These last months of tension, apprehension and fear, made me think a lot about my life, everything I have learned and I continue to learn, and those who have crossed my path.
When I was born, my parents didn't know if I would be a boy or a girl, white, black, Indian, Asian. That didn't matter to them. They were there, open-hearted to receive that little one, whoever it was. The same thing happened to the rest of my family: grandparents, grandfathers, great-grandmother, uncles and aunts, all with open arms to welcome me.
My parents taught me to respect the life of living beings regardless of Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus or Species.
I grew up with friends of all ethnicities and social classes. I studied in public and in private schools, and I never underestimated those that studied in one or the other.
I learned from my parents, grandparents and uncles that violence is no solution and only leads to even more violence.
They also taught me that knowledge is the greatest and best weapon to: understand where we came from and why things are the way they are today; to analyze and discern paths that will lead to a good future for all and not just for some; not to repeat sad stories of our or other countries; that is, learn from history.
They taught me to respect and appreciate freedom, among them that of coming and going, opinions, being who you are.
My parents always made it clear when they don't agree with the decisions I make, but even then, they always stood by me, they've always supported me. Just imagine that with this and other attitudes, my parents taught me to love unconditionally. What an appalling absurd!
I was taken to the Scout Movement by my aunt. There I met people from all walks of life. In the movement I learned that we are not alone in the world and that it does not revolve around our bellybutton or our wants, but that we need each other to survive and live. That together we can do more than divided.
I grew up learning that differences are not threatening, but enriching. Differences are what make this world amazing.
I learned to love people for being people, not for their skin color, for the gender with which they were born, for the country they came from, for sexual orientation, for religion, because that does not define them. No one is better or worse than anyone, we are all the same. What defines a person is their character, not their religion, their ethnicity, their sexual orientation, or gender.
They taught me not to be hypocritical and to be honest, and so, I never got carried away by that famous "Brazilian way".
I learned that we are all one with the planet and that we need more of him than he does us, so we have to defend him, love him, care for him.
I was also taught that the true meaning of family is not in the connection of blood but in the bond of love that we share.
Getting out of the closet was easy because I was always sure of their love for me. They never wanted anything but my happiness. They never scorned me for being who I am.
To this day my family - without blood ties - never let me down. They were always present, always supportive, always showed unconditional love during each adversity and in every good moment.
Yeah... I must have been very unlucky, for it seems that what is lately considered "of good morals" is exactly the opposite of everything they have ever taught me. For if it is so, I prefer to continue being "imoral."
domingo, 7 de outubro de 2018
segunda-feira, 3 de setembro de 2018
Like a butterfly
In the course of these past six years, I have written and re-written about a variety of things. About being in silence, about loss, about history, about love. Suddenly, the flow of writing stops. It stopped at the same time as life seemed to have stopped too.
For years life seems to have stagnated. The days pass, the lines on the skin grow stronger, birthdays come and go, and still everything seems to be the same.
It's so weird how life changes without us even noticing. After years of feeling numb, deprived of friends and flirts, it seems that the dormant period is finally coming to an end.

Somehow new friends started to come along, laughter and happiness seem to be making themselves present as they haven't been for a long time.
A few things still need to change, but these are practical things, meaningless everyday things. The meaningful ones, the important ones, these are finally starting to show their colors. A new trusted friend, a night of good company and laughter, smiles, a hug, a look.
Like a butterfly emerging from a cocoon , it's good to feel alive again.
For years life seems to have stagnated. The days pass, the lines on the skin grow stronger, birthdays come and go, and still everything seems to be the same.
It's so weird how life changes without us even noticing. After years of feeling numb, deprived of friends and flirts, it seems that the dormant period is finally coming to an end.

Somehow new friends started to come along, laughter and happiness seem to be making themselves present as they haven't been for a long time.
A few things still need to change, but these are practical things, meaningless everyday things. The meaningful ones, the important ones, these are finally starting to show their colors. A new trusted friend, a night of good company and laughter, smiles, a hug, a look.
Like a butterfly emerging from a cocoon , it's good to feel alive again.
domingo, 4 de março de 2018
The crowd
Every day, on my way to work, I see all those people on the bus,
in the subway and I feel like a number. Just another number. A sad number. Just
another one in a group of people that repeat the same day over and over: wake
up at the same time, have the same (or almost the same) breakfast, get dressed,
and head to work where the same endless tasks will be repeated hour after hour while dreaming
of the time they get to go home again and of the weekend ahead unaware that
each and every one of those tediously unhappy days is a day in life that will
never come back.
I’m part of this crowd with tired and
sad eyes on a Monday morning, but my mind never stops wondering about how can
people go on repeating endlessly something that doesn’t make them happy? How
and what can I do to change my days and not fall into this same sad path my
entire life?
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Source: BBC |
The crowd moves slowly, in the same
pace, even their breaths seem to follow the same anxious and hopeless rhythm. No smiles board the
morning train, only serious sleepy faces staring into the void. I don't want to follow the crowd.
We grow up being told to do what we
love, but what if what we love doesn’t open doors? What if all the time,
effort, tears and joy you put on your dreams, didn't unlock any doors? Eventually you end up in the crowd, this sad Monday crowd.
How did we get here? How and when did society
become this pleasure-less repetition of boring tasks? When did we
forget to enjoy ourselves? To enjoy each day? But most importantly, how do we
get out of this meaningless existence?
The longer we stay in a job position, the harder it is to
get out of it. Not because we don’t want to, but because others will only see
the last and longest experience we had. What do to do when you fall into a
field you never even thought of, in a job that for you is meaningless? It pays
the bills, ok, but is that what life is all about? I, for one, refuse to accept
that. But how to change it when you don't know what to do, where to go and how
to get there? When you feel completely lost knowing that your career dreams can no longer be? How to change directions when all connections you've been making in this field don't know your potential, don't know your background or even your level
of education to be able to refer you to something else, to something better
suited to you?
![]() |
Source: DeviantArt - Amandine Van Ray |
If anyone out there knows the answer for these
questions, don't feel shy to come forward, to give
tips, to pass along your knowledge on how we can change things. Everyone deserves the chance to wake up to a
life that they love, to work in something that fulfills them, to be happy. Sometimes all we need is an outside look to see different perspectives, different paths. It's never too late to climb that mountain and sometimes, all we need is a little push.
domingo, 5 de fevereiro de 2017
When life makes no sense

I have no idea where my life went wrong. I grew up being encouraged to do what I love, to follow my heart and be happy. And so I did.
I kept looking for "normal" jobs and either never heard back from sending resumes, or got interviews where the reason not to be hired was "oh, but you're over qualified for this job". That's what bad paying jobs used to give as an excuse not to hire me. Funny enough, those positions with a reasonable pay used to say "oh, but you don't have experience". How in hell is someone expected to gain experience if they're never given a chance to start with? Tragic funny, but it was like that since my first interview when I was 17 years old.
Meanwhile, for 18 years I pursued acting, my biggest passion, the only thing I ever wanted to do in life career wise. As for the great majority of actors out there, it didn't come out as expected. One of the worse decisions in my life was when it finally sank in that I would need a plan B.
A plan B. I never had a plan B. So I studied to be a tour guide. What could be more interesting than to have together history and traveling, two of my biggest interests? Got a job as soon as I graduated from the course and did pretty well as an international tour guide specialized in the Orlando amusement parks. The only downside, it didn't pay enough and the work was seasonal. So, no chances of paying my bills there.
So, in my early thirties I went to college, got a degree in History, which is something I really enjoy (and made my father super happy).
At this point in my life I was dating the most incredible person I have met so far. We had a pretty good relationship that had some down moments and, for some reason that even today I can't really understand, I didn't fight for the relationship and gave in to my darkest thoughts and we broke up. So, yeah, another feeling of failure when "the one" got away and it was all my fault.
I got so lost after the breakup that I spent months being someone completely different. I would go out and get wasted (and I was never a big drinker), went out partying from Monday to Monday and I even smoke cigarettes (which I hate!). I was feeling completely lost, as if the ground had fallen under my feet. I knew the rational reasons for the breakup but couldn't understand why I didn't fight to stay together. To this day I regret it, but well, time passes, people move on, and I remained alone.
Feeling lost and a loser, I finally graduated from college at 34. Now I had a degree and was sure that no one would use that as an excuse not to hire me. Again came the "you don't have experience" crap when the competition was 18 and didn't even have life experience.
Already in my mid thirties and freaking out as I was still unable to pay my bills and my father was still supporting me 100%. I have had always the will to get out of his shoulders and did my best to, but somehow it never worked out. I always had temporary or sporadic jobs, which always paid badly and weren't even enough to support one month of bills. At this point, my feeling of failure in life was already high.
Speaking two languages fluently and a third one in advanced stage of learning, I decided to give life abroad a try. I learned a new language, enough to get by but not enough to work. Followed my heart and went to live near the person I thought I had fallen for but in the end, it was just a physical representation of a dream that I had: meeting a foreigner, getting married and start a family abroad. Needless to say that it not only didn't work out, but it turned out to be a nightmare. A nightmare that took me over two years to recuperate from. The things I went through with that person were so heavy that left very deep scars.
I moved away again to pursue a Masters of Arts in History in a very well regarded university. But I was still dark inside. During those two dark years, I closed myself up. I didn't want to meet anyone, I was scared. I had social anxiety. I forced myself to go to McGill gathers to make friends and open up, see if I stopped feeling so lonely. Needless to say that it didn't work out very well. Thank goodness I made two good friends there with whom I keep in touch and it's always so great when we can get together. Here I also learned another language, my fifth, not yet fluent but working on improving it.
After the Masters I finally got a job. The only job that hired me even though I sent tons of cover letters and resumes. I'm way over qualified for this job, that's for sure. It pays really badly, but for the first time in my life even with a low wage job, I've managed to pay my bills without needing to ask my father for help. That makes me extremely happy! The other good thing that this job brought was the colleagues. Every single person that works there is so nice, warm and loving, and they are the sole reason to stay there. It took me a while to open up to them too, I admit. I was still trying to get out of the dark place I was in.
When I'm finally opening up and going out with people from work, having fun with them and trying to make deeper connections, Petruchio (my furry baby) is diagnosed with an incurable disease and his health declines very quickly. For over 4 years Petruchio and Sophia have been my only company, and now he's on his way to become a little star.
However, as life insists in make no sense, since 2012 I've been alone (when it comes to human company). During these past 4 (almost 5) years, I have seen basically 99,9% of my friends getting married and starting families. I see my nieces and nephews growing up. See "the one" happily married (and how she deserves to be happy!). And I look in the mirror and only see lines in my face getting stronger, grey hair appearing, the passing of time in its most recognizable way. And I remember that I did not make a pact with life to grow old alone.
I see my cousin with the life I always dreamed of. I see friends with successful careers and well structured lives where everything seems to come into place without so much effort or so much pain. And I can't help but think that there must be something wrong with me. I'm a good person, with a big heart and so much love to give, but I'm knocking on 40's door and still alone. Completely alone for over 4 years right at the age when everyone is getting married or already have their families. I'm extremely capable, I learn fast and every job I had all my superiors only had good things to say about me, I speak 2 languages fluently and can make myself understood in other 3, I'm intelligent, I have the socially requested university degrees, and yet, I don't get a decent paying job nor a not-so-decent-paying-job in my areas of biggest interest.
It is very hard not to feel as a loser, not to think that I'm a failure and a disappointment to those around me. It's been so many years that I started losing hope of someday things working out well. It is extremely hard to accept that the most romantic of all the cousins, I'm the one still single, childless and alone.
I still follow my heart and I've been trying to find meaning in all of it, trying to understand, but nothing makes sense. It makes no sense why I haven't achieved any sort of financial stability at 39, it makes no sense that I'm alone for so long when I have and still am putting myself out there. And as Murphy seems to have taken me for his bride, when I need them the most, my furry baby is going through his last weeks of life.
Definitely life makes absolutely no sense.
quarta-feira, 12 de outubro de 2016
Singletonshire after 30
Navigating the streets of Singletonshire is not an easy task. Doing that for years, to be honest, is tiring and boring. Everybody knows that love does not wait in every corner and as we grow older, we realize that things need more effort to work out well. What no one ever tells us is how much more effort it takes! I've always had the impression that in our Balzac-years it would be easier to find someone since one of the good things of growing older is knowing exactly what we don't want in a relationship. But I've never thought that we would construct so many barriers: be it age, tiny appearance details, finances, kids from previous relationships, geographic distance, you name it.
I was never someone who connects easily with others. Few people have interested me and I find really hard to find someone with whom to connect in a deeper level, someone that I can talk about anything, who makes me laugh, who's got a witty (and sometimes sarcastic) kind of humor. When someone like that finally appears, I do not measure efforts to be with that person. In my mind and heart there are no obstacles to keep me from being with that hard to come by special person.
Being an old fashioned romantic, I'm predisposed to overcome lots of
seemingly difficult obstacles in the name of love and I have no problem
in being the only one making the effort when the other person is
incapable of for whatever reason. Sometimes it does not come out as
planned, but other times it is better than expected. All I know is that I'm
willing to take the next step, to put myself out there and make all the
effort necessary for things to work out for the best. I have always been self-giving with my friends, it's no wonder I would go even further out for that special someone.
Love life for a single women in her late thirties is already difficult, for a gay woman it seems to be even harder. The stereotype of a lesbian relationship is that the women involved move in together on the second date. Of course, just like all stereotypes it's not that accurate, but in this case it's also not so far from the truth. What I mean is: as a group we women tend to want long term relationships and we dream of marriage/living together. So, it's only natural that when two women come together, that next step is taken a bit faster than with a guy. What makes things even trickier for a single lesbian in her late 30's is that most women in this age group are already in a committed relationship. But why am I saying all this? It's just another way of illustrating the difficulties of "Singletonshire" for women over 30.
It is very easy to start wondering if you're the last single person on Earth when all your friends are either married or in long-term relationships. Of course, it doesn't make things easier to have friends and family asking those dreadful questions such as "how's love life?", or making those even worse comparisons "you know Jane Doe was in the same situation as you and found her other half in the supermarket aisle". What about those comments about "a friend" who's in her late thirties and haven't got married yet that come with the sentence (and it's variations) "she's our age but she's still single, there must be something wrong with her." With pressure from family and friends who have already found their "someone", you might even get caught up in the terrible thought that something may be wrong with you when you know, in fact, that there isn't. It's just life.
It is very easy to start wondering if you're the last single person on Earth when all your friends are either married or in long-term relationships. Of course, it doesn't make things easier to have friends and family asking those dreadful questions such as "how's love life?", or making those even worse comparisons "you know Jane Doe was in the same situation as you and found her other half in the supermarket aisle". What about those comments about "a friend" who's in her late thirties and haven't got married yet that come with the sentence (and it's variations) "she's our age but she's still single, there must be something wrong with her." With pressure from family and friends who have already found their "someone", you might even get caught up in the terrible thought that something may be wrong with you when you know, in fact, that there isn't. It's just life.
As I navigate these waters, I find that the size of the difficulties are just as big as we make them. For some the geographic distance seems impossible, a huge deal, for others it can be an exciting challenge. But these "difficulties" are only as big and heavy as the size and weight we put on them. If you finally found someone with whom you feel good with, shouldn't you just take the next step and allow yourself to experience what could be the relationship you were always looking for?
Remember teenage years? It used to be so easy to find someone and let that new person in, but life was much simpler. We were still figuring out who we were. Near my forties, I feel like the older we get, the more of a world we become with our ways, likes and dislikes. It's difficult to open up completely to someone and let them into our world, our private space, so we focus on small "setbacks" instead of looking to the big picture. Seriously, take time to really think about the big picture and you will see that these "difficulties" are, actually, tiny.
Finding someone with whom to really connect is hard enough and we shouldn't create even more obstacles in our minds when we finally meet the person who will interest both our mind and heart. We shouldn't create even more difficulties to keep us from being with that special someone. In our late thirties we all have had good and bad experiences, easy and difficult closures, we all have scars, anxieties, fears. All things that can block us from finding happiness with someone new. But we also have lots of love, tenderness, and kindness to share with that one person who will bring a smile to our days, who will make our days even better. We are all longing for a chance to love and to be loved. So, why do we create stupid obstacles? We are not teenagers anymore which means that only physical attraction does not suffice, sometimes it comes after you got to know someone better instead of being the first thing that pops out when meet them.
Finding someone with whom to really connect is hard enough and we shouldn't create even more obstacles in our minds when we finally meet the person who will interest both our mind and heart. We shouldn't create even more difficulties to keep us from being with that special someone. In our late thirties we all have had good and bad experiences, easy and difficult closures, we all have scars, anxieties, fears. All things that can block us from finding happiness with someone new. But we also have lots of love, tenderness, and kindness to share with that one person who will bring a smile to our days, who will make our days even better. We are all longing for a chance to love and to be loved. So, why do we create stupid obstacles? We are not teenagers anymore which means that only physical attraction does not suffice, sometimes it comes after you got to know someone better instead of being the first thing that pops out when meet them.
Bottom line is: why don't we just allow ourselves to follow our hearts, take all those self-created obstacles out of the way and embrace the opportunity to be happy? What are we waiting for? Life rarely (if ever!) brings us exactly what we are looking for, so why do we keep on looking for someone who will fit perfectly the image we made of our ideal partner? Remember, none of us is perfect and we never will be. As hard as it is for a single woman approaching forty, I still have the strength to face the prejudice and the hardship of being alone in an age group where everyone else seems to come in pairs, and I will keep navigating the streets of Singletonshire with an open heart, ready to follow it as soon as butterflies start to tickle my stomach.
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PS: To all those "happily married/living together/in a long-term relationship reading this, do us singles a favor and stop asking when we will settle down with someone. These things do not depend on only one person. If one doesn't want it, two don't get together, or have you forgotten all your years of being single just because you found someone earlier than we did? ;)
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Bridget Jones' Diary - Universal Studios 2001 |
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PS: To all those "happily married/living together/in a long-term relationship reading this, do us singles a favor and stop asking when we will settle down with someone. These things do not depend on only one person. If one doesn't want it, two don't get together, or have you forgotten all your years of being single just because you found someone earlier than we did? ;)
segunda-feira, 21 de dezembro de 2015
Why do we fear change?
Do you ever get the feeling that we are afraid of life? Lately I have been thinking a lot about how we humans are so scared of the unknown. Doesn't matter if it's in our professional or personal lives, changes have scared us since the dawn of time. Just take a look back in History: not everyone would sail the ocean looking for a new world, but all have enjoyed what the new lands brought; not everyone would go and protest on the streets against war, but everyone is happy when a war is over.
"We attract what we are ready for." Sometimes I think that this is one of the most correct sayings I've ever heard. What bugs me the most, though, is that when something or someone new comes our way, we always find excuses to get out of it, to fight the change. Suddenly, that job you never liked "develops" many positive sides; that person who broke your heart doesn't seem so bad; the noisy neighborhood you live in is nothing but "lively". We tend to hold on to how things used to be and come up with all kinds of excuses not to face the fact that life is bringing us something new, another experience to help us grow. How many times have we faced a change, which we didn't want at first, but then it turned out to be one of the best times of our lives? So, why are we still afraid of it?
We tend to disguise our fears as a search for perfection. "Oh, that house is nice, but there's no garden." "That girl/guy is attractive, intelligent and successful, but doesn't have blue eyes." "The job is good, salary is great, but it'll take 20 minutes longer to get there everyday." Just a few (and very silly) examples, but we can all relate to something like that. That other job could be much more fulfilling; that small garden could be just perfect; that new person could turn out to be the love of your life. But instead of going for it, we keep looking for perfection when, in fact, we are completely afraid of changing the life to which we have become accustomed to.
I've heard so many times "you're so brave, you leave everything behind and go for what you're dreaming of. You follow your heart." To be honest, I don't think that has anything to do with being brave, just with being happy, with going after what makes my heart smile. Yes, I have acted impulsively and have faced good and not so good consequences, but would I do it again? Hell, yeah! Life is too short not to be lived. Too short not to follow our hearts and be stuck in the illogical fear of "what ifs". Do I have any regrets of all my decisions? No, none. And that's how I plan on continuing living life: following my heart. After all, what really matters in life isn't it love?
So, stop rationalizing, get out of your comfort zone and don't be afraid of what life brings. Be an explorer and discover a new world! If you were not ready to receive that promotion, to change places, to start a new relationship, life would not have delivered these possibilities to you.
That's my Christmas wish for all of you: open your inner gate and life will be much brighter.
"We attract what we are ready for." Sometimes I think that this is one of the most correct sayings I've ever heard. What bugs me the most, though, is that when something or someone new comes our way, we always find excuses to get out of it, to fight the change. Suddenly, that job you never liked "develops" many positive sides; that person who broke your heart doesn't seem so bad; the noisy neighborhood you live in is nothing but "lively". We tend to hold on to how things used to be and come up with all kinds of excuses not to face the fact that life is bringing us something new, another experience to help us grow. How many times have we faced a change, which we didn't want at first, but then it turned out to be one of the best times of our lives? So, why are we still afraid of it?
We tend to disguise our fears as a search for perfection. "Oh, that house is nice, but there's no garden." "That girl/guy is attractive, intelligent and successful, but doesn't have blue eyes." "The job is good, salary is great, but it'll take 20 minutes longer to get there everyday." Just a few (and very silly) examples, but we can all relate to something like that. That other job could be much more fulfilling; that small garden could be just perfect; that new person could turn out to be the love of your life. But instead of going for it, we keep looking for perfection when, in fact, we are completely afraid of changing the life to which we have become accustomed to.
I've heard so many times "you're so brave, you leave everything behind and go for what you're dreaming of. You follow your heart." To be honest, I don't think that has anything to do with being brave, just with being happy, with going after what makes my heart smile. Yes, I have acted impulsively and have faced good and not so good consequences, but would I do it again? Hell, yeah! Life is too short not to be lived. Too short not to follow our hearts and be stuck in the illogical fear of "what ifs". Do I have any regrets of all my decisions? No, none. And that's how I plan on continuing living life: following my heart. After all, what really matters in life isn't it love?
So, stop rationalizing, get out of your comfort zone and don't be afraid of what life brings. Be an explorer and discover a new world! If you were not ready to receive that promotion, to change places, to start a new relationship, life would not have delivered these possibilities to you.
That's my Christmas wish for all of you: open your inner gate and life will be much brighter.
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Thomas Kinkade - The Open Gate |
quarta-feira, 11 de novembro de 2015
Closure
Closure:
the state of experiencing an emotional conclusion to a difficult life event.
Sometimes what we feel for someone is so strong, or deeply rooted inside that it's difficult to completely let go of it. If the experience lived was somehow hard and complicated, some people are able to move on right away, others will feel as if their hearts were closed. It can take time to heal. Hours become days, days become months, and maybe, months will turn into years.the state of experiencing an emotional conclusion to a difficult life event.
Have you ever heard of people that have unfinished emotions in relationships? Well, I have, many times. Not only have I heard, but experienced it.
We never really know what's going to make us have the feeling of closure because usually we don't even realize that we need it. Since we keep on going with life, working, having coffee with friends, running the everyday errands, most of the time we can't see that our hearts are still closed. The brain might say otherwise, but it doesn't control our hearts and if our hearts feel closed, they need their own time to re-open.
Time heals everything, that's true, but sometimes it takes too long. Little by little your heart starts to open again and light is finally allowed in. Other times, this process is already taking place but very slowly and then, suddenly, you feel lighter and happier. It could have been from a dream that gave you the sense of closure, it could be from writing down all your deepest feelings, it could be from a friendship born from the love that once existed between the two people involved.
The fact is that, when your heart finally gets the closure it was waiting for, you feel lighter, happier, and free. Life's colors become more vivid, daily tasks are easier, nature's splendor is restored to its full beauty, and you're finally able to get completely rid of the bad memories and keep only the good ones. Life is once again, complete.
Let's welcome this feeling, embrace it, and feel lighter knowing that happiness has, once again, opened its doors to us.
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Image: Shawshank Redemption - Castle Rock Entertainment - 1994 |
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