The Opposite of Laziness

When I was in college, I juggled many different activities at the same time – a full engineering courseload, complete with weekly labs, reports, and problem sets; a supervisor position at my work-study job; executive board positions for different clubs; dance practices; maintaining friendships; sometimes going on Tumblr; the list goes on…

After college, for about a month, I had a part-time job at a quick service restaurant, and literally no other commitments besides applying for full time jobs. For the first week, this was fine – I hung out with my other newly-graduated friends, watched movies on the couch, read “The Opposite of Loneliess” by Marina Keegan, and ate fried chicken for dinner every night – it was my right! I worked hard for my degree and the opportunity to finally relax! Naturally, while it was okay for the first couple of days, I was worried that I’d become restless.

I eventually got a full time job that I settled into pretty quickly. I wasn’t going to breweries on early weekday afternoons anymore (darn!), but my life was starting to look structured again. I went to work, came home, made dinner, went to sleep. Go to work, go home, make dinner, go to sleep. Go to work, go home, make dinner, go to sleep. Rinse and repeat.

Months went by. I would catch up with college friends, who would ask, “What’s new?” I would answer, “Literally nothing!” And mean it!

For the first few years out of college, the variation in my schedule came from running. I would always have another race on the horizon, and with every race came a training schedule, and every training schedule changed workouts from week to week. I got in shape, earned a few medals, and, perhaps most importantly, learned the importance of a hobby in keeping myself busy and entertained despite the monotony of a 9-5 job.

Though I loved – and still love! – running, it too was also bound to get repetitive after a while. I longed to try new things, meet new people, continue growing as a person. As stressful as college was, I was constantly challenging myself and learning, which made everything feel worthwhile in the end. After six (!) half marathons, as much as I do love running, I was starting to feel stagnant. (Seeing minimal progress in my running definitely had a part to play, but that is another essay for another day.)

At the end of last year, I had had enough and decided to do something about my lingering fear of complacency – I signed up for a sketch comedy writing class. Financial incentives – that is, paying for races – had been a great motivator in the past, so I ponied up the tuition fee and got to writing. At the end of that class, I realized that my acting skills were not up-to-par and decided to start taking improv comedy classes. I loved my first class so much that I’m currently still working through the school’s curriculum!

Earlier this year, I also found a group called the Junior League of Boston that sounded like it would fill another one of my unmet “spiritual” needs – doing community service. Joining the group would also mean meeting lots of new people, which definitely didn’t hurt! I ponied up an even bigger fee to join this group, not really knowing what it would be like but excited to find out.

As all this happened, I continued running. Over the summer, my boyfriend coached me through training for a series of 5K races with the intention of lowering my time. Though I ultimately did not reach my goal, I improved a lot as a runner and was inspired enough to sign up for – and gain entry to – the Tokyo Marathon in March 2020.

Are you tired reading those last three paragraphs? Because I’m tired just thinking about the next few months. More improv, more writing, more community service, meeting so many more people, all on top of trying to train for a freaking marathon! in Japan!

While I am excited for what the coming months will bring, part of me is worried about overloading myself like I did in college. At that point, growth came with its own growing pains, like a crushing amount of stress and pressure and, inversely, not a lot of sleep. (To explain my current sensitivity to caffeine, I like to think that my inordinate coffee intake during this time flipped some sort of switch in my brain, as if to say, “No more! Ever!”.) I’m worried that I will burn out again, but have to keep a big, bright smile on to hide this darkness from all the shiny new people that I’ll be trying to make friends with. (Sounds like college!)

Well, just like college, at this point, the only way out is to simply push through. If anyone needs me, please look on my couch – I’ll try to be there as often as I can!

Trisha Retakes Years-Old Surveys (3/6/11), 1/many

I’m currently reading “We Are Never Meeting in Real Life” by Samantha Irby, and her application for The Bachelorette reminded me of the MySpace and Facebook surveys that I took a lot throughout high school. I couldn’t get past it without resisting the urge to re-do one of my old ones for fun.

These things are so! freaking! long!

Continue reading “Trisha Retakes Years-Old Surveys (3/6/11), 1/many”

My Name: The Power of “a” Syllable

“What do you prefer – Trish or Trisha?”

“I don’t care, as long as you’re consistent!”

I’ve never been picky about my name. Unlike my brother’s name, which was my grandfather’s, my parents have ceded that mine holds no deeper meaning besides “sounding pretty.”

Some people have no problem with my answer and choose one option right away. I like it when this happens because it takes the pressure off me to choose for them. After all, I’m not lying when I say, ‘I don’t care.’

Other times, people hesitate and think for a second, sometimes pressing me by saying, “No, seriously, what do you prefer?” – to which I think, ‘Why would I lie and say I don’t care when I actually do?’ … but then I realize people would actually lie about that, and then I get sad.

“No, I really don’t care, I swear!”

Whenever this happens, I love seeing what people choose.

“Trisha,” as my full name, has an air of formality around it. The vast majority of people call me Trisha and do so because they never thought to ask my preference, which is totally fine! Why change the status quo for no reason? Sometimes, they are acquaintances who ask the question as a way to break the ice but also don’t want to break the ice completely by using a nickname too quickly, so they continue with my full name, which I find mildly amusing.

The other day, the instructor of my improv class asked this question while in the middle of teaching (which may or may not be the impetus for this entire post), and, in the moment, chose my full name, which I completely expected based on the scenario we were in. My response even got a couple of laughs, which is always welcome in an improv situation!

“Trish” has more the air of a nickname, so most people who choose to call me this are more familiar. In the literal sense, this includes most of my family (read: “Ate Trish,” “Tita Trish,” etc.). Among friends, this usually includes those who I’ve known for a while and only thought to ask my preference when they catch themselves calling me “Trish” randomly when they had been calling me “Trisha” for ages, which, again, is totally fine. Unlike the aforementioned acquaintances, they usually know me better and are more comfortable using a nickname.

I’m actually thankful for these moments, as they give me a tiny barometer reading of our friendship, along the lines of, “Aw, they would really call me Trish? We truly are friends!” (Not to say that people who call me “Trisha” aren’t friends – people show affection in different ways, after all.)

The only options that is weird to me is changing between the two. Just like a child thinking that they’re in trouble when their parent uses their full name, a sudden change in what someone calls me is a signal that something is off.

Did that person just call me Trish for the first time without asking? Are they coming on to me? Are we really close like that? Alternatively, does that other person usually call me Trish but just call me Trisha? Like the kid mentioned above, am I in trouble? Are we about to have a serious conversation?

At the end of the day, there is only one answer that is consistently incorrect – Patricia. In the words of the (immortal) Ting Tings, “That’s not my name!”