Author: Ria

  • May | In Retrospect

    May | In Retrospect

    Song of the month: Cut to the feeling, Carly Rae Jepsen

    Oh woes me, Ria’s back at it again with another existential crisis. This was going to be a whole separate post but it looks like this is side stepping into my May round up. This month for me flew by in a dizzy haze of mixed emotions. Part combination of mid-twenties crisis / post-holiday blues / general anger at how effing cruel the world can be as the Manchester attack hit very personally. My brain frazzled. I’ve taken time out and well, the result is this post (which, I’m not entirely sure makes much sense)…

    Blogger no more?

    I’ve spent the last month thinking about the way I categorise myself. Labels for me are useful and as bad as it is I like applying them to myself.

    I am many things. A woman. A Filipina. A Brit. A daughter. A sister. A nerd. A Ravenclaw. A bookworm. One label I’ve been happy to stick with for a number of years and has held pride of place in many bios on the Internet is ‘blogger’.

    Blogger: a person who regularly writes material for a blog.

    Or so was the definition of I was happy to parrot to people over 5 years ago when I first started out. Obviously since then that definition has morphed into something wholly different. Something ‘more’. And whilst I made a few feeble attempts to prescribe to the idea of what a ‘blogger’ is, I’ve found myself shifting away from the ‘B’ word. Reluctant to announce it as my status. (I’ve even sneakily taken it down from some of my social media bios)

    It’s not you, it’s me

    It’s not that I think that the label is tainted or negative in any way. It’s more of a matter that I don’t feel comfortable labelling myself with that moniker anymore. I don’t fit the definition of what a blogger is right now in 2017. When people picture ‘bloggers’ they don’t see me. They see the curated feeds, editorial-esque spreads and polished articles. They see consistent content and active social media accounts, spouting wonderful opinionated, introspective, commentary, or deeply personal essays. They don’t picture me. Which I’m fine with. The industry and blogging itself has evolved. I just haven’t bothered or have had the energy to keep up with it. And I’ve come to a very simple conclusion with all this.

    I have a blog but I’m not a ‘blogger’ anymore.

    Shying away from the ‘blogger’ label has meant picking up other instead. Feminist. Activist. Writer.

    The last of those is one acquired after years of self-doubt. The complete irony being that just as I’ve grown the confidence to call myself a writer, I’m losing the label which has defined so much of my Internet existence for half a dozen or so years of my life.

    So is this you ‘quitting’ blogging?

    Well no, but TMM may ‘feel’ a little different? I want to dedicate less time to worrying about getting a blog post up and schedules. I don’t want to be beholden to Editorial calendars and empty promises of sharing content and my life. I want to spend more time on my creative writing, without feeling guilty that my blog looks empty for a bit. I want to spend more time in the other spaces I do have a responsibility to write and curate content like on Blogger’s Bookshelf and Resonate.

    So this is definitely not a farewell. It’s more of a catch you later? See you on the Internet? Keep an eye out for me in other places? idk If you miss me that much as I say my Twitter is always open. Say hello. In the meantime I’m re-assessing what this space is for me. Thanks for your patience.

    Much love.

    Ria Xx

    p.s. existential crisis aside, I’m so humbled by the lovely messages regarding the announcement that I’ll be published for the first time in 404 Ink. Be sure to pre-order Issue 2 of their magazine to see my new piece of poetry.

  • April | In Retrospect

    April | In Retrospect

    Song of the month: Stay, Zedd (ft Alessia Cara)

    April went by in a blur. Mental tiredness has now been replaced by the physical exhaustion.

    I barely remember anything that happened this month and looking at it in retrospect feels like a totally out of body experience.

    I have India travel posts coming very soon, so I won’t spend too much talking about it now. We did so much in two weeks it’ll be hard to quantify in words and images alone, but it was definitely one of the most incredible holidays I’ve ever been on. It would be very easy to go all ‘Gap Yah/Eat, Pray Love’ about this trip, but it did test the limits of my comfort zone. I do think I’ve come out of the other end of this holiday more resilient and it’s put a lot of things into perspective for me too.

    India aside, April marked a very subdued 25th birthday. Jet lag and a few personal dramas aside meant it came and went without much fanfare. Appropriate really as I mentioned in my last post that I’m at a point in my mid-twenties where I feel content to just ‘be’. Bank Holiday was the polar opposite of ridiculousness partaking in the Oxford tradition of getting up at 5am for May Morning Celebrations. It was nice to tick off the bucket list, but I wholly recommend not going out the night before.

    And now we’re meandering into May, my body and brain are grateful for a bit of a break and a return to normalcy before the Summer. My plan is to get back on track, back to writing and reading, and to clear my headspace of this travel fog. I’m also determined to get back to work on some proper activism again (*whispers* Hey UK peeps have you registered to vote yet? Remember to register to vote ok!). Whilst it was nice ignoring the real world for a while it’s definitely time to delve back in again.

    p.s. I need to say a quick thank you to my lovely guest writers who looked after TMM so well in my absence. So shout out to Michelle, Anastasia, Lucy, Prithvi, and Anjali for their wonderful pieces – click on each name to catch up on their posts!

    Ria

  • 25 | Thoughts on not having your life together

    25 | Thoughts on not having your life together

    I found a few of my old childhood diaries over Christmas. Amongst the ridiculous entries on teenage drama and moaning about how hard school was, spattered in between these entries were occasional list of things I wanted to have achieved by age 25.

    The lists are long.

    They include everything from fly around the World, visit Los Angeles, own a house, own a car, be married with babies on the radar, work in fashion, be performing on a West End stage, go to Drama School, graduate in English Literature, live in London, live in Paris, become a journalist, become a full time writer etc. The common theme was 25 was the age I was going to be sorted. I’d have figured it all out.

    25 seemed so very old when I was a kid. It felt ‘adult’ and I definitely thought I would ‘have my life together’ by now.

    Examining my life through the eyes of my childhood self, I am a failure. I don’t have my own home, or a boyfriend, let alone a fiance. I failed one of my A Levels and as a consequence never went to my first choice University. I’m not a published author, nor am I on track for a singing or acting career (probably for the best tbh).

    Today is my 25th Birthday

    And I’m no more certain as to what I actually want out of my life than I did when I was 10, or 15, or heck even 20.

    What I have got at 25 is peace of mind that I’m am finally ok with that. I’m finally ok with not having my sh*t together.

    I read a fantastic quote from Shonda Rhimes recently that got me thinking about this.

    “If I am killing it on a Scandal script for work, I am probably missing bath and story time at home. If I am at home sewing my kids’ Halloween costumes, I’m probably blowing off a rewrite I was supposed to turn in. If I am accepting a prestigious award, I am missing my baby’s first swim lesson. If I am at my daughter’s debut in her school musical, I am missing Sandra Oh’s last scene ever being filmed at Grey’s Anatomy. If I am succeeding at one, I am inevitably failing at the other…You never feel a hundred percent OK; you never get your sea legs; you are always a little nauseous.”

    We live in a world of aspirational Instagram worthy lifestyles, KonMari and Bullet Journals, capsule wardrobes and wellness bloggers. For many cis-women, we’re meant to have a great graduate job, a loving boyfriend-girlfriend/a great sex life/rolling set of Tinder dates to fall back on, immaculate Ikea fitted homes with mason jars and homemade kale smoothies in the fridge alongside our meal planned vegan dinners. We’re supposed to be social and live our lives to the fullest. But we’re also pushed to be reflective, write journals, talk politics and recognise our privilege, be active feminists and social justice warriors. We’re supposed to be Tough Mudder competitors or Triathlon warrior women but also the feminine combination of Kylie Jenner, Blake Lively and Beyonce.

    Whilst it may not feel like it we have some much more freedom to be who we want to be than the women before us, but freedom is often overwhelming.

    Shonda’s quote serves as a lovely reminder that even the most successful women, even Emmy award winning producers who’s shows basically keep entire US television networks afloat, are ‘failing’ by societies standards. And for her that’s ok.

    Sometimes in world ruled by social surveillance and careful profile curation I feel like we all need to be a bit more aware that we are not infallible beings. We make mistakes. We are going to f*ck up and most importantly we are not going to have perfect lives 24/7. Even trying to achieve that standard of living would likely push you to the point of physical and mental exhaustion.

    Now at 25 I have finally come to some peace with the idea of not having my sh*t together and I’m done pretending to the world otherwise.

    I may not be a popstar or published author, but I’m working in an industry that I’m really interested in. I may not be married, but I know my self worth is not based on my romantic entanglements. I value and love my family and friends so very much. I want to travel before tethering myself to a place or a person, and even then I want to experience the World in its entirety. I’m blessed with privilege and the freedom to potentially return to studying one day, move to another country, or change my career entirely. My ambition is still there. I’m still a dreamer, a writer and feels so very passionate about people. I also get jealous, am stubborn and can be a real dick. I’m not a perfect person and should never prescribe to be one.

    The ‘me’ at 25 is content.