Thursday, 16 January 2014

Reinventions of self


Today I went to pick up my new glasses. They're the purple ones that you see over this text. Every time I put them on I feel brand new (and dizzy, but that's just my eyes adjusting to the new prescription) and it kinda ties in well with this time in my life where I can clearly feel I'm starting a brand new chapter of what promises to be a very happy and exciting story. A new job and the promise of a bright future. And it got me thinking.

I guess you can tell my story through my glasses. I've started wearing glasses shortly after starting Uni as a result of so many readings in less than perfect lighting. It's funny, almost everyone I know from my course started Uni without glasses and yet almost everyone was wearing glasses by the time we graduated. English majors, eh?

Anyhoot, my first pair was as understated as you could get. The slimmest of frames, black, and only on top, the bottom was just the lens without a frame. In photos you could almost miss them on my face. I felt good with them. Brainy and true to my love of literature (or at least to the cliché of it). I felt like I now had something that would require people to take me seriously. I wore glasses, ergo I knew my business.

My second pair was acquired while I was still at Uni though by then I had discovered dance and song and acting, so I was ready to be bolder. Hence came my red glasses (see in picture above). I was going through an artistic phase and when I got home with such a statement on my face my dad almost had a fit. You are going to get sick of them fast, the novelty will soon be lost and you'll be stuck with them for ages, he said (and by said I mean shouted). Which thankfully was never the case. I fell in love with my glasses today as much as on the first moment they rested upon my nose. They represent a willingness to be noted, to be looked at, to be adventurous and fun and to take a leap into the unknown. I was ready to venture outside of my shell. As my boyfriend and the salespeople at vision express can tell you, it took a lot of effort to get me to accept something on my face other than my red glasses. I knew a change was needed, but I just didn't feel like myself without them.

And now make way for the purple ones. I confess I was slightly unconvinced at the shop, but as soon as I put them on today on my way to work I could see a different life before me. This is a new me. This is a rebirth, a reinvention. For the first time in my life I feel like a grown-up through and through. No more crappy teenager jobs, no more wearing trainers to work. Now it's all boots and packed leftovers for lunch and being wary of scratching my eyes because ups! I'm now wearing makeup. It's a new life for me. And it seems only fitting that it should show on my face. 

Thankful Thursday # 2



Wow, I can't believe it's been a week since I last wrote something here. Time is just flying by and I haven't really have much opportunity to settle into my new routine yet. Regardless, thrusdays are an absolute must! So lets get thankful!


  1. My job. I love going to work. Yes, as time goes by and as I let go of the safety net I find myself with lots and lots to do, but I am madly in love with it, so it's all good and I couldn't be happier!
  2. My boyfriend. If there's anything better than going to work it's coming back to this wonderful man. He's been my rock through thick and thin, he's the person that make me laugh, he's the person who makes me dinner (and leftovers for me to take to work for lunch) and the one who finds me cutsy videos to help me unwind after a long day. What's not to love?
  3. Having a bed. I can't stress this enough - having a comfy bed and loads of duvets to burrow under and rest after a big day is the greatest and yet most understated thing ever! I love, love, love our bed. I love burying myself under it with just my nose sticking out for air. Thank you, Universe, for the invention of beds!
  4. Leftovers. Cooking is great, but not having to cook when you're tired and hard pressed for time is amazing! Leftovers, the second greatest invention (after beds)
  5. Funny videos. There's something like watching a husky playing around with a big pile of leaves that just makes everything better.
  6. Bigger days. Every day it's a little bit easier (roughly one minute easier) to wake up and start my day. And that's a great thing to be thankful for, don't you think? 

Thursday, 9 January 2014

Thankful Thrusday # 1


Let me start by saying that this is not an original idea. I borrowed a friend's idea of Thankful Thrusday and used it for a while on my Bubblews account (long dead, may it rest in peace!). But I've been missing it and so decided to bring it back into my life. A day of the week in which to take time to be thankful. Isn't that just the perfect way to start a new year? So here we go, here are the things I've thankful for today:


  1. My job. Not just having one, but landing this particular one. I am absolutely in love with it, every single aspect. For the first time in my life I don't struggle with getting out of bed and starting my day, in fact after I pass the semi-comatose state I always wake up from I am always quite keen to get into the office and start a new day. Having fun doing my job is still a brand new concept and I am over the moon about it!
  2. My boyfriend. He is my rock, my partner, the person I choose to live alongside every day. And it's an easy choice. I'm especially grateful this week, when I've had to dedicate myself completely to a new routine and haven't have a lot of free time for my other duties and chores. So yeah, my boyfriend is a star!
  3. Slightly longer days. You can notice it a bit more every day. And soon enough it'll be dawning by the time we get up and it'll still be day when we leave our jobs. And it's getting brighter too, the promise of Spring is already in the air.
  4. January. Nothing seems to inspire us more than a fresh new year in which to make our plans a reality. We promise, we pledge, we believe that everything will be better, that we can be better. And if we're determined enough this year might be the year!
  5. Being able to remove make-up without looking like an orphan panda. I'm dead serious. It's been a decade-long struggle, but I finally managed to do it (sort of). At least I don't look like a panda, which is a massive improvement!

And this is it for this week. What are you thanful for today?

Tuesday, 7 January 2014

What is this feeling?

Right, before we start let me get one thing straight - I'm a musical geek and proud of such fact. So it stands to reason that every once in a while my post titles are musical-inspired (this one is the title of a song from Wicked). Don't worry, I won't bore you with it. Promise. I'll just chuckle inwardly and move on. Like I'm about to do right now.

So the New Year brought along a new job. Talk about turning a new leaf! Today was my second day and I could not be happier. This is the job the Universe owed me for quite sometime. After a rocky couple of years I'm finally somewhere where I feel I can make a different and where I feel supported and appreciated. So far I love everything about it and for the first time in my life I can't wait for morning to come so I can sit on my desk and start a new day in my new role. If this is what I've been missing then I can only grieve the years I spent without it, because this is the life! This is the feeling we all should have when we get up in the morning (except with me for the first half hour I still have the brain activity of a zombie. A sluggish one!).

I can't wait for a new day. I don't really have much to say other than this. Life is good. And I can't wait for more of it. Even if it's just more of the same thing, I couldn't be more thrilled!

Friday, 3 January 2014

Expanding your geography

As you can imagine, changing countries means you'll have to not only learn the geography of the place you moved to, but also make your own personal geography. Confused? I'll explain.

First of all it means you need to learn your geographical surroundings in the literal sense; you need to discover how far point A is from point B and how to get there. And it takes time, a sense of adventure and you need to be very, very humble about the whole thing - I mean, you just moved somewhere new, give yourself time to adjust and learn to move about. I've been living in the outskirts of Birmingham for over two years and I still surprise myself when I discover new ways to reach my destination from a different start point. For the longest time I walked absurd distances because I had no idea where to make a shortcut, so I went about it in a very roundabout way (and I suspect I sometimes still do), almost going around the city for ages when I could've just gone across it, only I didn't know how. And then once you feel like exploring and don't mind getting lost the almost inevitable - and quite wondrous - thought pops into your head "Oh, so this is where this road leads! That's much more convenient than what I've been doing!". I live for those moments.

Then there's your personal geography. That comes with time and there's no cheating it. Basically it means making the city your own. And before you know it you have places that start to feel yours. The place where you cut your hair. The supermarket where you do your shopping every Sunday. The sushi place that has the best vegetable yakisoba. The coffee shop where you waited for an important interview. Your bank branch. The place where you buy your board games every other week (maybe that's just me...). The sandwich shop where they already know your order (if you're like me and always sticks to the same item on the menu then I'm sure you can relate). You get the point. The city stops being a somewhat abstract place where things happen and slowly becomes your home. The place where your life happens. And that's an amazing feeling. Especially if you're the kind of person that cherishes roots. Feeling home when you're abroad takes a heck of a long time, but it's the best feeling ever. Not only because of the obvious fact that it's home, but more importantly because you made it so. You persevered. Congratulations - you are nothing short of a rock star.

Thursday, 2 January 2014

A new leaf

First order of business - welcome, 2014! I hope you bring nothing but positive stuff. There, resume blogging.

If you're reading this (which obviously you are) and if you've been here before you'll notice this space looks different. As a matter of fact I have quite a thing for restarts (personally it's not one of my best features, but there you go!) and so instead of just deleting the blog and starting anew I decided simply to give it a new face. Isn't that what the first days of January are for, anyway? Fresh starts?

 So yeah...! Hopefully this will help keep me inspired and write more. Fingers crossed as I get used to it again things can start to flow more easily (in case you haven't noticed I'm kinda struggling at the moment). If I didn't like the sound of my fingers tapping away at the keyboard so much I probably would've stopped already. Anyhoot, amongst my many resolutions for 2014 I decided to blog more. Find my voice again. Wouldn't that be something?

Here's to a year full of achievements!

Monday, 30 December 2013

Celebrating 2013

I started 2013 with a new job. A role that was clearly not something I wanted to pursue long-term, but nonetheless a big step forward for me, so I was thrilled about it! This was the year we got a new car, which greatly improved our lives in terms of commute and on my recent job hunting efforts. It was the year I finally got a gym membership and actually had fun using said gym (when I could get over the dread of walking all the way over there!). It was the year when I finally managed to make edible soup and the first time I went mini golfing. 2013 was the year I learned how to make sock creatures and how to change duvet covers single-handedly. It was the year when I read the most and when I accomplished most of my New Year's resolutions. This was the year when I returned to Paris, this time with the love of my life. 2013 was the year I gradually stopped dressing the same way as when I was at Uni. In 2013 I celebrated three years next to a wonderful man whom I couldn't possibly love more. It was the year when I conquered sun salutations without falling or messing up my breathing. It was a year of constant learning and tweaking. In 2013 I discovered the pleasure of - for the first time in my life - treating myself to lunch in a restaurant and a trip to a bookstore on a regular basis. This was the year when I clearly developed my gaming skills and established board and card games as a solid new love. It was a year of more social activity than 2012. And then there was the perfect ending of getting a brand new job. Something I am looking forward to and that I know is the start of a shinier future.

Sure, there's less positive aspects to this year but I choose not to dwell on these too much. In 2013 I got a big dental scare. I was pushed to extreme limits in my (now old) job. I had months of late shifts that meant not seeing my partner for most of the week, even though we live together. My self-esteem plummeted to new lows. I was unemployed for four months. I barely lost weight. I spend my second Christmas away from my family. In the whole of 2013 I spent less than three weeks in my country. But then there's also all the good things mentioned above. That and the promise of a better 2014. A 2014 full of change and growth. And I can't wait for it all.

Am I where I expected to be by my late twenties? No, not by a mile. However - despite how many setbacks I had to work through in my path - I know change is upon me and I'm ready to embrace it and sprint with it until I catch up, full speed to the next milestone, and the one after that. 2013 was a year of great inner change, of learning and realigning myself. 2014 will be a year of outer change, of doing and achieving and making my future a reality. I am ready. Bring it on!

Friday, 27 December 2013

2013 - The readings

So it's that time of year again when we look back on what this year has meant to us, the good, the back and all the in-betweens. I've decided I'll start with the easy part - the books I've read. Rated from 1 to 5 stars. I know for a fact that I'm the only one that actually enjoys this, anyhoot - for my own pleasure (and your own, I hope) - here it is! (And brace yourselves, because I've been really busy in the reading department!)


  1. Les Miserables, Victor Hugo *****
  2. The hobbit, J. R. R. Tolkien ***
  3. The fault in our stars, John Green *****
  4. The casual vacancy, J K. Rowling ***
  5. A game of thrones, George R. R. Martin *****
  6. Cat's cradle, Kurt Vonnegut *****
  7. Gone girl, Gillian Flynn ***
  8. Coraline, Neil Gaiman *
  9. Of mice and men, John Steinbeck ***
  10. Equal rites, Terry Pratchett *
  11. The newlyweds, Nell Freudenbergen ***
  12. To kill a mockingbird, Harper Lee **
  13. A relíquia, Eça de Queirós **
  14. A clash of kings, George R. R. Martin ****
  15. The sense of an ending, Julian Barnes ****
  16. A sombra do vento, Carlos Ruiz Zafón **
  17. An abundance of Katherines, John Green ***
  18. Desamor, O Arrumadinho *
  19. Morreste-me José Luis Peixoto ****
  20. O amor é fodido, Miguel Esteves Cardoso **
  21. As rosas de Atacama, Luis Sepúlveda ***
  22. Divergent, Veronica Roth ****
  23. Na tua face, Vergílio Ferreira ***
  24. Norwegian wood, Haruki Murakami ****
  25. O filho de mil homens, Valter Hugo Mãe ***
  26. Firmin, Sam Savage ***
  27. As intermitências da morte, José Saramago ***
  28. The host, Stephenie Meyer ***
  29. Sula, Toni Robinson **
  30. Talk to the snail, Stephen Clarke ****
  31. Insurgent, Veronica Roth ****
  32. Allegiant, Veronica Roth ****
  33. Sputnik sweetheart, Haruki Murakami ***
  34. Ender's game, Orson Scott Card ****
  35. Let it snow, Maureen Johnson, John Green & Lauren Myracle ****
  36. A storm of swords - Steel and snow, George R. R. Martin ****

Wednesday, 28 August 2013

The portable TARDIS

For all non-Whovians (non-Doctor Who fans): the TARDIS is the time machine/spacecraft the Doctor uses on his travels. It stands for Time And Relative Dimension In Space and basically it gives the screen writers an opportunity to set any episode in any time period or place of their choosing (real or imaginary). The first time I caught it on television was an episode with Agatha Christie, so I didn't recognize it at all because I thought Doctor Who was meant to be strictly sci-fi (at that point there were no aliens or strange creatures in sight). But I digress.

This whole thing is meant to be about books. Yes, books. Because they are the true TARDIS, the real transporters to alternate worlds and times. Anytime, anywhere, you open one and a few sentences in (less if the book/author is really good) you are somewhere else entirely. Not just that, you are someone else. You delve deep into the mind of characters and narrators, sometimes to such an extent that you find yourself with a completely different set of ideals. It happened to me with Gone with the wind; less than half way in and I was shamelessly rooting for the South (which is something I can't say I'd sanely do).

I'm one of those people that wants to know it all. So I will pick up books (most of them fiction) on practically anything. The fall of Troy. The American civil war. The Victorian age. Avalon-related books. Children's classics. Fantasy. Sci-fi. Teen fiction, you name it. And then there's the language. The sweet music of how the words are magically put together. Both in English and Portuguese, some books I pick them up not because I'm interested in the subject-matter, but rather because of how beautifully the phrases flow. Some authors have the gift of turning something bland into a hipnotic read; it's all so pretty you just can't look away and stop yourself from reading just another page. And another. And another.

It's my greatest source of existencial angst to be forced to acknowledge the fact that I will never read all the books I'd like to. And if I do cover all subjects, I will only be scratching the surface. So I'll never really be much of an expert in any kind of genre, because I can't commit to just one! I've never read anything set in Ancient Egypt, or about the fall of the Romanovs, I've never read Murakami (I bought Kafka by the shore in 2006, it's pathetic, I know...) or most of the great classics. If only I could read in my sleep...

Also, dear Whovians and non-Whovians, books are bigger on the inside. Think about it. Think of all the hours you invest in them, all the emotions you go through, all the worlds you get to know and things you get to find out. It's a hurricane-sized turmoil enclosed in just a few square inches of paper. Luckily, after you finish one there's always loads more to follow.

Unless you don't want to finish. In that case, just do as the Doctor does and rip out the last page. Then it never has to end.

The uninspired blogger

I'm a very, very poor blogger. For ages I fantasize about getting a new blog and writing about this and that and then once I do I fall flat on my face. Every since I started this blog all words seem to have cruelly deserted me. And then on the few occasions that I can actually find the words and thoughts everything strikes at once and I am left with a massive jumble of half processed things. And don't even get me started on my thought process (or lack of it). I mean, it should be recorded and donated to science, I tell you! More often than not I start a post, give it a title, type in the first sentences and before I know it I've lead myself somewhere completely different from where I intended to be. So in the few occasions I manage to write something I very seldom hit the "publish" button. Sad, I know. Though it's not like I'm depriving anyone from great prose. Or great thinking, for that matter.

Yes, I think I will always romantise about my writing efforts. Of how I'll just log in and pour my heart and soul and my many, many insightful ideas and theories into the blog. And it will be quirky and funny, and girly and nice and fresh and hip (does anyone still says "hip" anymore?) and inspirational and people will like it and comment and I'll feel like I have a fresh medium through which to express myself and touch other people.

Alas my writing is not as interesting as I'd like it to be. As I am in person. It's sad, but it's life.

Doesn't mean I'll stop trying, though, does it?