JustLj in April Part III

April Themes for Teaching | Scholastic

The Blog About Moving Again

Last month, I wrote The Blog I Didn’t Want To Write. And I meant that literally. It wasn’t a clever title or a dramatic framing device. I genuinely did not want to write it. I was tired. Mentally tired in the kind of way where even opening a blank document feels exhausting.

The kind of tired where your thoughts feel heavy before the day even starts. But I wrote it anyway. And strangely, it ended up being one of the most viewed posts I’ve had in a while. More likes too.

I noticed it in the analytics afterward and sat with that for a bit. I think people can tell when something is honest. Even messy honesty. Because March wasn’t really about solutions. It was just me admitting where I was at.

And I think April is the conversation that comes after thatNot a recovery arc. Not a motivational speech. Just…the next step.

Moving again. Slowly. I’ve spent enough years living with Major Anxiety and Depression Disorder to know that awareness changes everything.

Not fixes everything. Just changes it. There’s a difference between feeling awful and understanding why you feel awful. There’s a difference between spiraling blindly and recognizing the spiral as it happens. It doesn’t make it disappear. But it gives you something to hold onto. And acceptance is part of that too, even though I used to hate that word. Acceptance sounded too much like surrender to me. Like giving up. Like saying, “This is just how I am.” But I don’t think that’s what acceptance actually is anymore.

I think it’s being honest enough to stop fighting reality long enough to actually address it. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, acceptance is defined as “the action of consenting to receive or undertake something offered.” But emotionally, I think acceptance is less about agreeing with your circumstances and more about acknowledging them honestly enough to stop pretending they aren’t there. To accept yourself is not to stop growing. It’s to stop abandoning yourself while you grow. For a long time, I thought awareness would automatically fix things.

That once once I understood my anxiety and depression well enough, I would somehow outthink them. But awareness without acceptance can become its own form of exhaustion. You become hyperaware of every flaw, every spiral, every bad habit, while still treating yourself like a problem instead of a person. Carl Rogers once wrote, “The curious paradox is that when I accept myself just as I am, then I can change.”

I think I’m finally starting to understand what that means. Not perfectly. Not all at once. But enough to begin moving again. To say:

Yeah, I’m struggling right nowYeah, I’m anxious. Yeah, I’m depressed. Yeah, I’m overwhelmed.

Okay. Now what? That “now what” feels important to me lately.

Because I don’t want to stay frozen forever. And I think that’s where this month finds me. Not magically better. Not cured. Not suddenly transformed into someone disciplined, healed, and thriving. Just aware enough now to start trying again without lying to myself about where I’m starting from. There’s still stuff weighing on me. Still uncertainty about the future.Still days where I wake up already mentally exhausted. Still moments where everything feels like too much at once. But I’m noticing something different too.

I’m starting to want things again. Not huge things. Just small human things. Stability. Structure.Enjoyment. Rest without guilt. Excitement without anxiety attached to it. I want to take care of myself better. I want to stop treating myself like a problem I have to solve before I’m allowed to live my life.

I think part of getting older is realizing you cannot hate yourself into becoming healthier. You cannot shame yourself into peace. Eventually, you have to decide you are worth helping. “And now that you don’t have to be perfect, you can be good.” John Steinbeck

John Steinbeck: “And now that you don't have to be perfect,...”

Even on the bad days. Especially on the bad days. And honestly, sometimes “moving again” just means really basic things. Getting out of bed. Cleaning your room.

Answering emails you’ve been avoiding. Applying for jobs. Drinking water. Taking your medication consistently.

Letting yourself rest when your body is clearly asking for it. None of it feels dramatic while it’s happening. Most healing doesn’t.

Its repetive. Uneven. Quiet. But it matters. I think last month was about acknowledging the weight. This month is about acknowledging that I’m still carrying it and moving anyway. Not perfectly.Not quickly. But intentionally.

And maybe that’s enough right now. Maybe movement doesn’t have to look impressive to count. Maybe survival itself deserves more credit than we give it. Maybe being aware of yourself, accepting yourself, and still choosing to keep going is already a kind of progress. I still feel uncertain a lot of the time. Still tired.

Still worried. Still trying to figure things out. But Im here. And that feels worth saying.

JustLj in September PART II

The Blog Post of Alignment

September arrived like a test of patience and clarity. It felt like the month wanted to ask me, Do you know what you’re really after? Opportunities came and went, some lifting me, others cutting a little deep. In the swirl of it all, I kept circling back to one word: Alignment.

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, alignment is

“an arrangement in a straight line, or in correct relative positions; a position of agreement or alliance.”

It’s about things fitting together, whether in geometry, in groups, or in life. But alignment is not always about perfection. It’s about honesty. It asks us to notice when something resonates and when something doesn’t, even if rejection or loss is part of the process.

This month, I felt both ends of that spectrum. A job in New Jersey that I had quietly hoped for slipped away. I didn’t have the experience they were looking for. Rejection has a way of echoing louder than acceptance, and I’ll admit it stung. It raised doubts, making me wonder if I had misjudged my skills or if I would ever be seen as enough. However, almost as if it were a balancing act, another offer soon appeared. A position closer to home. On paper, it looked promising, and the fact that they wanted me felt like an ego boost. Proof that someone out there saw my potential. Yet when I sat with it, I realized it didn’t align with the life I’m building right now. Saying no was difficult, but it also reminded me that belonging somewhere doesn’t mean I should belong everywhere. Alignment requires discernment, not just acceptance.

Now I find myself waiting, hopeful, for another opportunity, one that actually feels aligned. The position aligns with my career path, academic studies, and personal values. It’s a waiting game, and waiting is never easy. But this month has taught me that being in alignment doesn’t mean rushing to fill the gaps; it means trusting that the right pieces will meet you halfway. Here are some famous voices that echo this truth:

Key Realizing Dream Focus Success Significance Small Steps Victories Path  Greater Meaning Oprah Winfrey Walk Show Host

Im learning that alignment doesn’t guarantee smooth sailing. It doesn’t mean rejection won’t sting or decisions won’t feel heavy. Instead, it gives me a compass. A way to measure if I am moving in step with the person I am becoming. And as September closes, that compass points to patience, self-trust, and the reminder that alignment is not about saying yes to every door that opens, but about knowing which ones are truly mine to walk through.

Poem of the Month

by me

In Line With Myself

I used to chase every spark,

hands raw from holding flames

never meant to keep me warm.

Now I pause at the threshold,

listening

does the floor echo my name?

Does the air carry my breath back whole/

rejection cuts, yes,

but it also carves a path,

a sharper edge of knowing.

Alignment is not applause,

not every nod of approval

it is the quiet click

of self and circumstances meeting

without force.

And if the right door waits,

I will know it not by chance,

but by the steadiness in my chest,

the soft alignment of who I am

with where I’m called to be.

What I’m Currently Working on

To stay updated on my journey and what I’ll be working on next, feel free to visit the Works in Progress Page or follow the Facebook Page, where I share daily updates and fun tidbits.