βIt felt like waiting for something to happen. Which has to be the worst part of being young. So many of your decisions aren’t yours; they’re made by other people. Sometimes they’re made badly by other people. Sometimes they’re made by other people who have no idea what the consequences of those decisions might be. The bastards.β
Patrick Ness

Recently, I stepped outside and under the bright blue sky, I read The Rest of Us Just Live Here. Itβs my first Patrick Ness book, but it wonβt be my last. It was funny, endearing, had a unique perspective, and well-written. The Rest of Us is about the normal ones, those who arenβt the chosen ones. The βbackgroundβ characters in a plot like Harry Potter or The Hunger Games. The ones unlikely to be remembered and those get to watch the chosen ones do their thing. The story resonated with me deeply.
The end of high school is an interesting time, and it brought me back to a few months ago, when I lived the end of my college experience. The future is scaryβthere can be a lot of unknown, and you donβt quite know what the change will look like until youβre in it. But an ending always makes way for a new beginning.
Or so I thought.
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What are you waiting for, gentle reader?
It seems like everyoneβs waiting for something. A package in the mail. A letter from someone you love. Your birthday. Or someone elseβs. A check. A ring. A house. Waiting is one of the great unifiers of human existence. Even those with lots of money still have to abide by the rules of time.Β
So much of childhood is waiting until you get older. To gain that degree of freedom. Or what adults know better as responsibility. That path is paved by many things out of our control. When youβre young, like Ness says, it seems like all the important decisions about your life are handled by other people. And youβve got to learn to live with the consequences. That feels about right for me. I honestly feel like Iβve learned way too much about rejection these past few months. I think Iβve learned the lesson by now.
Iβm old enough to know that rejection isnβt always a personal thing, that there are bigger things at play. But Iβm young enough to feel disheartened anyway, to let that disappointment give way to despair, despite what I know. Rejection is, whether we like it or not, redirection. The thing weβre waiting on ends up being delayed or itβs not meant to be ours anyway.
The hard thing is discerning which of those is actually true. Gentle reader, if you have an answer, please let me know!

I think we all get a bit anxious when life becomes a waiting room. Waiting for the diagnosis or the result of surgery. Waiting for the test score. Waiting for the news, good or bad. Sometimes life likes to keep us in suspense. This is the moment that makes us. We either fall into despair or we persevere in hope. To be honest, there is neither good nor bad here.Β
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Hope is the thing with feathers, Emily Dickinson said, and that means it so easily flies away no matter how badly we wish we could hold onto it.
There are reasons for our different responses to the waiting room.
Some of us are assured the outcome is in our favor. Others of us are fearful of getting hurt. Still others of us have hoped so long, we have developed calluses and hard hearts holding out for something that never seemed to come. For me, it all depends on what Iβm hoping for. Lately, Iβm starting to question my sanity about job searching and might be soon applying to grad school. Iβd hate the debt, but the job market has not been kind to my heart.
Itβs ironic. To be young and waiting for something to happen is the beginning of every adventure. It simultaneously is a source of torture because even though you think adventure is on its way, you could so easily be let down. I wonder if this means Iβm a pessimist. Itβs easy to say that βyouβre young and youβve got a lot of life ahead of you,β but Iβm not sure we ever stop to think about how much of that life is out of our hands. We donβt know the number of our days, or whatβs truly around the corner. We arenβt in control of the good gifts that come our way or the troubles that find our way to us. And sometimes itβs due to the agency of others, rather than what we have or havenβt done.
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If we can do anything about the waiting, we can choose to accept that it will happen to us. We have no way of telling what it holds for us on the other side. Part of me wishes I knew Iβd be in for a long wait for a job. I probably would have prepared a good chunk of longer novels to enjoy, courses to take, and activities to do.
Waiting does one thing well.
Waiting shapes us to accept our lives as they unfold, not as we will them in being. I have to accept whether or not I actually get what I was waiting for. I have to live with either the joy of finally receiving what I desired or the sorrow at its absence.
May your waiting shape you well. May you receive what you are waiting on. And if not, may you learn to grieve and then to rejoice in its absence. May you wait in hope or in despair, but never alone.
Sincerely,Β
Gigi
Isaiah 8 13 – 17 13 Sanctify the LORD of hosts himself; and let him be your fear, and let him be your dread. 14 And he shall be for a sanctuary; but for a stone of stumbling and for a rock of offence to both the houses of Israel, for a gin and for a snare to the inhabitants of Jerusalem. 15 And many among them shall stumble, and fall, and be broken, and be snared, and be taken. 16 Bind up the testimony, seal the law among my disciples. 17 And I will wait upon the LORD, that hideth his face from the house of Jacob, and I will look for him.
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Thank you, Kathy, for this scripture! You’re always so kind to encourage me!
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ππ
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