buoy·ant
- Ryan Schwaar
- Oct 10, 2021
- 2 min read
Updated: Oct 31, 2021
There are a few words that I seek to describe me holistically: Excellent, Uplifting, Needed, and Buoyant.
On being excellent, I want to be good at all I do. I crave affirmation like coffee, and I crave achievement like dark chocolate peanut butter cups.
On being uplifting, I want to be a light in people's lives. I want to repeatedly tell them how beautiful and adorable they are, how much their opinions and feelings matter, and how confident I am in their aptitudes.
On being needed, I pine after a consistent feeling of being an indispensable piece of others' lives, a cherished aide that they both enjoy and require on a regular basis.
On being buoyant. I think this may be the culmination of my target traits, the pumpkin espresso bundt cake that melds together the aforementioned ingredients into a dish I proudly serve to those around me.
I write this post, not because I know what buoyancy really means, but because I want to find out. M-W says, "cheerful, gay" - honestly, done.
Another source bullet-points the following as "several ways to enhance your personality" under the heading of Ways to Build a Buoyant Personality (first of all, woof. it all feels insultingly simplistic, like a Weight Watchers pamphlet or books on dating):
Create happiness within yourself
Stretch yourself to reach your goals
Find purpose in your life
Be enthusiastic about your life and the lives of others
Treat yourself like your own best friend - with kindness and caring
Support yourself when you embark upon new and difficult tasks or situations
Do things that make you feel special
Is it just me, or did we just duck into a Hobby Lobby in West Michigan in mid-November, smiling softly and clutching Starbucks in our mitted hands?
Allow me to craft a new list of what the concept means to me:
Compliment friends & strangers without hesitation
Create goals but not expectations
Take criticism as insight - choose to never be offended
Tell people how you feel & honor their response
Use your spare time to create things
Try to be the same person in every setting
Choose to care about the work you do - do it well
Trust that people aren't speaking in code - we're all adults here
The latter is a mantra of my friend Rachel's and mine. We choose to counter our disposition towards overthinking & to believe that what people say is what they mean. And if it is not, it's on them to better articulate their intentions. It is not our job to dig layers deep into every interaction, seeking alternate meaning in someone's response time or tone. This does not mean living life in the shallows, but rather avoiding the unconfirmable and exhausting process of analyzing others' subliminal messaging. We aim to stay afloat, bearing the tide confidently with our head above the surface, like a buoy setting the boundary around the island on which we live, where only love is allowed.
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