zandravandra

turning people into catgirls

~author/streamer/gamedev~ appreciator of colorful wigs


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posts from @zandravandra tagged #Thank you for everything

also:

zandravandra
@zandravandra

I never learned to grieve.

I lived for decades, opened up my heart to countless people and places and things, lost a lot of them—but I never grieved their loss. I was never able to; I never learned how. I felt sad in the moment, and that was that. The rest, I pushed away. I had to, in order to survive. But, like all defense mechanisms born from trauma, that only gets you so far.

It all adds up.

When the pandemic started, I coincidentally began trauma therapy. I'm still at it, over four years later, because that kind of thing takes time. I've grown a lot as a person since then, and I can tell that I've made a lot of progress in a lot of very important places. But just as someone sitting on a rain-soaked curb watching heavy machinery tear their house down to its foundations because what started as moldy wallpaper turned out to be a cascade of issues running deeper than anyone had ever imagined, I am constantly faced with the realization that there's more. There's always more. It feels unending. But I know that if I keep at it, one day, all this exhausting hard work will end.

And then I'll be able to start rebuilding. The part after an ending, that I never got to see.

But the grieving, even once I start feeling it, even once I start understanding it—as I have been recently, having finally gotten around to that part of my therapeutic journey—the grieving will never end. If I've learned anything it's that it comes and goes, becomes more and less powerful over time, but it never truly ends. Maybe that's why I've been so afraid of starting to feel it this whole time.

It's funny, isn't it? By living my entire life in fear of endings, I've kept ignoring the one thing that never does.

But now I'm feeling it, at long last. And it hurts; it really hurts. But at least there's some relief in it, some release, as the weight of innumerable unfelt losses is being lifted from my shoulders, bit by bit. I'm going to miss a lot of people and places and things, but I won't miss the crushing feeling of all their unprocessed grief.

But I'll miss this place. I'm going to miss it so much.


zandravandra
@zandravandra

You can get a lot done in a day, if you put your mind to it. If the stars align.

Looking back on the past 24 hours, the last 24 hours and change of a place that has meant the world to me, I can confidently say I did everything I could to live that day to its fullest. I enjoyed what I had while I had it, I participated in a temporary thing that brought me joy without focusing on the end looming closer and closer. I lived in the moment, at long last, in a way that's so difficult for me to do. I did my best.

The thing they don't tell you about doing your best—something I had to learn by myself, the hard way—is that you're not expected to do it all the time. You can't. It's not reasonable or sustainable. You can only do your best some of the time, and even then, the circumstances have to let you. You can't just do your best, you have to get lucky.

As someone who's designed games for decades, I've come to have a particular perspective on luck. It's a bit like spice; you have to use the right amount or else the result is either bland or unpalatable. But get it right, and you get to enjoy the best of both worlds: players feeling that they deserve their wins, and not blaming themselves for their losses.

So, yeah. That's the energy I've been trying to bring into how I approach my day-to-day. When I do my best, fantastic! I get to be proud of myself. But when I can't, I try not to beat myself up over it. Because sometimes it's not up to me.

I really did my best to help this place thrive! But it still ended. And that's okay.

I'm really grateful so many of us got so much time to say our goodbyes. We got really lucky.

Tonight, I say goodbye, and tomorrow, I get to see what happens next. And unlike so many of the other times I've grappled with loss, this time I'm actually feeling hopeful! Because this place changed me. This place change others. And now, we get to bring that change along with us as we go our separate ways.

Here are some of the ways cohost changed me.



I never learned to grieve.

I lived for decades, opened up my heart to countless people and places and things, lost a lot of them—but I never grieved their loss. I was never able to; I never learned how. I felt sad in the moment, and that was that. The rest, I pushed away. I had to, in order to survive. But, like all defense mechanisms born from trauma, that only gets you so far.

It all adds up.

When the pandemic started, I coincidentally began trauma therapy. I'm still at it, over four years later, because that kind of thing takes time. I've grown a lot as a person since then, and I can tell that I've made a lot of progress in a lot of very important places. But just as someone sitting on a rain-soaked curb watching heavy machinery tear their house down to its foundations because what started as moldy wallpaper turned out to be a cascade of issues running deeper than anyone had ever imagined, I am constantly faced with the realization that there's more. There's always more. It feels unending. But I know that if I keep at it, one day, all this exhausting hard work will end.

And then I'll be able to start rebuilding. The part after an ending, that I never got to see.

But the grieving, even once I start feeling it, even once I start understanding it—as I have been recently, having finally gotten around to that part of my therapeutic journey—the grieving will never end. If I've learned anything it's that it comes and goes, becomes more and less powerful over time, but it never truly ends. Maybe that's why I've been so afraid of starting to feel it this whole time.

It's funny, isn't it? By living my entire life in fear of endings, I've kept ignoring the one thing that never does.

But now I'm feeling it, at long last. And it hurts; it really hurts. But at least there's some relief in it, some release, as the weight of innumerable unfelt losses is being lifted from my shoulders, bit by bit. I'm going to miss a lot of people and places and things, but I won't miss the crushing feeling of all their unprocessed grief.

But I'll miss this place. I'm going to miss it so much.



Alex Zandra - See You Soon
See You Soon
Alex Zandra
00:00

From the bottom of my heart, thank you for helping me dive back into music after decades away from it. I've only just started learning to play the piano, after wanting to for almost my entire life, but since it's in part because of COMPOST that I finally took the plunge, I wanted to give this a shot.

Here's my very first musical piece for the piano, played and sang by me.

It was very difficult to make for a lot of reasons, but it was equally important for me to see it through to the end.

I hope you like it <3 it's flawed, but aren't we all

lyrics

I’ll write you a piano song
As we sit here cheek to cheek
Sorry if I play it wrong
I've only had it for a week

Wish I’d had more time to learn
All the notes and the technique
So I’ll just let my passion burn
And allow my heart to speak

Happy birthday, see you soon
And before you flutter free
I hope you'll like this little tune
Made from what you meant to me

You made a place for you and me
And everyone you've ever known
A place that helped to set me free
And showed me just how much I'd grown

Wish I'd had more time to share
All the things that made me smile
But I'm still glad I could be there
For every triumph, every trial

Happy birthday, see you soon
And before you flutter free
I hope you'll like this little tune
Made from what you meant to me

(instrumental)

And now it’s just you and me
Though it feels like I'm alone
I hoped we'd sing in harmony
But your words are set in stone

Wish we’d had more time to talk
About the things that made you smile
I trace your steps now when I walk
And I'll keep walking for a while

I wrote you a piano song
As we sat here cheek to cheek
Sorry if I sing it wrong
Cause it's getting hard to speak

Happy birthday, see you soon
If only in my memory
I hope you liked this little tune
Made from what you meant to me