I Hate (Online) Dating.

For most of us, 2020 deeply fucked up something of our lives. For many, it’s meant devastating loss and uncertainty. I try to remember that so far, I have been fortunate. I am safe and healthy. All of my loved ones have been safe and healthy, more or less. I’ve been able to work and provide for myself.

The only things I’ve lost of meaningful worth are time and some hope. There were goals and plans I had for this year that I had to accept were just not gonna fucking happen. Some of those things were easier to accept than others.

The one that hasn’t been easy to accept? How this pandemic is affecting my (nonexistent) love life. When I turned 30 last summer, I promised myself that I would start “putting myself out there” — a phrase I hate with a murderous passion — because there was something about turning 30 that made not wanting to die alone feel very urgent all of a sudden. I blame Love Island. (And trust, we only recognize UK in this house.)

I’ve never really “put myself out there” before because I didn’t know how. I’m what one would call a late bloomer. I’m also what one would call old-fashioned. I’ve spent most of my life assuming that I would meet-cute my future romantic partners like they do on Sex and the City. And if not that, I would just meet them randomly IRL. I’ve only ever liked people I’ve gotten to know really well in person.

And since this blog is called One True Thing, I guess I should also explain that I don’t “put myself out there” because the one time I did, I was involved in a very coercive and manipulative relationship with an older guy who sexually assaulted me twice. A very trauma compounded by my trust and intimacy issues stemming from witnessing my parents’ disaster of a divorce. (Yes, I do go to therapy! Thank you for asking.)

Oh, and it’s also further complicated by the fact that I came out as queer only three years ago, because I fell in love with a woman. But it was messy and emotional. (Truly only emotional, which made it even messier.) But once you take your queerness out of the box, it’s not like you can put it back in and return it. But my queerness is also still new and foreign and and maybe a little misshapen to me. And so I’ve also been like, “Who am I putting myself out there for?” I still don’t know how to answer that question.

OK, so yes. This is why “putting myself out there” is a very scary and complicated thing for me.

But all of a sudden, I was 30. I was very single. And sometimes, y’all, I swear I can feel my ovum packing up their shit and retiring to Florida. Finding a person — not my person, which I’ll get to — became a Very Serious Matter. Because did I mention I’m very afraid of dying alone?

As I started talking about the not wanting to die alone and wanting to “put myself out there” with my friends and aforementioned therapist, a terrible truth was reiterated over and over again: For 90% of humans (this is not a real statistic), “putting yourself out there” means online dating. Swiping right. (Or is it left?) You see a representation of a person through your phone — a few photos and some facts and some blurbs they’ve written about themselves — and you’re supposed to decide if they’re cute or interesting or smart or kind enough to talk to? And if they want to talk to you? And then if they do, you have to deal with truly the most mind-numbing conversations to figure out if they’re cute or interesting or smart or kind enough to risk BEING MURDERED to meet them in person?

Y’all, it’s a fucking nightmare. (And do not even get me started on the politics of desire and how fucking hard it is to be a [fat] Black woman on these apps.)

But I tried it nonetheless. And promptly got catfished. So then I deleted the apps… and then re-added them… and then deleted them… and then re-added them. And now, I’m considering deleting them again.

Because the truth is: I fucking HATE online dating. I’m not a swipe-to-find-a-match kind of bitch. And it really sucks because in this dystopian future, online dating is the only dating that’s safe. If there were ever a time to really pony up, it’d be now. But I deeply hate it.

And so, a huge part of 2020 has been accepting that this will probably be another year I’m single AF and a little lonely. And that’s OK. My eggs are not retiring. I am not going to die alone. I have time. The goal isn’t to find a warm body. The goal is to find my person — someone who is cute and interesting and smart and kind, who shares my same values and ambitions, who I can have a relationship with.

So until I can “put myself out there” IRL, I’ll stay my Black ass at home.

The Pandemic Has Wrecked My Sleep Schedule.

I went to be at 2:15am last night. 2:30am the night before. 8am the night before that. 5am the night before that. Please don’t ask what I do until that time. You will be painfully unimpressed. (OK, fine — A lot of TV, YouTube, and mindless Internet rabbit holes.)

Do I feel like an insane person? Yes.

When the COVID-19 crisis escalated to the lockdown phase in March, I was pretty intentional about making sure I maintained a sense of “normalcy,” despite the fact that we were all social distancing at staying at home. I tried to make sure I woke up around my normal time, that I went on walks a few times a week, that I stood outside and got fresh air everyday, and that I went to bed at a reasonable time.

And then… Well, we all know what happened — and what is still happening. Between the deplorable and catastrophic government response to COVID-19 here in the U.S. and the BLM/M4BL uprising, that sense of “normalcy” has completely been shattered. Nothing about this is normal. Nothing in me wants to normalize it. And especially after the uprising, I’ve just realized how “normal” was already what we called being complacent/complicit in deeply fucked up systems.

Plus, I think there’s something about it being summer (too damn hot!), still feeling the urgency to stay my ass inside (very damn important!), and the overwhelming sense of WTF-ness happening in the world around us (too damn much!).

Normal just isn’t really in the cards anymore. And won’t be for a very long time. So it’s been difficult for me to feel like having a “normal” routine is a necessity at this point. Even though I know I’m being silly, because it absolutely still should be.

Bitches gotta sleep.

I'm Bad at Self-Care. (AKA One True Thing #1)

Two weeks ago, I turned 31. I still have two saved drafts I intended to post to celebrate my 30th. (LOL.)

I was once a fairly prolific blogger, as I’m sure most Millennial/Xennial writers who came of age with the Internet and social media were. But as I’ve made the transition from hobbyist writer to professional writer (blegh!), I’ve stopped blogging.

But for my 31st year, I made a commitment to myself (and my therapist) to prioritize self-care. “Self-care” gets thrown around a lot, usually to sell us shit. Like spa days and vacation packages and face masks. (Mmm, capitalism.) But for me, self-care means learning to practice daily actions and behaviors that prioritize my own health and well-being. And beyond that, prioritizing my own joy, wholeness, and peace.

But I’m really bad at self-care, y’all.

You see, I tend to put other people’s needs and feelings before my own. I don’t think this is necessarily bad. Especially because kindness and compassion are daily practices as well. The problem is I offer a disproportionate amount of my time and energy offering kindness to others — and not to myself. And then I burn out. And then maybe I spend five insomnia-addled days holed up in my apartment, procrastinating on writing and e-mails by deep cleaning my apartment and watching YouTube.

IDK, my brain is weird. What I do know is that for most of my life, it’s been so much easier for me to take care of other people than it has been to take care of myself. But I’m 31. But there are some incredibly important things that I would very much so like to achieve and bring into my life in my 30s, but they require a daily self-care practice.

Writing every single day for myself — not for a paycheck or acknowledgement or prestige — is one of the ways I used to practice self-care.

Being open about the messy, funny, boring, ugly truth of my life is one of the ways I used to practice self-care.

But the toxicity and hyper-visibility of social media makes me anxious, so posting on Twitter or Instagram or Facebook (yes, I still have Facebook — I’m 31) no longer really feels like self-care.

So welcome to my new old blog, in which everyday I will write at least one true thing.

See y’all tomorrow.

Making Up My Mind

Yo! It’s 2019. I am bad at regularly updating this blog.

From my last post, it’s easy to deduce that 2018 was a difficult year. As a good friend of mine reminded me recently: There are years that ask questions and there are years that offer answers. Whew, chile, did I have to confront all the messy, confounding questions in 2018. There were so many. So many. And for most of year, I couldn’t answer them for myself.

It was hard to give answers because I didn’t know what I wanted. It was hard to make decisions because I didn’t have the energy, time, or resources to do it very often. I spent much of last year working, but not knowing what I was working toward. And on a deeper level, I was often working against my own well-being, healing, and best interests. It was just plain hard.

But now that I’m on the other side. I have decided to provide my own answers. I am making up my mind about the things I desire, the things I’m willing to work for, the visions I want to bring to fruition this year.

I am writing. I forgot the magic and the meditation that is writing. I am taking risks. I am trying to be more positive. And when I can’t be positive, I’m at least trying to mind my business and stay in my lane. I’m being kind to myself. And I’m doing the inconvenient yet necessary work of learning how to care for myself, prioritizing my needs, and setting up boundaries.

I am committing to my dreams and my goals.

And you know what the gift has been? I have known peace this year. Tangible, golden, beautiful peace. It never stays for long. But it comes, which I don’t think I could say at all about last year.

I hope 2019 also brings you the peace and the joy and the wild dreaming it has brought me so far.

Let’s build, tribe.

A Learning Year

I've been needing to write this post for a while. I currently have two other drafts saved, trying and failing to write what I hope I can finally write here and now. I'm going to try at least…

I'm coming up on one year post-USC. This upcoming Saturday will the official one-year anniversary of when ya girl secured the MFA bag (while Hillary Clinton and Helen Mirren watched) from USC's School of Cinematic Arts and the John Wells Division of Writing for Screen & Television. I remember how stressful and exhausting and surreal that day was. I remember being so upset that my mom wasn't there, that it drizzled and my hair frizzed up, that I sweated my eyebrows off. I also remember feeling so proud of myself — maybe the most proud I've ever felt of myself. I had managed to get into the best MFA screenwriting program in the country, into the best film school in the world. (Fight on or fight me, bro.) I had received a graduate fellowship and wrote a script that awarded me a scholarship, so ya girl's student loan debt was cut in half. I had already secured an assistant job in Shondaland — that I started the very next day.

I was so proud and so happy. 

For two years, I had hustled and grinded my way to hard-won joy. I worked the hardest I'd ever worked. I went to therapy. I stretched myself into a larger and newer and better person. In some ways, I was still the same ol' bitch. But in a lot of ways, I wasn't. Going to USC was truly the best thing that ever happened to me. It was such a wild and big dream that I made happen. And it opened so many doors. It opened friendships. And it rooted me to myself in a way that I desperately needed. It was the best prayer that God ever answered.

And so, I think this first year out in the "real world" was always going to be hard. USC was not perfect. The school is mired in bureaucracy. It's an elite institution that rewards folks who already come from privileged backgrounds — myself included. It wreaks of the same stale (white) surface-deep liberalism that most universities do. But despite all of this, I found a home and a community there as a writer, storyteller, and artist. I felt nurtured and encouraged pretty much every day. I felt valued. I felt like my stories mattered. I felt like I mattered.

My first year working in the entertainment industry has often not been that. This first year in Hollywood was a lot of things. It brought up a lot of things. I spent most of the year exhausted, stressed, depressed, and sick. My physical and mental health deteriorated. And so did my self-confidence. My face broke out. I gained weight. Health conditions I have were exacerbated. But most significant: I didn't write. I haven't written a new original project in over a year. I couldn't. I was too tired, too sad, too paralyzed to write. Even now, writing scares me. 

What a lot of people don't know is that I've spent most of the past twelve months doubting myself so much, that I eventually deemed myself unworthy. I stopped believing that I had anything interesting or original to say. I stopped believing that I had ideas and a worldview that could be valuable. I stopped believing that my stories mattered. And because I'm a person who writes so much from her own experience and inner world, I stopped believing that I mattered. And that was my rock bottom. Once I decided I didn't matter, I became a person I didn't like. I did and said and thought things that were ugly and dark and petty. Many times, I felt less than human.

I began questioning whether or not this was my actual path. I wondered if I had made a mistake quitting two great jobs, adding an additional $65,000 to my student loan debt, and pursuing a career that most people fail at. Seriously. I considered applying for my old job at Planned Parenthood. And though I know that I my purpose on this Earth is to write and tell stories and create television & film, I still feel like shit most days. I still feel unworthy of this dream sometimes.

I spent a lot of time blaming others for my misery this year. I blamed my white friends and my wealthy friends for having privilege I didn't. Especially when they got things I felt like I also deserved. I blamed USC for not preparing us enough for the harsh realities of the industry. I blamed others for being entitled and demanding and thoughtless. And I blamed the many other successful people working in entertainment for perpetuating what is often a toxic, abusive, and dehumanizing industry culture — while touting faux-progressive bullshit about equality and justice. I blamed everyone and everything for the shitty state of the world, that often made it that much harder to feel like the work I want to do and the dreams I have are possible or consequential. 

I am still moving out of that place of victimhood, because I also know that I was and am an active participant in my own suffering.

In moments when I could've chosen to be better, I didn't. When I could've been writing, I was wallowing. When I could've been happy for my friends' success, I was jealous and mean. When I could've advocated for myself, I chose to shrink. When I could've held myself accountable for the ways in which I wasn't showing up for myself, I instead chose to blame and lash out at others. And so, as I prepare for my second season/year working in television, I am trying to figure out how I can be better and offer myself better.

I know it begins with writing. I've made every excuse not to write this year. I've found every reason why I shouldn't or couldn't. Y'all would be astonished how often I will avoid writing. I've literally rearranged furniture to avoid writing. But I'm a writer. To be a writer, I have to write. I have get over my own shit and write. I have to set aside my own fears and write. I have get over what other people have done or are doing and write. I have to be OK with my own mediocrity and write. I have to write terrible dialogue and scenes that don't make sense and scripts that my manager will flame the hell out of. I have to put in the work. Because that's where my career begins and ends: in my ability to put words to page constantly and consistently.

I also have to take care of myself. I'm still learning what this looks like. For a long time, I thought it meant physically taking care of myself. Like, drinking water and eating vegetables and exercising and doing yoga. I thought it meant losing weight. And it absolutely does mean those things. But it also looks a lot like self-parenting and self-sustainability. It means not agreeing to take on more than I can chew. It means being impeccable with my word. It means maintaining and budget and living within my means. It means waking up early, so I have more time to be productive in my day. It means going to bed at a reasonable hour, so I'm rested and energized. It means finding real and prolonged ways to manage my stress. It means going to the doctor and the dentist. It means finding a new therapist. It means disengaging from toxic people and spaces and experiences, even if that means my life and my world looks less full. It means apologizing when I'm in the wrong. It means being honest with others about where I am, and also how this means I don't have the capacity to be the friend or colleague or community member I used to be. At least, not right now. It means finding space for my spiritual practice, so I am grounded even when I feel like writing and work and the world are trying to uproot me.

And lastly, I need to practice gratitude. I spent so much of the past year being angry that I forgot that this is literally what I prayed for. I remember praying so hard that I would land in a writers' room, in Shondaland. I remember praying so hard that I would write a script that I loved, that would get me representation. I remember praying so hard that I'd be able to find a tiny, cute apartment in Hollywood somewhere, so I could be on my own. I remember praying so hard for everything that I have right now. Because I have so much good. There are so many people who have invested in this dream with me — friends, family, professors, classmates, colleagues, bosses, and so forth. There are so many people in this industry who have offered me kindness and friendship and mentorship and guidance and affirmation this year — real, abundant, intentional love and support when I couldn't give it to myself. There are so many people who have been patient and understanding. I want to be worthy of their faith and their encouragement.

I see so clearly now that this first year working in television was my learning year. It was my guerrilla grad school. I've learned so much — from others and from myself. I've learned what it takes to be successful, to have a sustainable and fulfilling career. I've learned the exact amount of hard work one has to put into a dream to make it come true. And I've also learned the exact amount of talent and luck and access and time one needs as well. I've learned that when you put such high expectations on people, they are bound to disappoint you. And I've learned that no person is as good or perfect or cruel or uncomplicated as we make them out to be. We are all messy, wild humans just trying to make sense of ourselves and our lives and our world. I've learned that there is an insane amount of skill and craft and genius and manpower and magic that goes into making just one hour of television — let alone 24 of them. I've learned that true friendship and genuine kindness are invaluable in this industry.

I've learned that I am just at the beginning. I have room to grow — and growth is not always joyful or beautiful or pleasant. Sometimes, it's ugly and painful. I'm still learning myself and this dream. I'm still learning the geography of these answered prayers.