It’s been more than a week since I received my acceptance letter from University of Southern California. The high from the excitement and exhilaration has slowly cooled down. My wish has become a reality. I no longer have to dream about attending USC. Instead, I now have to think about it…and you know where thinking leads to…
Worry. Anxiety. Fear. Doubt. Apprehension.
It’s been three years since I’ve last been in school…three years since I’ve flipped open a textbook, three years since I’ve read anything but chick lits and diet magazines. So far, the only workout my brain ever got was from obsessing and calculating weight and calories, and devising crafty tricks and ways to uphold my ED habits and activities.
Suddenly, I was in a total panic. I thought: Oh, dear God. I am so ill-prepared for college. I bet half my brain cells are in a coma from lack of activity! How am I gonna adjust to all the stressful workload and hectic schedule of a college life? What if I don’t even remember how to study anymore? What if…*gasp*, I get (God forbid) a B?!!
You see, I’ve always been a perfectionist. Anything less than an A irks me. In high school, I made sure nothing blemished my perfect 4.0 GPA. The day I got a B+ on my Driver’s Education class, I was seen screaming and slamming lockers in the hallway. I’m not kidding.
So you see where the source of my worries is: my drive for perfectionism. I want to get good grades. I want to do everything, achieve everything. I want to be the best.
As I was worrying about this, a friend whom I had not seen for awhile suddenly sent me an email. In her email, she confessed to me that she has been dabbling with an eating disorder…and she was getting scared…but she did not know who else to turn to. The only person she could think of was me because she knew I was struggling with the same problem. It was a long, heart-wrenching email, and I was cut to the heart for several reasons.
First, I was once again shocked by how prevalent eating disorders are in this world. I’d never even dreamed that this friend would have ED! Second, I was enraged at how conniving and cruel ED is, as my friend poured out her pain and struggles to me. How dare ED rob her potential and happiness like that? And third, I was ashamed.
I was ashamed because I’d let my own selfish dreams get ahead of myself again. What did it matter if I got straight A’s in college? What did it matter if I graduated with honors, or with a prestigious internship? Will I be able to take my report card and trophies and accomplishments with me to the grave? What truly mattered in life?
My parents have always ingrained this to me ever since I was young: There is nothing as important as life. What matters most is my life, and other people’s lives. To be happy, and to make others happy. To treasure and love myself and others.
I believe that I experienced ED for a reason. Through my ED, I learned so much more about life. I gained precious insights and revelations about not only human pain and sufferings, but also inner peace and happiness that comes from God. I may not have gone to an academic university, but I have gone to Life University. And there is much more to learn, much more to experience.
College is so much more than grades. I don’t want to put my #1 priority on my academic achievement, but on my life achievement. The people whom I meet and bless, the real-life lessons that I learn outside of the classroom. I want to put my first priority on becoming not the best student, but the best person.
I’m still learning to be a good person. I guess attending Life University isn’t just a four-year course, it’s a lifelong course.
Sorry for the long-windedness again. But I just had to write this down before I forgot again, and I wanted to share these thoughts with anyone who can understand.
Anyway, I have yet another kabocha recipe for you today! Here’s something about kabocha you ought to know: Whenever I buy kabocha, I get two types. When roasted, one is really moist and mushy with soft skin, just like pureed pumpkin. The other is really dry and firm like baking potatoes with a thick, hard skin. (Maggie, did you ever experience these differences?)
This time round, I got the dry kind, which is perfect for dicing and stir-frying because of it holds its shape well after being baked. So, stir-fry it was!
Kabocha-Lentil Stir-fry with Goat Cheese and Sun-dried Tomatoes
- 1/4 cup black lentils, uncooked
- 2 sundried-tomatoes, chopped
- 1-2 tablespoon Balsamic vinegar
- 1-2 tablespoon maple syrup
- 1 tablespoon lemon juice
- 1 clove garlic, minced
- 1/2 small onion, diced
- 1/4 orange bell pepper, diced
- 1 cup baked kabocha, diced
- salt and pepper to taste
- 1/4 cup chopped green onion
- handful crumbled goat’s cheese
- spoonful of Parmesan cheese
Cook the lentils with about 3/4 cup water with the sundried-tomatoes.
Meanwhile, mix together the balsamic vinegar, maple syrup, and lemon juice. Set aside.
Once the lentils are cooked, heat up another pan and cook the garlic, onion, and bell pepper until soft.
Toss in the kabocha, stir-fry until heated through. Add in the cooked lentils with the sundried tomatoes and the vinegar mixture. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
Stir in green onion at the very end, remove from heat. Dish it up into a bowl, go crazy with the cheeses.
What a lovely bowl!
The acidity of the vinegar and lemon juice contrasted really well with the sweetness of the kabocha and maple syrup.
I loved how the sundried-tomatoes infused its deep flavor into the lentils. No other seasoning other than salt and pepper needed!
How can
you say no to this? It has cheese and kabocha in it!
And I can just sit here singing odes to the wonderful kabocha and goat cheese all day. Tra la la~
Question of the day: What, in your opinion, forms the best person you can be?
Reminder:
- Have you joined our Warm Fuzzies game? If you haven’t, please do! This is one game where our motto is, “The more, the warmer and fuzzier!” If you have signed up, please check for your name and link on our Warm Fuzzies page. And Erin, I’ll need your url so I can add you in to our list!
- Only THREE more days left till all recipes for BSI:Corn is due! Check out the wonderful recipes already submitted in the BSI page! I know they’re amazing, but don’t be scared off by the competition…SUBMIT A RECIPE! If you win, you get to prance around in cute socks! Make your friends jealous of your nicely-adorned feet!
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Congratulations on USC!!! You will do great, I know.
Hey beautiful! You know, I’m a fellow perfectionist too (if you hadn’t worked it out yet..) I think you’ll really appreciate school because, if its anything like my studies, it gives you a reality check. You want always get A+’s. You wont always top the class. But that’s ok. It actually helps you become the best person you can be (rather than just the best student) because it forces you to deal with some things you may not have had to before! But you will love it. I guarantee you! And that nervous anticipation about how you will do… that actually only makes it better!
Sounds like your friend is really lucky to have you to write to. It is crazy scary how big EDs are. I hope you friend gets through it.
Haha – love the motto. The more, the warmer and fuzzier! All over it
I’m sorry to hear about your friend! Also, it’s completely normal to be nervous about heading back to school. You’re a strong girl and I have no doubt in my mind that this time will be different. Plus you have us for support as well
When you look back, it doesn’t matter how many As and Bs you got in college. What matters are your experiences and relationships with others
Study hard, but have fun too!
What a yummy stir-fry, goat cheese and sun-dried tomatoes are two of my favorite ingredients!
Love the kabocha recipe!
I think it’s good that you’re able to look upon your life experiences and learn from them, even if they’re bad experiences. It’ll help you much in the future.
And it’s nice that your friend has you to turn to. It’s nice to have someone to talk to about things who understands the ED “monster” and doesn’t just dismiss it.
Recipe sounds great! I’m sure you’ll get back into the swing of things once you start school. I have no doubt you’ll do great
I am so glad your friend has you to turn to.
Some of my very favorite life memories are those from college – it had NOTHING to do with grades. It was the life experience , the socialization, the learning, the fun, the heartbreak. You have made yourself be perfect for long enough – I think it’s time you just let go for awhile and enjoy life because it’s so short.
The recipe looks and sounds fantastic – I love the flavors you use in your recipes and I also love how colorful and healthy they are.
I love this statement:
“I want to put my first priority on becoming not the best student, but the best person”
I think you are such a beautiful person and your friend is so lucky to have you, to confide in.
i think there is nothing wrong with wanting to be a great student! certainly it’s much better than not caring at all. but at the same time, you want to have a full rich happy life, and that should not come second to being a perfectionist. from your post, it sounds like you really DO have it all together. and you will be going to a place where sure, you will be learning and going to school, but it will be about so much more than that! and anytime you need help or to vent or to ask questions when you dont know the answers, you have us!!!!
you are gonna be awesome
I can totally relate to you on this. I’m currently taking a year off between high school and college due to recovering from my eating disorder. I’m ambivalent towards starting college this fall. I’m SO scared I won’t remember anything, that I’ve forgotten how to study, that I won’t get good grades. I’m a perfectionist too. I worry about the college situation all the time. I’m afraid it’s going to be too hard, especially because I’ve taken time off from school. I don’t even know if I’m ready to go back; and I’m afraid of that too.
Thank you for this inspiring post. It’s true, life is much more important than how you did in school.
Thanks for commenting on my blog! Yours looks great as well, I see we also both share a love for cottage cheese and lavash pizzas.
I too am nervous about starting school again. (community college this time though!)
That will take a lot of stress off me, just knowing that I get to come home to my fiance
every day and will be able to sit with him and work on my HW and ask questions
if I need help.
I have at least 6 math classes and just ONE
more Psychology class to take. (boo hoo because I LOVE Psychology)
I’ve put off math for far too long, I need to get through these classes
in order to finish my Bachelor’s! (in Psychology)
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