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šŸ§Letter 108: What have you been loving, lacking and learning?

9 min

April Review, Context why I review, Michigan Reflections, Blue Hawaii, A Star is Born

If you are new here or missed last week's edition, you can catch up on the past letters here. If you are reading this for the first time, Iā€™d love you to sign up below to join the other learn-it-alls:


Aloha fellow learn-it-all!

Greetings from my layover at the LAX Airport šŸŒŗ

The magnolias were blooming this past week in Michigan :-)

It's good to be back folks!

I meant to write this letter on my 9-hour flight last week but then got sidetracked with journaling, writing a letter to my future self, crying my eyes out to a movie mentioned below, and Ā comparing photo libraries with a new travel photographer friend next to me.

With the nerves of backpacking for the first time for six days this upcoming week in Hawaii, catching up with family, my mom's birthday, and sorting out my job, Iā€™ve had a lot going on. I hate making excuses and pointing my finger though. Next week Iā€™ll be sharing about promises we make to ourselves.

Before we dive in a shoutout to my mom. Because of her, I am driven, caring and inclusive. I am who I am because of her Ā love you momma V.

Now, letā€™s take a cannon ball into letter 108 from a learn-it-all. Enjoy!

ā“ Question to think about

What have I loved, lacked and learned this last month?

šŸ¤” Reflecting

Five things I loved

  1. New readers. I welcomed 26 new friends to the community. Hello, welcome and thank you for being a part of my learning journey! There are now 356 readers of these letters as of April 30thšŸ˜‡
  2. Assertiveness. This month I expressed myself more openly. Instead of festering or overthinking something that I never end up saying, I said it. In practice, this meant not shying away from overhand serves or setting in volleyball, advocating for myself during my new job, having difficult conversations, and tweeting things that feel like tmi.
  3. Reflective writing. Half of my current journal has brown paper. I've committed these pages to doing longer form thoughts on things varying from rants about growth digression, worries about the near future, remembrances of drinking days, and green lights for friendship.
  4. Weekly hikes with friends training for my backpacking trip
  5. Reconnecting with family and being vulnerable getting closer to friends as I ask for emotional support surfaced problems. Also proving to myself that a wedding can be fun while sober with an open bar.

Four things I lacked

  1. Stillness. I felt scatterbrained. A part of this is me starting a new job. Another part is that Iā€™ve been sitting at a table much of the day and feel more stir crazy. I refuse to allow problems to become excuses though.
  2. Professional Confidence. Because I haven't been a project or community manager in a while, I've feared that my muscles have atrophied and that I forgot how to use the skills I've learned over the years.
  3. Reading. I have gone through a period of barely reading. Instead, I was watching an hour of Star Wars for 12 consecutive nights. My roommate said I started talking like Yoda. No shame. Heā€™s a legend. Long live the Jedis. You call all call me padawan from now on as Iā€™ll always be a beginner at something in my life.
  4. Public writing. I can't help but compare my present self to the gal a year and a half ago who published something everyday for my Ship It project. Why didn't I do that last year again during my sabbatical? Why arenā€™t I writing more? Iā€™ve made so many writing friends and feel like Iā€™m falling behind as I unconsciously compare myself.

Three things I learned

  1. Growth is not linear so I cannot expect myself to linearly improve. I refuse to give up being a beginner because it constantly reminds me of my favorite quality in others: humility. I choose to be a beginner at many things like backpacking, beach volleyball, yoga, meditation and surfing. Iā€™m not doing all these things to become an Olympian. I am doing them for fun. Other reasons are to scratch some curious itches, make friends, to stay fit, to stay sane, and to stretch my zone of familiarity.
  2. Rewatching movies with captions on is such a valuable use of time. Their meanings change as I watch them in different ages. Anne Hathaway movies really speak to me too: Ella Enchanted, Princess Diaries, and Devil Wears Prada. With captions on movies, it feels more memorable and more likely to remember the quotes.
  3. In order to keep doing these monthly reviews, I need a kind mindset to celebrate and acknowledge the passed time rather than criticize or become anxious.

Two questions Iā€™ve been asking

  1. What's one decision you can make today that will save you from making ten more decisions in the future?
  2. What is a small, but courageous choice you can make today?

One new habit

Meditate daily (at least ten breaths)

Context on why I need the habit: I am doing this again. Back in February, I tried this out where I tried to increase 1 minute every day. I barely got to half of the month. I failed with too many different environments, lack of prioritization, and no tracking of the minute increase.

ā®Context on my Reflecting

Above I showed you a summary of some higher level snippets I feel comfortable sharing. This is a process I started back in 2020 with an accountability group. My future self always is thankful to be doing this. It always helps me to be more proactive and intentional in how I live my life.

What a nice segue into the next sectionā€¦

šŸ“– Reading Again...

I dusted off one of the most impactful books that I read in November of 2018 after graduating from university.

The book: The Defining Decade Why your Ā twenties matter- and make the most of them now by Meg Jay.

Four years ago, this book helped me get off the hamster wheel of life. I started to be more intentional with my life.

I just began rereading it. Hereā€™s a quote from Meg Jay that explains the concept that helped to start taking action and running experiments in my life.

ā€œIdentity capital is our collection of personal assets. It is the repertoire of individual resources that we assemble over time. These are investments we make in ourselves, the things we do well enough, or long enough, that they become a part of who we areā€¦ It is how we build ourselves bit by bit, over timeā€¦ [It] is what we bring to the adult marketplace. It is the currency we use to metaphorically purchase jobs and relationships and other things we wantā€ (6).

There were a lot of life events that I attribute to this book, in addition to reading the Growth Mindset by Carol S. Dweck, and taking Eric Koestorā€™s Book Writing entrepreneurial course.

For context, Iā€™d recently quit working in risk insurance. I started researching and interviewing strangers who I saw as lifelong learners with the aspiration to become a writer. I did my first Dry January after reading it. I started doing solo trips to figure out who I was. I started taking seemingly random courses I felt compelled to join. These surrounded me with others intentionally living their lives.

I started to see beyond the status quo. This book created a call to action for me. As Jay wrote the finding from her 27 yo Ā patient Helen, ā€œā€¦ you canā€™t think your way through life. The only way to figure out what to do is to doā€“ somethingā€ (15).

Without this book I doubt Iā€™d be writing to you today.

I know, thatā€™s mystical. Had I never read that book, I wouldnā€™t have started to seize more life desires. My curiosity and courage led me into the space of personal development and finding others who were like me. That is those who love growing, creating, being curious and sharing their ideas for the hell of it.

I found my notebook with its book notes in my parentā€™s basement. More to come :)

šŸŽ¬ Watching Part 1

šŸ’™Blue Hawaii

Blue Hawaii was filmed 61 years ago in 1961. The year my mom was born. This got me thinking: what movie came out the year I was born?

Back to the movie: we watched Blue Hawaii on her birthday. Its lead role is Elvis Presley and takes place in Oā€™ahu. I was thrilled to see so many familiar spots like Diamond Head, the Tantalus lookout, and the shopping street Kalakaua Avenue. Though, the misogyny of the movie made me frown. In the movie, his mother is super needy, who didn't approve of his working class girlfriend. I honestly donā€™t know what the story arc. Sure Elvis could move his hips, but this movie made me repulsed by the character he played. The scenes have beautiful shots, but the way that the men act around woman repulsed me.

Itā€™s nostalgic for my mom. But she snoozed off, and enough was enough. I have no idea how the movie ended. I honestly don't care.

This mindset makes me think of Stephen King: "Every book you pick up has its own lesson or lessons, and quite often the bad books have more to teach than the good ones." Whether itā€™s a book or movie, same difference. We can still learn from the bad stuff.

I want to focus my attention on more timeless ideas: evergreen content. The ones that survive the test of time. They are relevant rather than the ones that will leave my (hypothetical) grandkids with a sour taste in their mouths.

šŸŽ¬ Watching Part 2

ā­ļøA Star Is Born

This is a movie I watched on the plane starring Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga. Cooper finds her in a hidden drag bar and uncovers the natural talent of Lady Gagaā€™s natural talent for singing and songwriting. Talk about a stroke of pure luck! He takes her on tour with him.

I got chills as he asked her on stage for the first time and the courage it mustā€™ve taken to go from never singing any of her original songs in front of anyone to a whole crowd of people.

Many of the themes are:

A favorite quote from the movie:

ā€œYou donā€™t think about where youā€™re going because you like where you are.ā€

šŸŒŸ Quote to inspire

ā€œYou learn something every day if you pay attention.ā€ - Ray Le Blond

šŸ“· Photos of the Week

Groom featured far right next to me

My cousin Thomas got married last year. Heā€™s the first cousin on my momā€™s Polish side of the family for my generation to get married. Kind of a big deal.

Because last summer was during a time where large gatherings werenā€™t safe, the wedding was small. This reception party and other family gatherings were the first time I got to see some family members in a couple months or up to a couple years pre-covid. It was so lovely to reconnect.

Some highlights that came up from my week in Michigan:

šŸ™ Shoutouts


I appreciate you reading this! If ideas resonated, Iā€™d love you to leave a comment, reply to this email, or send me a message on Twitter @JenVermet. Visit my online home if you forgot who I am. If you want to know what I'm up to right now, check my now page.

Never stop learning šŸ˜

Mahalo šŸŒŗ

Jen

PS - If you missed last week's letter, here's a distilled tweet recap

PPS - You can read the full letter 108 on my binge drinking here.

If youā€™re reading this because someone shared this newsletter with you, welcome! Iā€™d love it if you subscribed:


šŸ‘£ Footnotes

On what a learn-it-all is:

On one of my favorite dutch treats that I grew up eating:

On why we need patience

On how school and tests creating limiting beliefs of who we are:

On yet another reason why I will never stop learning:

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