I’m trying to get back on track with newsletter writing.
Since arriving back in Colorado, I have settled in pretty well at Mom’s place.
My employment is still in flux. I have a profile on a tutoring website that
connects students and tutors, but I have had only one tutoring session so far.
I hope to hear back today about whether I was granted a teaching certificate
for a course at a local college. At this point, becoming an educator in some
form is my goal. I always liked tutoring, and would like to continue it, but I
need steady income, and am therefore pursuing teaching positions at the local
schools.
I have also started writing a novel, which will be the first
of a two-book series. Motivation and inspiration wax and wane. I’m trying to
write through the book from beginning to end, and I’m currently at a point of
the story in which dialogue is going to have to carry the plot for a little
while and I’m stumped on how to proceed naturally. Writing and thinking of new
ideas for the book are a fun pastime.
In general, my mood also waxes and wanes. I am currently
doing well, but when I realize that my loans will enter repayment before too
long, I get stressed. It’s good motivation to get off my duff and look for a
job, but life would be a lot easier without debt. I imagine that’s a good
blanket statement that remains true regardless of circumstances.
I have had time to reassess the decisions I’ve made that
have led to this point in my life, and have been able to figure out a better
way I could have made life decisions in the past - and was even able to share
some of that with an old acquaintance. What I’d like to do now is figure out
how to apply the same principles to my current decision-making process. I need
to figure out where to go in life from here, and I don’t want to make the same
mistake of locking myself into a big decision without weighing the costs and
benefits, and without allowing myself room to reevaluate when necessary.
Scott