It’s been a wild year, you guys. Mostly amazing, though. I mean, there was some not-so-great stuff in there for sure, but in my personal 2013 the good definitely outweighed the bad. Weirdly I feel like I’m one of the few people who can say that.
Let’s take a look, shall we?
JANUARY
I started the year off by making myself a flower crown which was somehow THE BEST THING IN MY LIFE (I am really into flower crowns and didn’t realize I could actually MAKE THEM FROM STUFF I BOUGHT AT THE DOLLAR STORE):
Then I went to my friends Jennie and Red’s New Year’s party:
On our way home from the party our subway was delayed by a girl who may or may not have been threatening to somehow harm herself. It seemed like an ominous beginning to the year.
2012 had gone out not with a bang but a whimper; on December 30th I’d published a post about how hard I was finding it to cope – re-reading it now makes me feel so incredibly relieved that I’m no longer in this place:
These days I feel as if I’ve lost the capacity for joy. I’ll catch myself mid-laugh and realize that I’m faking it, and I’m faking it so well that I’ve nearly got myself convinced. In the same way that it’s sometimes hard for me to believe that spring will ever come again, it’s also hard to believe that anything will ever make me feel good or happy again. I have these thoughts, like, hey, maybe at the beginning of my life I was handed out a finite number of good experiences and now, in the winter of my 30th year, I’ve somehow managed to spend the last one.
I’m grateful that this December I still, somehow, believe in the promise of spring.
The rest of January was tough. I was depressed for a lot of it, and to make matters even worse, early in the month Matt, Theo and I were struck by a stomach bug that led to the enchanting experience of throwing up all over a bathroom stall at Sick Kids.
There were a few highlights that month, of course. Shortly after New Year’s Day we participated in an Idle No More rally at Yonge and Dundas, which was pretty amazing:
And then on January 17th it was Theo’s second birthday, which was pretty rad:
Also Wil Wheaton tweeted at me, which, I mean, HIGHLIGHT OF MY FUCKING LIFE.
@anne_theriault yeah, punch this up and resubmit it next wek.
— Wil Wheaton (@wilw) January 18, 2013
Other than that, though, January was pretty hard. Depression-wise, things came to a boiling point at the end of the month. I won’t get into the gory details, but by then I was suicidal and sick with guilt over the fact that I felt that way. I went to my doctor, who increased the dosage of my antidepressants. I talked to my therapist, who listened and kindly nodded. I talked to my friends and family, who had advice that ranged from well-meaning to useless. Nothing seemed to do anything; the days just dragged on and on, weak winter light bleeding into blank, sleepless nights. It’s funny – now that things are so much better, I can’t really remember how those days felt. I can only remember that they were the emotional equivalent of the sensation and sound of fingernails on a blackboard. They were unbearable.
On January 31st my friends Audra and Jairus took me to the CAMH emergency room. I saw a psychiatrist there and spent nearly an hour talking to her. She was nice – not condescending, not pushy, not mean. Just nice. And young. And I totally coveted her wardrobe.
After that, things started to slowly, inexplicably get better. Somehow seeing her gave me permission to feel what I was feeling, and having the guilt over what I felt lifted made an enormous difference.
FEBRUARY
February was a weird sort of in-between time. I felt like I was in some kind of borderland, not quite here but not quite somewhere else, either. I spent a lot of time trying to pull myself back together, and I think that by and large I succeeded? One of the things the CAMH psychiatrist had “prescribed” was to take more time for myself. She said that I should try to do one thing a day just for me, so I did exactly that. I went and sat in quiet cafés and wrote in my journal. I took mid-day trips to the art gallery and drank in all the gorgeous around me. I went to the water spa and sat for hours in pools of salt water reading the Game of Thrones series. I tried hard not to feel guilty over all the selfish things I was spending money on.
February 11th was the 50th anniversary of Sylvia Plath’s suicide, which seemed strangely important. That date felt like a sort of arbitrary line in the sand, and I thought that if only I could get past it, things would get better. Part of it was that I felt like I was lucky enough to be moving on with my life, while she was constantly frozen in her 30th year, at the height of her poetic career but what must have seemed like the nadir of her personal life. I wrote about how strange it was that this year, when I turned 31, I would suddenly be older than she had ever been.
At some point towards the end of month I cemented my friendship with Nathan, who, at that time, was working at a fancy food store a block away from the studio that I manage. I would talk to him every time I went in to eat all the free samples or buy discounted day-old stuff, but we weren’t really friend-friends until one day I went to pay for something and he saw my copy of George R.R. Martin’s Dance With Dragons sticking out of my purse. After that we sort of fell into deep smit with each other and we’ve been pretty inseparable ever since. Nathan is mostly a super tall dude version of me with really good hair who makes me laugh a lot. I keep trying to put into words how amazing he is, and I keep coming up stupidly short, so I’ll just leave it at this: Nathan is one of the best things that has happened to me this year.
Other February highlights include:
This super rad Star Trek sweater I found at Value Village
As is my tradition, I spent Valentine’s Day with my girlfriends instead of with Matt. We ate a fancy dinner and then got drunk and mouthy, which seems like the best possible way to spend that stupid holiday. I also wrote about how much I hate Valentine’s Day.
I wrote an article for XOJane about breastfeeding, for which Matt took what might be one of my favourite pictures of Theo and I ever.
The two biggest events in February were definitely the two nights that Matt and I had on our own away from Theo, just two grownups doing grownup things without a manic two year old to interrupt them. The first was early in the month, when my friends Eden and Michael offered to babysit Theo overnight. Matt and I spent our sacred time away at the Gladstone Hotel, in a super fancy room:
It was the first time we’d ever been away from Theo overnight, and things went well for all parties involved!
Then, at the end of February, Matt and I went to a classy whiskey-tasting event in Kingston and spent the night at the same B&B we’d stayed at the night of our wedding while my mom took care of Theo. Turns out I super like whiskey:
On February 27th I deleted my Facebook account for a week, which was pretty much exactly what I needed to do right then.
MARCH
March was pretty much a red-letter month for me in 2013. This year could, among other things, be called The Year I Fell Totally Head-Over-Heels In Love With Patti Smith, a process that was cemented by seeing Smith in concert at the Art Gallery of Ontario on March 7th. There had only been a handful of tickets to her performance there, but I’d somehow managed to score one by going and waiting in the freezing cold outside of the gallery the morning that they went on sale. It was so, so unbelievably worth it.
I WAS THIS CLOSE TO PATTI SMITH YOU GUYS:
AUGH
Other Patti Smith highlights of this year include: seeing her exhibit Camera Solo, reading her book Just Kids, getting Horses on vinyl for my birthday from Nathan, and tearing through one of her all-time favourite books, Astragal by Albertine Sarrazin. PATTI SMITH I LOVE YOU.
I wrote some stuff that garnered a bunch of pretty rad attention in March, including 15 Assumptions That Might Be Useful To Make, which was my first post ever to be Freshly Pressed, I wrote a ridiculous alphabet poem for International Women’s Day which was shared by some pretty cool people INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO the Girl Guides of Canada, and I learned what it really, truly means to have a post go viral after writing a post called “I Am Not Your Wife, Sister or Daughter” in response to the Steubenville rape trial. That post, which has had half a million views to date, was shared by super crazy professional publications such as The Believer, Mother Jones and The Atlantic. YOU GUYS THOSE ARE WHERE THE REAL WRITERS ARE. I think March was maybe the first time I’d ever felt like a For Real Writer Lady.
Other March highlights include going to Montreal for my grandmother’s 85th birthday, an event that was notable for three reasons:
1. My grandmother (centre, age 10) celebrated her 85th trip around the sun
2. Theo looked SUPER ADORABLE in a kilt
3. I figured out how to do a sock bun
As the month was waning I got to experience my first ever Write Club, where I watched the super charming Ryan F. Hughes read his work.
I also wrote another post that went viral, this time about a meme that I kept seeing pop up claiming that the holiday Easter is named after the ancient Babylonian goddess Ishtar. SPOILER ALERT, EASTER IS NOT NAMED AFTER ISHTAR YOU GUYS.
At the end of March I went to an awesome reproductive rights party with Audra and Jairus and I GOT TO HOLD THIS TINY KITTEN.
CLEARLY I WAS NOT KIDDING WHEN I SAID MARCH WAS GREAT.
APRIL
In April I started painting again after about ten years of not painting. It’s one of those things that wholly absorbs my attention, which is kind of a nice vacation from the rest of my life. I haven’t painted much since the spring, and putting this post together is a good reminder that I should start again.
We had a lot of family art time in April
Among my masterpieces were this weirdo fox
And this New York skyline for my sister Claire
In late April, I met and had dinner with Sheila Heti and I am not going to be weird and fan-girly about it here but uh it was pretty great. I wore a dress and put flowers in my hair! I made up cue cards with talking points in case I got really awkward and couldn’t think of anything to say, but I shouldn’t have worried because we pretty much just sat and talked for hours. It was, as Sheila said, a good first date.
On April 27th I went to my high school reunion (well, it wasn’t, like, a reunion-reunion, it was the 25th anniversary of the special arts program that I’d participated in, but it was basically a reunion). I’ve been pretty vocal about how un-fun my high school experience was, and I told everyone that I absolutely, definitely WAS NOT GOING, and then of course I went. And I had fun. So I guess that’ll show me.
The good news is that I looked cute:
I wrote some pretty serious stuff in April, including the ways in which Dove manipulates women, Rehtaeh Parsons’ suicide, the Boston Bombing, and the kidnapping and sexual assault of a five year old Indian girl. I also experienced one of the worst hangovers of my adult life and wrote a 13 step guide to hangover survival. So, you know, it was kind of a mixed bag in terms of content. Also I was STILL FUCKING HUNGOVER AT 8:30 PM THE NEXT EVENING. THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS WHEN I WATCH STAR TREK AND DRINK TOO MANY MARTINIS.
MAY
From my journal, dated May 2nd:
I’m sad tonight. The air is warm and smells of new earth and the heavy sweetness of flowers. As I walk home through the Annex I can hear soft laughter and the clink of dishes, comforting post-dinner sounds from all the surrounding houses. The kids are out tonight, smoking pot in the park, playing on the swings, daring each other to go further, higher. Everything is unbearably lovely, much more lovely than it ought to be. I want to hate this world, but I can’t. I can’t love it, either. I’m stuck somewhere in between.
Spring is always the time when I feel like everyone else is out having more fun than I am. Spring is when I worry everyone is doing a better, more interesting job of living than I am. I feel like there’s something stirring inside me, wanting to wake up, but it can’t, or else I won’t let it. Being miserable in the winter isn’t so bad, because everyone else is miserable, too; being miserable in the spring and summer, when everyone else is out having fun is another thing altogether.
I felt better as the month went on, though. Matt’s brother Adam came to visit, and Theo had a blast hanging out with him:
That month we went to Adam’s CD release in Sarnia. You can download his music for free here (although I do encourage you to make a donation).
On May 20th I read my own work at Write Club which was SUPER GREAT AND AMAZING. Also I won my round and am now the owner of a much-coveted tiny plastic trophy. I am really lucky to have a wonderful group of friends, and Audra, Ryan, Lili, Frances and Nathan were all there to clap super hard for me (Jairus would have been there if he hadn’t been sick!). What why am I so lucky.
On May 30th Henry Morgentaler died and the Huffington Post asked me to write a sort of tribute to him. Which, I mean, I find it kinda hilarious that I am the first person they think of when they need someone to write about women’s reproductive rights. LET’S ASK ANNE, SHE’S ALL OVER THAT PRO-CHOICE SHIT. Fun fact: I wrote that post while sitting on a bench at the corner of Yonge and Eglinton right after seeing Star Trek Into Darkness.
HI ZACHARY QUINTO, CALL ME MAYBE.
Other highlights!
We went to Riverdale Farm and I experimented with mint green short-shorts:
Matt and I went to see Fiddler on the Roof at Stratford. I don’t have any pictures of the show, but here’s one my mom took of us before we left Toronto:
My friend Brendon held his annual friendapalooza barbecue, and he and Theo wore matching outfits:
I finally visited Jack Layton’s grave:
I discovered this amazing old picture of Alex Trebek:
I also wrote about the collapse of the garment factory in Bangladesh, why I’m not a huge fan of Mother’s Day, and self-loathing.
JUNE
Here is my June in pictures:
Theo got his nails done by a woman who bears a striking resemblance to Hilary Clinton
I read in parks
With Nathan
We spent a lot of time outdoors
I saw The National and Mikal Cronin at NXNE (not pictured: The National or Mikal Cronin)
I was a hilarious drunk
Annie and Michael visited from Halifax. OH MAN was it ever good to see them
I dug up a bunch of my favourite Matt and Theo pictures for Father’s Day
Ancient Romans invaded the Royal Ontario Museum
I had my first PRINT article published in Shameless Magazine
I made a flower crown for Audra
I stole Nathan’s Jays hat
I stole Nathan’s I Wanna Be Your Dog t-shirt and cut it up into an awesome tank top
Not pictured: I STOLE NATHAN’S WALLET (kidding, kidding)
We visited Kingston and Claire showed Theo the kid-sized train at her work
It was maybe the best day of his life
On June 1st I went to see my friend Drew’s band play and realized that I had no fucking clue what to do when drunk folks start calling people fags.
One of my favourite high school teachers, Roland Muller, died and his death was so much harder on me than I’d imagined it would be.
I wrote 10 Signs that Feminism May Not Be For You for the Outlier Collective, and it wound up being my second post ever to be Freshly Pressed. Yay!
I wrote some advice for Sheila Heti.
I started writing my book, and then wrote about writing my book. META.
So that was the first half of my year. I was originally gonna do this whole thing in one single post, but I’m only halfway through and I’m already at 3,000 words, so I think that I’ll stop here.
Coming up next: 2013 PART TWO: THE RETURN OF 2013.
Thank you for sharing so much – ish good!
Now I’ve got to make a resolution to stop typing while my mouth is full of last year’s chocolate Easter eggs.
Interesting, I’ll shall do this also
Wow, what a great post, and how gorgeous you are! You’ve had an amazing year, ups and down included. It was nice being reminded, too, of all the inspiring posts you’ve written. Looking forward to part two.
Loved every line of your post! The good, the bad and ultimately the thread of hope, grace and fun that runs through it. Looking forward to Part Two.
I loved this glimpse in to your year. Your ability to use writing as both a form of communication with others and a tool for personal healing is admirable and inspirational. I’m looking forward to the kid’s nap time today so I can dig more in to your archives. Cheers to 2014!
Nice post, thanks for sharing 🙂
Thanks for sharing all this with us. Isn’t Patti Smith great! I saw her a few years ago in a fairly small venue. She blew me away. Amazing show. Here’s hoping for a good 2014.
I am glad to hear that 2013 (for the most part) was a good year for you! Mine hasn’t been that great and it has been like this since last year, so I think I might know what you have been or are still going through. Thank you for being an inspiration and for sharing your stories! Wishing you (an early) Happy New Year!
Your words glide off the “paper” like a silk scarf, perfectly describing your life, then slipping away, leaving behind a sensation of such beauty, one can only gasp in awe at what we just read.
I await part 2!
Such an inspirational blog. Beautiful, sad, honest, happy. Thank you for sharing this with us, and I wish you a happy 2014.
Hi Belle – I nominated you for the Sunshine blog award!!! Go to my blog post about the award to see the rules and grab the badge for your sidebar: http://silverliningsproject.wordpress.com/2014/01/03/a-blog-award/
I have really enjoyed reading your posts over the last few months. You write with grace and honesty, which is inspiring – and so easy to identify with. I wish you, Matt and Theo a Happy 2014!
One of my favourite posts (since I’ve been reading/following you) is the Reading List for David Gilmour. I always look forward to reading your words – thanks so much for sharing and for inspiring. Fearless and Joyful 2014!
Oh and … I am inspired to wear a crown of flowers tomorrow. Lovely idea.
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