Gesundheit
I hesitate to use the word "blessed." That word always makes me cringe a little bit. Something about it seems to imply favoritism -- as if God looked down and said "Today Joanna shall have more than the others." And I've also noticed that people who use the word "blessed" seem to use it willy nilly -- as in, "Canned tuna is on sale! I feel so blessed."
I even hesitate to say "bless you" when someone sneezes. I'm not sure I have the power to bless someone. In fact, I assume that "bless you" is short for "God bless you," which always felt inappropriate to me. I mean, who am I to tell God what to do? I barely have a relationship with the man (or woman -- or whatever).
So to say that I'm feeling "blessed" goes against my grain. Maybe it's the Libra in me -- the need for fairness and justice -- maybe I feel like, if I'm blessed, then someone else won't be. Like on Pushing Daisies when the Pie Maker brought someone back to life and, as a result, someone else had to die. Like there is a limited supply of blessings, and when the pot is empty -- that's it.
However, I stopped using the word "lucky" a few years ago too, so that's out. To me, lucky implies that I had little to do with my own circumstances -- that my efforts were meaningless. That perhaps I was even undeserving of said luck. No - "lucky" is out.
So if not lucky, and if not blessed, then what? In spite of being broker than broke, in spite of the fear and anxiety that comes with moving to a new city and starting a new job, the characteristically pessimistic Joanna feels somehow light and cautiously optimistic. It can't be ignored.
It comes down to this: People are amazing. Sometimes people really come through. And sometimes you don't even have to ask. (Mostly you do have to ask -- a particular challenge for me, and a skill I've been practicing almost non-stop for the last few months.) And to my surprise, people come through. For example:
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Marya called exactly at the moment that I needed her too. She reminded me that I've gotten through worse and that "nothing is insurmountable."
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Vicki let me send her every apartment ad I even halfway considered and gave me feedback on the neighborhoods. She offered to let me stay with her while I apartment-hunted, which sadly never worked out, but still -- she offered. Months before I even graduated, she offered. She promised me that I would love Philadelphia, and answered every question I had about the city. And tomorrow she's having me over for dinner. Yay!
Jordan, Dana, Julia, and Scott all sent me suggestions for apartments, neighborhoods, and any other Philly information they thought might be helpful.
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Debbie showed up when I didn't. I had been in town for a few days and had been trying to get over to see her, but life kept intervening. So she just came over and made me laugh really hard.
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Doug and Sandy opened up their home to me so I had a place to stay while I looked for apartments. I got to stay in their beautiful new guest room where Sandy had thought of everything -- even chocolates on the bedside table. Mmmmm.
Beck let me call and vent as often as I wanted (as in, daily) when things seemed to be falling apart, and when the apartment I wanted seemed way, way, way out of my reach.
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Zack's friend Dave, who lives in Philly, offered to help out when Zack couldn't. And he did. And he was awesome. And he offered to help with the next load too. Most importantly, he showed me where the Foodery is (which is just a few blocks from my apartment and has the best beer selection in the city).
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I could go on, but the orchestra is playing me off. The bottom line is that I am grateful to these people. Without them, I'd still be on the couch.
I feel like I spent the last 2 years sneezing, and finally the universe said, "Gesundheit."
So to all these people, and to the ones I've surely forgotten to mention, Gesundheit.