feel vastly different when you’re young and naive and immature; when you and your friends are still a little drunk on a boat back to the island your hostel is on; when you have paint on your face and glowsticks around every appendage; when you’re exchanging foggy memories of loud music, dancing in bare feet, and kissing someone in the ocean. I can tell you that travelling at a young age forces you into independence, challenges you, changes you, and I can tell you that that is important and invaluable. I can tell you that there are things you learn about the world and about yourself that are better lived in perpetual movement than in stagnation, that I have learned more in months of travelling than I have in two years of post-secondary education.

I know that this is not the path that everyone will travel on, or even needs to. I know that there are incredible experiences and unforgettable memories that people gain from travelling on other paths, like going to university or trade school or working right out of high school. But if you are on the edge, if your heartstrings are even only slightly pulling you toward an adventure into a great unknown, just book your flight and don’t look back. There are many things that people regret at the end of their lifetime, but I have never once met someone who regretted exploration and adventure. I’m not saying that this isn’t something you can’t achieve as you get older, but I am saying that there is something uniquely beautiful and transformative about travelling when you’re young. I wish upon every young person coming into their own the hazy memories of stumbling hand-in-hand with people you love through streets littered with illuminated lanterns, the memory of watching the sunset on a beach by yourself and letting go of everything in your life you didn’t need in order to be happy.

I can’t say it any better than how Jason Mraz once wrote it on his own blog: “You were not born here to work and pay taxes. You were put here to be part of a vast organism to explore and create. Stop putting it off.” So quit your job, take a couple of years off from school. Contrary to what you are constantly hearing, you really are so young and you really do have so much time. Don’t feel rushed into anything you aren’t ready for and don’t put yourself in a position where one day you’ll wonder what might have been. Don’t settle for anything less than what will you make you extraordinarily happy.

Drop everything. Go on an adventure.

| alex

For the Love of Words: Casual Blessings

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I stumbled upon a blog recently that I wanted to share with all of you! Casual Blessings is dedicated to sharing grace and good wishes. It wishes upon its readers (and draws their attention to) small, casual, secular blessings. Some are written by the owner, Leikkona, and others are posted on a submission basis. It’s been active for a year and only has ten pages of content, but it seems as though activity has picked up in the past couple of months so I think this is definitely one to keep an eye on! Here are some of my favourite casual blessings:

May you pick up your tea when it’s exactly the right temperature, and may you happen to glance out the window when the light is just how you like it.

May you listen to a song you always skipped and find out you love it.

May a crisp fall breeze tickle your nose, and may you see some colourful leaves dancing on the sidewalk today.

May you encounter kindness and respect when you open yourself to the people you love.

The posts are short and so incredibly sweet. It’s a simple and beautiful theme, a lovely reminder of everything in our lives that is magical. Happy Monday, everyone!

| alex

You are Extraordinary

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It starts at a young age. We’re told that certain talents, interests, pursuits lead to economic success and that others don’t. We’re told that those that lead to economic success are the only ones that are important, that have value, that deserve your commitment. It’s not always direct, but it is a reality for a lot of people that is often bleak and disheartening. We’re given core subjects to study in school that suggest to us what is most important to be successful in. We’re encouraged to become engineers, accountants, dentists, lawyers. We’re told that playing an instrument, drawing, writing are good hobbies to have, but not careers to pursue. It’s tough feeling like your interests and talents aren’t valued in society. It’s tough feeling like you’re never quite good enough, like your abilities never quite meet people’s expectations.

So I just wanted to say that I think you’re extraordinary. I know that sometimes you have trouble believing it about yourself but know that I believe it for you. You are unique and you are worthwhile. You contribute something of value to this world. You are talented and you are good at things.

You are good at telling stories, at making people laugh until their stomachs are sore and tears are in their eyes. You have incredible handwriting. You are good at making Kraft Dinner, at not following the box instructions and adding in the actual perfect amount of butter. You are good at mixing drinks. You are good at doing your hair; you can use a straightener in five different ways and every morning it looks like you’ve just been to a salon. You are good at speed reading. You are good at playing video games, at getting the best ending in RPGs and maintaining an unbeatable KDR. You are good at writing songs, poetry, short stories, essays; you inspire and challenge people with how you string together words. You are good at making the perfect playlist for any occasion. You can put together an outfit that would make the Olsen twins envious; you take chances and experiment in fashion and motivate others to do the same. You are good at cutting straight without any lines and free-hand drawing circles. You are good at travelling, finding the best flight deals, bartering for the cheapest prices at markets. You are good at remembering and reciting quotes from your favourite movies and TV shows. You are good at adapting to new environments, making new friends, rolling with the punches. You are good at untangling headphones and christmas lights. You create artwork that changes people, that makes them think, that makes them stop and stare in awe.

Don’t underestimate the importance of your abilities just because they don’t necessarily serve an economic purpose. Don’t allow anyone to convince you that what you are good at, what you are passionate about, what you find value in is not worthwhile. Your talents are a reflection of your heart, curiosity, and passions and the things that are important to you are important, period.

Always be in pursuit of what you love. Always do what makes you happy. Always remember that you are extraordinary.

| alex

Spring Has Sprung: The Essentials

It has been so beautiful in my city for the past couple of weeks! Although we’ve been revisited by an occasional snowfall, I feel like it’s safe to say that spring has finally sprung! To celebrate, I thought I’d share with all of you a couple of sunny, flowery, and practical products for the season from some of my favourite stores. What better way to ring in the spring with a little bit of online shopping? Especially if you live in a city like mine — with a five (sometimes almost six) month winter, it eventually becomes a sort of necessity to start ushering the spring into your wardrobe/home before it’s quite ready to reveal itself outside!SpringFinaly1. Rubber Boots
I actually just bought my first pair of rain boots and I can’t believe it took me so long! I love them so much – jumping in puddles without having to worry about wet feet is the best. I personally own Hunters but I went shopping with a friend recently and saw these Steven Madden Riding Boots – we immediately fell in love with the buckles and red detailing.

2. Sunnies
I love Free People sunnies, especially these ones! Not only do they have a relatively wide selection of unique and fashionable sunglasses, but they’re also really reasonably priced.

3. FloralFloralFloral
What says spring better than flowers? Floral may not be groundbreaking in regards to spring fashion, but it’s definitely one of my favourite seasonal trends. One floral item is all you need to bring some sunshine into your outfit — I especially love this kimono from Urban Outfitters!

4. Umbrella
This Hunter umbrella is not only practical for rainy spring weather — it’s pretty cute too!

5. Statement Ring
Actually a staple for any season, but it’s spring so treat yourself to something new and unique! I love this one from Urban Outfitters.

6. Light-Weight Scarf
It’s finally time to pack up those thick knit scarves and trade them in for something more warm-weather appropriate! I love this one from Aritzia — it’s light-weight and oversized. Aritzia scarves may be a bit pricey but from my experience, the quality is always worth it!

7. Vases
I think that the loveliest way to bring spring into your home is to fill it with colourful, pretty flowers. But you’ll need something equally as pretty to put those flowers in! There’s a huge selection of beautiful vintage and home-made vases on Etsy — my favourite are these painted wooden ones that come in a set of three!

8. A Good Book
With spring comes the closing of another school year for us university students. For some, that means wanting to avoid all printed word for the entirety of the summer. For others, that means being able to set down those textbooks and read whatever it is your heart desires. If you enjoy YA Fiction as much as I do, I suggest you try reading John Green’s The Fault in Our Stars. It’s an incredibly smart and beautiful story — John Green is one of my favourite writers (actually, people). The movie adaptation is also set to be released in June! The screenplay was written by Scott Neustadter & Michael H. Weber (500 Days of Summer), scored by Bright Eyes, and is starring Shailene Woodley and Ansel Elgort — I am SO excited.

Happy Spring, everyone!

| alex

For the Love of Words: Cody Gohl

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I used to be an avid reader of Thought Catalog. A friend showed me a TC-published piece a couple of years ago and I immediately became hooked. All of the contributing writers at the time were putting together pieces that were thoughtful, beautiful, insightful; their work made me think, showed me new perspectives, moved me. There has been an unsettling shift within the past year or so. Even though there are now more articles posted per day, the value and beauty I used to find in every article on the website can now only be found in one of every 50 pieces published; it has become an exhausting task to sift through all the listicles, reddit shares, and poorly-written narratives to try and find something of substance. I miss the way things used to be; I miss when every single one of the articles published was well-written, respectable, and intelligent in some way.

I thought I would pay my respects to those good ol’ days and share with you guys the writing of Cody Gohl. He’s by far my favourite writer to have ever been published on TC. His writing is beautiful, poetic, and so moving. Here are some of my favourite excerpts from Cody’s writing:

But Neruda must have felt like this once must have sat on a bench and watched and crafted love out of something like a piece of tissue held in hands wrinkled and glass fragile but now they’ve left and the woman too and a plump grey cloud rolls above my head.

– It’s Been A While Since Anyone Cared Enough

For him, you will be the light at the end of the tunnel, the halo of glowing yellow that he has been waiting for. Never forget that you are someone worth steering for, someone worth the swift kick in the opposite direction worth all of the trials and checklists and almostrights because you are a mountaintop, the crush of violet on skin from a rainbow that seems so close to the earth that it must be real.

The Soulmate You Deserve

Because even if we ran out of things to say I don’t think it’d bother me much don’t think it would send my bones to rattle and okay maybe I talk too much and try to connect too much and maybe the line I said about your heart beat didn’t sound as poetic out loud as it did in my head but I’m a zany case of skin and I can’t help it that you make me buzz electric and it’s not my fault that in my mind we’re just two lightning bugs like darting stars in tall grass

All The Things I Want To Say To You

Help me to seize more color of this world. Help me to toss the sails to wade waist-deep in water too cold because someone said they didn’t want to go in alone. Help me to remember times in which I’ve been sad and hurt when talking to people who are sad and hurt and help me to pepper the mundane with adventure.

Help!

I imagine a boy who became a man before he’d realized it. A case full of old instruments, loose paper. His hands have roughened, but are gentler now. They’ve learned how to hold other hands without getting clammy. He reads his old journals and chuckles at the sentimentality of it all. 

Future

Cody no longer writes for Thought Catalog, but all of his articles can still be found on his author page. He currently posts new pieces and poems on his blog and you can keep updated by following him on Twitter. If you’ve enjoyed what you’ve been exposed to so far, I also highly recommend you buy his eBook, A Slow Moving Something. It’s a collection of essays and poems about his time studying abroad in Madrid. If you’re like me and are sans eReader, you can download a free Kindle app on your phone/macbook and read it that way.

I don’t think I’d ever be so bold as to call myself a writer but I do love it. And I think it’s so important to keep myself growing, learning, and inspired through other people’s writing. Cody’s writing has always inspired me. I love the honesty in his narratives. I love how he writes of experiences and feelings so personal, but they still somehow feel like my own after I’m finished reading. I love the way he strings together words to create glowing images in my mind. I love the lack of structure, how his sentences flow and melt together.

I hope you love his work as much as I do; I hope it moves and inspires you. Happy Wednesday!

| alex

Lights Like Lanterns: Little Memories of Vietnam

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I miss having all the time in the world to read beautiful books on beautiful beaches while you sat beside me playing beautiful music. When the beads of sweat rolling off the tips of our noses started arriving in herds, we looked toward the sparkling blanket of ocean that lay before our feet. I miss having to run across the sand because it was so hot and we were certain we were getting third-degree burns on the soles of our feet. I miss the out-of-breath screaming and the laughing and the falling overtop of one another when we finally reached the water. I miss wrapping my legs around your waist while you carried me through the waves because my feet couldn’t touch the bottom and open water gives me bad butterflies. I miss holding hands while we floated on our backs so that nothing from the gentle rises and falls to the crashing of the waves could pull us apart. Because even after being together everyday for a month, we never wanted to be too far from one another.

I miss doing all the things we loved and all the things we wanted to do and being able to do them together. I miss sharing every moment, all the highs and too-real lows that come with traveling to the other side of the world: breathtaking ocean-views and dirty, blistered feet; beautiful architecture and sweaty everything; succulent food and sorry stomachs. I miss all the talking, all the comfortable silences. I miss the hundreds of games of Uno and watching you read maps. I miss watching for the look of wonder on your face every time we crossed a street, drove through forests, pulled into a different city. Everything was so new and beautiful to you and I felt so fortunate to a part of the scenery I know you try so hard to keep in your memory months later.

I miss hearing you ask for bottle caps for the beers you hadn’t tried before and I miss how embarrassing it felt to be using so many hand gestures when we tried ordering food at restaurants. I miss biking to the beach, browsing through bookstores, all the souvenir shopping we did even though we’re both terrible at bartering. I miss getting caught in rainstorms together, letting the rain soak through our clothes, kissing while people ran past us looking for shelter; it felt like we were in a movie and I’ve always felt like our love is like the best kind of movie love.

I miss making new memories in a country so different from our own and holding hands more often than we weren’t and not having to go more than a few minutes without you looking at me the way you do. I miss always kissing each other’s damp, salty faces without caring that they were damp and salty. I miss the way our legs were pretzeled together evening after evening without fail and the way the early morning sunlight hugged your cheek before I leaned in to place my lips in its warmth. I miss feeling like it was only you and I and like the world was ours for the taking and like real life would never feel bad again because we had these lights like lanterns to unfold in times of darkness.

I hope these little memories float toward you like pieces of flickering light. I hope they offer a little warmth in this cold and I hope they drench your life with luminescence on days that seem dull and lightless. I hope they remind you of those sun-kissed days on our favourite beach, when everything felt so simple and there was nothing but the sounds of waves crashing as we pressed our salty lips together and whispered iloveyous into the ocean breeze.

| alex

Spring DIY: Bike Basket

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I am so ready for Calgary to experience spring weather again; it feels as if our winters get longer every year! Now that we’re finally edging toward the finish line, I thought I might as well start ushering in spring with a DIY project for my bike!

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Supplies:

  • Basket (I bought mine at Walmart for about $10 – I realized afterward that it was a bit big for a front basket, but still functional. I actually might use it on the back of my bike going forward!)
  • Hot glue gun
  • Fake flowers (These are everywhere, but cheapest at the dollar store. I originally planned on using several different types of flowers but ended up just sticking to daisies – they suit me much better!)
  • Ribbon (For the way I’ve done this, the ribbon is visible so I chose a colour to match my bike!)

Step One: Pluck off all your fake flowers from their stems. They pop off easily but I realize that may be because I bought dollar store ones. If you happen to buy flowers of better quality and are having difficulties, I’m sure you could cut them off the stem with a pair of scissors! Make sure to leave a couple centimetres of stem so it’s easier to stick in the basket!

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Step Two: If you have several different types of flowers, organize them into an arrangement before you start this step. If you are haphazardly sticking flowers all over your basket as I did, then you can start with gluing right away! Use your hot glue gun first on the actual flower stem – apply glue liberally to avoid having your flowers fly off mid-ride. Before the glue dries, stick the stem into a spot on the basket and apply pressure. Add some extra glue on the sides afterwards if it looks necessary.

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Step Three: Continue gluing and placing until your entire basket is covered to your satisfaction! I only have flowers on the front and sides because I was planning on having the basket on the front of my bike. However, now that I’ve decided I might put it on the back instead, I’ll have to cover all four sides!

Step Four: Use the ribbon to tie your basket onto the handle bars. I’d suggest double-knotting and checking the knot before each use just in case! In the photos, I’ve tied the ribbons right on the top edge of the basket. However, I decided to re-tie them afterwards about 2 inches down from the top edge – this will just help to avoid drooping once you’ve actually put things in the basket!

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That’s it! This project was so easy and quick to complete – I’m definitely going to buy another basket (or two) so I can make more! Since these baskets are so easy to attach and remove, it’ll be nice having a couple to choose from – especially since the one I’ve made here is actually the perfect size for the back of my bike!

I hope this tutorial adds a bit of sunshine to your day and gets you even more excited for spring! Happy Tuesday, everyone!

| alex