2017 is my 40th
year, in this body, on this journey.
It’s a big deal. Right?
Quite frankly I can’t decide
how I feel about it. It seems I should
be in the mood to celebrate. Or perhaps
I should be depressed. Queue the mid-life crisis?
While I feel indifferent
about it I also realize deep down somewhere it is a milestone worth
acknowledging. I’ve given some
considerable thought about how to tip my hat to the first 40 years of my
journey and have decided to launch a personal blog to document my 40th
year. This is that blog.
I wasn’t expecting what would
come up for me when I started thinking about doing this. Suddenly I was concerned, would anyone read
it? Why did I care so much if they
did? What was the reason behind the
blog? Did I need a reason at all?
Ultimately I figured I was
over thinking it and just needed to put something together and make it mostly a
cathartic exercise for myself. Though I
needed a perspective to write from or I was worried it might end up being a
jumbled bunch of entries. I do like some
structure in my life and so I couldn’t help myself. My plan is to write from three different
perspectives. One perspective will be a
theme or story from my past. The other
will be observations in the present along this journey in 2017. And the third will be Q and A with myself
about the future. Me at 40 asking the
older wiser me of the future questions.
Stay with me for a second on
the last one. I believe in a deep-seated
wisdom within us to answer our own questions.
The challenge is accessing it often when we need it the most during a
busy day, a crisis event, a stressful situation, a difficult decision. We must
be purposeful about building the muscle to access it. This requires stillness during chaos, peace
in the middle of crisis, hope in the face of difficulty, and so forth. So this year I’m going to practice building
access to my own inner guidance.
Who knows what 2017 has in
store for me. I am however sure there
will be big challenges to face, huge opportunities to realize, and about
everything else in between. I do my best
to live big and bold and push the envelope and I will do my best here to be
transparent and authentic in that journey.
I know I can sometimes be “managed” in my vulnerability. This is a professional skill I’ve learned,
though it also keeps me at a distance from people. I’m going to work on lessening that outer
layer this year in this format. I’m
giving myself permission to be more raw and vulnerable. Frankly even saying this makes me uncomfortable. I guess that’s the point, right?
For those who wish to know
more about me, continue reading….
I figured I should include a
narrative of who I am and how I got here for those who don’t know me and
somehow find their way to this blog.
The current state of affairs
here at the close of 2016 is I live in Washington, DC with my husband
Christian. We met in 2004. I hired him.
That’s a fun story perhaps I’ll have a chance to weave in at some
point. We live in what I would consider
a very nice house in NW Washington DC.
We’ve been there for 3 years. It’s
not our dream house, though it is our dream yard complete with a pool and
outdoor fireplace. We have no kids though
we do have a cranky 16yr old cat, Ricki Green.
Most of my days are spent
growing and running Keller Williams Capital Properties, a network of 7 real
estate offices in the DC Metro Area. I
co-founded the organization with my business partner Bo Menkiti back in
2006. I have my hands in a bunch of
other things including development projects throughout DC and Maryland through
the Menkiti Group, real estate sales through MG Residential, mortgage, title,
insurance, home staging (Christian’s business), and a bed and breakfast in
Maryland. That’s the bulk of it. I’ve been in the real estate business since
2001.
I work a lot. When I’m not we
are traveling to as many international destinations as possible, 2-4 per
year. In 2016 we visited Turkey, Greece,
Spain, and Mexico. I have a musical
background and from time to time I break out on our Baldwin grand in the living
room, or pull a vocal concert together for my friends and family.
Let’s see, what else should
you know… A few years ago, I started
getting into meditation and practice it frequently. I can honestly say I love my life. The list of things working well is long,
including my professional growth. My
relationship. My family connection. I’m working on and not satisfied with my
financial growth, my physical goals, and my spiritual connection.
I’m very skilled with people
generally, and am a particularly good presenter and facilitator and growing in
my success as a business man and leader.
When the spotlight is on me, about me it’s uncomfortable. I’d rather talk about you.
I like to be challenged and
am surrounded by a lot of strong professional relationships. I don’t have too many personal relationships
that aren’t connected to my professional capacity. I wish I did, and haven’t quite figured that
out yet.
I was born in Rock Springs,
Wyoming and lived there the first 12 years of my life. I feel almost no connection to Rock Springs
other than it being my birth place and I’m not sure that connection feels very
strong either. My extended family lives
in SW Wyoming so I go back about once a year to visit and always feel
incredibly out of place. Probably about
as out of place as they would feel in Washington DC. This does not bother me, and I don’t feel any
need to reconcile any of this.
At 12 we moved to Ames Iowa
so my Dad could pursue his PhD. 2 years
later we were off to Oregon for a year, and then to Des Moines Iowa where I
attended high school. My perspective is
informed in part by my connection to the culture and people of both Wyoming and
Iowa. Other important facts: I grew up Mormon, my parents are good and
generous people who raised me well, and I have 3 younger sisters.
I graduated high school in
1995 and immediately went on the road with Up With People, an international
musical organization that uses music as a vehicle for cultural exchange. I traveled abroad with that group for one
year, came back to Iowa for a couple years and attended the Des Moines Area
Community College. I was very bored with
academics and wanted to get going with my life and so I went back to Up With
People for another year. In 1999 I moved
to Baltimore to be with a man. This was
shocking both because my first real relationship was with a man, AND he lived
in Baltimore.
I had intended to go back to
school on the east coast but found myself in a sales job and did well. By 2000 I had moved to Washington DC (sans
boyfriend) and shortly thereafter found my way to real estate.
It wasn’t all a charmed
life. Coming out as a gay man in a Mormon
household with family in Wyoming and Iowa was quite difficult. I see now being different and not
understanding it as a child and teenage affected me deeply. For many years, I was being who I thought I
was supposed to be, to please my parents and society. I didn’t start to explore my own authentic
self until well into my 20s.
Then there was the time I was
nearly driven into personal bankruptcy due to challenging business decisions
around 2009.
There are other scars of
personal betrayal, lost opportunities, deep hurts and some regrets. An appropriate amount for 40 years in I
suppose.
So there you go, a little
about me. Now on to the journey of being
40. Let’s see what all the fuss is
about.
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