I remember my twentieth birthday as if it was yesterday.
Grey.
I recall going to bed at night after speaking to my mother and thinking "I don't know how all this will be when I turn thirty, but if it goes on this way I'd rather not see it". Back then I didn't really care much about anything. My hometown is a pretty fine place, but everything felt grey to me.
You hear a lot that your twenties are your best years. One ends up believing this and living under the constant pressure that you are wasting the best years of your life and there isn't much more after them, everything is the baggage you drag from your failures at this age.
We were wrong. All those voices and I.
After reading this, one may think that the twentieth was my worst birthday, but it wasn't bad, just grey. I day I spent mostly in silence, nothing went really wrong. My worst birthday was the twenty-eighth. What about the best? That was, no doubt, the last of them.
I am thirty years old. In many ways, the months since I turned thirty have been the best of my life. Nobody knows how eager I am to enjoy them. I have already tried to squeeze as much as I could out of my years and it went terribly wrong, now I wonder what will happen once I put that effort on what really matters to me.
Think about Gómez Addams. Everyone remembers how in love he is with Morticia, but it's not only her: Gómez loves his kids, his family, every single thing he does... Gómez Addams is in love with life! I want that love, I want that energy. And it comes from within.
The country I live in is an unfathomable pit of darkness during half of the year. Time flows at very unpredictable speed and our inner wild monkey from the Savannah goes absolutely insane picturing the ancient dangers lying amongst the shades... All afternoon long! Today was sunny, and the absolutely normal walk I took towards the Café where I have breakfast every Saturday was incredibly beautiful.
It cannot be something be. It must be the little things.
This is an idea I started working with only when the largest thing I was involved in failed me spectacularly. All of a sudden, everything was exactly the same as before, but it was terrible. Everything. Was. Terrible. But every once in a while, PLUP! The tiniest thing would happen and I would find myself laughing like a little kid. In those moments I was not only content and comfortable - I was happy. Sparse little invaluable moments of true happiness in the middle of the absolute mess that my head was back then.
I read a wise old man who left us long ago say something like: "the answers to the biggest questions are in the smallest of things". Whether it was Gandalf or Marcus Aurelius is a question that shall never find an answer, what matters is the message. Something so tiny you can carve it in a coin and carry it around.
Always. The. Small. Details.
With this I don't mean life is easy, nor we are unique specials jewels of the Universe nor must you smile to all your problems and, most importantly, I don't mean one must fixate over anything big or small.
What I mean is your mind opens with experience, and wherever you think there might be beauty but you can't see it, or see it and dismiss it, you will appreciate it. My life hasn't changed much in the last two years, but I am much happier, and so will you. Until then, please enjoy the ride.