In the spring of 2011 I was
enjoying my last few weeks of my undergraduate college career. I was lucky and
was able to prioritize my time enough that I could spend most of it with my
good friends. On a beautiful Saturday my good three friends and I went golfing.
Now I am not good at golf, at all. But that day wasn’t about the golf it was
about relaxing with my good friends. I would have been willing to end my
adventure at this point and I would have been completely happy, but there was
another plan in store for me that night to help me get rid of the angst of
leaving my friends and school.
Later in the evening we met up at
one of the local bars to hang out with an extended group of friends. It was a
quiet Saturday night at the bar, so a few of us decided to walk over to my
favorite bar in town. We walked in and started looking for a place to sit. I
turned and looked there four guys sitting at my normal table, no big deal. Then
I took a closer look. They were the guys from The Buried Life tv show from MTV,
who were in town for a speaking event earlier in the day. Being the friendly
Canadians that they are they said hi and asked if we wanted to sit and have a
beer with them, I wasn’t drinking that night but I sure as hell wasn’t going to
miss out hanging out with them. So we pulled up some chairs and started
talking. After talking with them for about half an hour they were wondering
what our small college town had to offer and they wanted to hit up some
different places, and there was getting to be a crowd of girls wanting to take
pictures and oohh and ahh all over them. So it looked like it was getting to be
that time where we parted ways. However, when they said they were going to the
next bar they invited us to go with them. We obliged and found our way into one
of the craziest most fun unexpected experiences that I have been a part of.
There was lots of dancing, meeting people, a
few pictures, tons of people, a dance stage full of stressed college kids and a
trip to the local 70s bar equipped with light up dance floor. It was a blur of
a night and I was sober. By the end of the night people had gotten separated
but I made good on my promise I made earlier in the night and gave one of them a
sober ride to their hotel just outside the town.
This whole day is one that I will remember for the rest of
my life. It was something totally unexpected that made me realize to stop
worrying about what was going to happen when I gradated school and was going to
be away from my close friends and enjoy what you have.
After meeting with all of the guys from the Buried Life you
realize that they are doing what they love to do, they are helping inspire my
generation to go find what they want to do. This in turn helped inspire me to
see how fortunate I am even if I am always striving for more.
The monotony of a routine can be
depressing and debilitating for being creative. Sometimes there are external
triggers that you didn’t realize you needed to show you how to break out of
your monotony. When you feel lost in
shuffles of life, realize what it is that is making you feel lost. If it is a
variable that you can easily change, then change it. If it is something that is
seemingly too complicated to fix in a short period of time, break the variable
down piece by piece and take care of it.
Take a note from the guys at the Buried Life and answer the
question; what do you want to do before you die?
Then go do it.
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