Thursday 25 December 2014

19 things I learnt in my first year of uni // 19th year


1. You meet a lot of temporary people.
     - I once read a quote that said "between the ages of 18 and 22 you meet a lot of temporary people " and over the year found it to be absolutely true. People I thought I would be best friends with forever and stayed up until 4 in the morning talking to became people I could barely exchange glances with in later months. Sometimes there is no reason, it just happens, but it's good to understand that although a lot of people you may want to stay trickle in and out of your life new people will always come along at the same speed. More and more I try to choose to notice those entering my life as opposed to the ones exiting. 

2. Ditch people who make you feel like shit/toxic friends.
    - From some friendships you get nothing. People will constantly criticise you, ignore your problems, desert you when you most need it. No matter how much fun you might SOMETIMES have with these people, ditch them. It can be hard to leave behind people you once had fun with, or thought you'd loved, but basically if you're getting nothing from the friendship (care/attention/support) but negativity then get on and do it! I had one friend this year who, although we had a good laugh, when I removed the humour that I began to feel uncomfortable with the more I learnt about feminism and sexual abuse, I realised I actually strongly disliked the person and that they had no further interest in me beyond the fact that I was a girl they thought they might one day be able to mess around with. Don't give them what they don't give you and then see if the friendship has anything left to stand on- often not. 

3. People change.
    - There are some people you will always deeply care for, but sometimes they just change, so be prepared for it. 

4. Intense friendships are often short.
    - There were two friendships I made this year that I believed would be infinite and remain exciting and joyful for ever and ever and ever. These friendships were intense and hilarious and shocking, and often times exhausting- but when all the excitement of discovering a new person disappeared I realised that there was very little basis for any friendship at all. No similar interests, passions, views.. We often see only positive and have a tendency to ignore the negatives because we are wrapped up in the fast pace of it all. Slow burning friendships, I have learnt, seem to have found more importance in my life in the long run.

4. To cook.
    - Until I was 19 I always worried I'd never be able to feed my family or cook like my dad. But one day I woke up and I just felt like it. You learn eventually because you have to, and it became a thing I really loved.

5. How to be comfortable.
    - When you go away to university you have a whole new space, and a lot less people who know you! This gives you a place to experiment and have fun with the way you look and act and dress- trying out different personalities until you find one (or many that make you feel good, that make you feel like you). Stepping out of your skin can be incredibly liberating when you know no one is watching, and it can enable you to be comfortable being a bit crazy when you are around people you do know.

6. Loving yourself is okay and awesome- take pictures of yourself.
    - 2014 has been dubbed year of the selfie, and you know what? Selfies rule! Keep taking them, when you look absolutely spectacular or completely disgusting until you realise how beautiful you are. You are the image you create. Also, loving yourself. I've learnt that it's the most important thing that you can do, because when you are left alone, you need to know that you are important and wonderful and learn how to ignore the voices that spit hate inside your head. It doesn't make you up yourself, or conceited. You are allowed to think you are amazing, because you are. But, as much as you should learn to love/ value yourself you should also evaluate yourself. Be self deprecating just enough to be motivated in recognising and changing your faults (the genuine ones, not just the things that annoy the people you don't really care about).

7. Money runs out.
    - $200 doesn't just appear in your bank account each week for rent/food/fun, especially if you go out for coffee everyday! Be considerate and conscious of your spending!

8. How to wear lipstick.
    - Wearing lipstick has actually been one of those big things for me this year, fuelled by some good Lorde and pinup girl inspo. As long as it's done PERFECTLY it just makes you feel so good, even when you are alone. Lipstick is like a protective barrier and a projection of your mood.. Bright orange, deep purple, burgundy, or a classic red lip at Christmas. 

9. Bodies change and that feels really scary.
    - Leaving your family and the stability of good healthy everyday meals, and being subjected to the weekly party ritual of uni means that you will almost inevitably gain weight, but this is totally normal, as long as you stay healthy you're in the clear and you have to accept that you can't stay at a pre-pubescent weight forever. 

10. Learn your limits with alcohol.
      - I truly learnt this the hard way, ha. Have fun, just don't keep overdoing it to the point where you hate yourself. 

11. Never be with someone unless you really like them, it's just unfair.
      - I had an experience this year, with a boy, where I decided to date them, because I thought 'Why not! give it a try, I quite like him..???'. Nooooo. No no nope. Doesn't work like that, not for me anyway. I knew that only a little under the surface it didn't feel quite right. But it felt so wrong and uncomfortable. It also left me feeling really bad because I had been really unfair to a lovely person, by letting them have something they really wanted and then taking it away, rather then just not doing it in the first place. 

12. You change.
      - Other people aren't the only ones, you change for good and for bad, listen to your old friends and people who really know you to find out if you're becoming the person you want to be. There is no need to restrict yourself to your past appearances, and the standards others have put in place for you. People will always be trying to put  you in a box, but that does not need to confine you. Just because once upon a time you never used to swear, and now you do all the time, or because once you laughed at a joke about blondes, doesn't mean you have to forever more. Don't let people give you the you're not 'fun anymore' or 'as innocent' bullshit. It's your life, not theirs. 

13. Cut your hair / get tattoos.
      - Although I haven't cut my hair of part of me really really wishes I would. Girls I know have gushed about the confidence and strength that comes along with a chop. I suppose really it is brave, as it casts off a lot of stereotypes. It teaches you a lot about yourself (I am told), and I'm eager to learn. Same goes for dyeing, shaving etc. hair is not permanent so have fun with it. Same goes with tattoos. Getting my little crucifix marks showed me things about permanency and reality that I had not realised. And to battle the constant argument of regret, I like to think that even if you grow to dislike the imagery you once wanted imprinted on your body, then so be it. It remains instead as evidence who who you were; what you DID like and how you HAVE been in the past; all this evidence of having lived life.

14. Shame/pain/loneliness/sadness happens.
      - No matter how good your life is, you can't avoid human emotion, and that's okay. 

15. Understanding it will pass and how much that knowledge helps. 
      - When I was at my lowest this year, this was the one thing that really kept me going. I remembered when I had been diagnosed with my illness a few years ago and I felt so terrible and empty all the time, but then I thought 'hang on, since then I've had the most amazing crazy happy life'. I know that life gets better, it always does, and it always works out given time. Be patient and wait for happiness to come. 

16. How to be alone.
      - You spend a lot of time with yourself when you are at university- in my case because everyone studied, or went home, or had work, or got too tired. This can be uncomfortable at first, but the nicest thing that came from this was learning to enjoy my own company. Singing, reading, writing, playing guitar, painting, listening to music, praying, SLEEPING. Even talking to myself out loud. The more you educate yourself about the world, and learn things about yourself, the more you like being just with you. Solitude gives you peace, a space to think, move the way you want to, and be a weirdo without surveillance. 

17. Girls are not your competition.
      - This is probably one of THE BIGGEST things this year has taught me- a combination of being around new people with different ideals, out of high school, and discovering more about what it really means to be a feminist- but there is no need to feel like you are competing with other girls. I used to feel like this a lot, and to deal with this I found small ways to judge and tear people down for ridiculous things because I was the alpha-female and I had to be superior. But then I figured, girls get enough hatred and judgement from the world as it is, and I didn't want to be a part of bringing down my own girls (and this extends to all people! Just stop being so negative all the time.) The more I encountered negative people who constantly bitched and moaned and mocked others I realised how gross it sounded, and in fact was, when I did it. Since having my eyes opened to this new way of living I have felt happier; purer even. Stick together, because loving girls is the best thing you can do for yourself and for them. And in a world without competition, everyone wins. 

18. Read!
      - Reading teaches you so much important stuff, and can inspires you to explore parts of yourself.

19. Trust god and surround yourself with others who do too.
      - This one can be a challenge, but boy does it pay off. Everything always seems to work out, or at least I can see the good in it, when I put my faith in god. Being around friends at church and uni and just in life in general who were Christians was SO important to me this year! It is so encouraging to have like-minded people around you, when you can learn and grow together. I know it's made my life happier, because it's made me someone I want to be.

x

Tuesday 23 December 2014

GOOD SICK DAY

It's christmas eve 2014 and I've got the flu buuut also got this beautiful package of tees and ended up having a lovely day in bed! Whilst planning a lot of groovy food things from Jamie Olivers 15 minute meals, and had a little indulgence and listened to this playlist over and over.. http://open.spotify.com/user/rachellydiab/playlist/3N9mVlNY9HSvVe504vanCF (hopefully this pays in the future so you can remember all these beautiful tunes!)


light 19th dec. 2014

A few shaky snaps trying to capture the beautiful pink sunset tonight...










Wednesday 10 December 2014

non existant film.

I saw this idea in a Rookie Mag, to create screenshots and subtitles for films that don't exist, and to photograph them. I've used some of the snaps I posted in the previous post.





Tuesday 9 December 2014

Lily and I.

Queen of the forest. This was such a beautiful day.






 This last one was truly spontaneous. Meant to be a cute pic taken by lily, but instead she captured the flash of absolute fear in my eyes as my friend Ollie started whacking down pine cones with a large a branch. Terrifying.

x

Some oldies.

A few dear pictures of life in auckland that never went anywhere... 

All by me/sis/friends. 

x

A little change.

I am fully aware that no one reads this, and that's okay. I feel like everyone needs a little space and this is mine- sometimes I don't feel like writing in my journal or putting my self out there to people who I know because it can be a little frightening.

So I'm gonna freshen this up, It's a new start, for me, trying to clean my life up a bit. Maybe I'll forget this and never write here or document anything, but I want a place where I can keep my photo's, my writing, a way of documenting my life, keeping me on track spiritually and health wise.
We spend our entire lives making goals and resolutions but rarely do we commit and keep to them. I'm in a good place at the moment, and though I am aware that change does not come straight away, I want to pursue change and happiness. Like actual happiness, not just what it looks like to other people.

I'm often conflicted by the prospect of acceptance/adaption- when you love something how can it be wrong for you, do you alter the way you are living or accept that this was how you are made? I don't know. But I do know how wildly therapeutic it is to write it out.

So here's to new beginnings.


I believe your promises 
are yes and amen
x

-edge kingsland 

Wednesday 18 June 2014

MIST.

I feel a little like a misty void. No longer sure where my walls are and what defines me as me, the things I won't and the things I will. Forgive me for being a bit vague and pretentious, but in winter when darkness falls at 5:30 and the temperature is rarely above 10 degrees, my mind seems to lose whatever it is that normally holds it together. There are times in life I suppose when you are suffering from neither the devastation of a great low or the excitement of a great high, and in my experience I have found these times to be the most difficult. 

The problem is that these mid-points stop me thinking like a normal (and hopefully passionate) person. They remove my physical motivation and render me senseless in front of a screen, watching endless series of archetypal nonsense in 22 episode form. I have found myself in the same unwashed jumper and cross legged position at around 4 o'clock everyday this week and begun wondering what I am doing with my life. Everyday wasted is.. Well, a day wasted. My thoughts and intentions, like the days themselves seem clouded, so, what to do about all this? I could lie to myself and promise to propel my life forward and spend each day drawing, travelling, singing and reading, living in the fashion of eat pray love. But in truth I know what I will do: nothing. 

Inspirational stuff, right? But unfortunately for anyone looking for enlightenment, that's it. These periods in life come and they go, so let it be (if you are thinking right now that i would be the worlds worst life coach, it's okay, i agree). With this newly found cavalier attitude in mind I find myself adapting my aims in life. For now these aims include consuming my weight in butter and watching at least 20+ hours of mindless television before something in me stirs, and I am reassured by my knowledge that this will pass, soon the fog will lift and so continues life's harrowing adventures. 

VoilĂ .

Thursday 12 June 2014

i-phone, i-know

It is truly difficult to escape the constant clicking of iPhone cameras and the insatiable need to publish each minute detail of life- or, perhaps a more refined take, revealing only snippets that we aim to tantalise our peers with and make our lives seem even more intriguing.

It is so easy to buy into the prospect of ourselves as 'celebrity' when our own friends become our followers and we worship images of each others carefully arranged thighs and falsely captured smirks (such selfies being intricately arranged in the privacy of a well lit bedroom). But the more I fall into these snap-happy habits myself, the more uncomfortable I become, wrapped in the social media web of perfection and deception. Too fearful of missing out on some sordid scandal or arrangements made by friends if I abandon my profiles, but also frightful of my own attachment to them. My wish is to simplify, yet this is difficult to do beyond a certain social point. I mean, sure, if everyone did it I'd be fine! If no one had facebook of instagram or snapchat then we could really get on with enjoying our lives, instead of worrying about who else is watching them. but to be the only one who is disconnected? This, my friend, poses far more of a challenge.

To live in a world where 'did you see that picture of (insert name here) on facebook last night?' was not the main topic of scintillating conversation would be bliss! Removing oneself from this world however, is harder than it seems.  It is easy to justify keeping things as they are and maintaining our online lives as stopping something in motion takes far more effort (cheers Newton! Or Einstein, or someone..?) than we are often willing to fathom. So where to start? Culling my friends to only those I truly care about and erasing all traces of my online activity?.. Ah, but here we hit another difficulty. Do we choose not to care entirely and let unflattering image after unflattering image of ourselves be splayed across a screen, or do we choose a select few pictures, perhaps 4 or 5, to be available to the prying eyes of those investigating our namesake online. Not caring is cool (oh how I wish I could do so), mystery is sexy (but takes so much effort), and striking a balance between the two seems an almost impossible task! A suggestion in the art of neither caring nor spending ours culling: Just. Get. Rid. Of. It. All. One day soon, I plan to be brave enough.

To jump back on my original *everyone takes a ridiculous amount of pictures of everything* train of thought: I have always had an obsession with taking pictures, and since I first wrapped my hand around a camera have been documenting everything I possibly could. This is no bad thing, but I have decided for my own sake, with a little encouragement from my dad, to reserve my lens for art only. His gem of advice was this- think of your camera as an old film camera, where every shot was dutifully thought out and executed due to there great expense. If I only had one photo to take a month would I waste it only my breakfast? Perhaps not. save those precious snaps for beautiful moments you really want to remember, and keep in mind that not everyone needs, nor wants, to see them.

We live in a fast paced world where we are obsessed with capturing every moment of life on our camera or iPhone before it passes us by. Now is the time to exist as a mystery to others and to give our selves a chance to truly experience the things we have become accustomed to photographing.

Shut of the computer/leave the phone at home/put down the camera and have a bloody good time!

If you are not very careful
Your possessions will possess you
TV taught me how to feel
Now real life has no appeal

-
Marina and the Diamonds, Oh No.
-Rachel
Image: Photographed by Charlie Engman for Vogue | Styled by Jorden Bickham

Wednesday 7 May 2014

Floating and Drowning


A little while ago I took some images for a school project that I thought I might share:


"So lay me down
Let the only sound
Be the over flow
Pockets full of stones"


- Florence and the machine

Photography: Rachel Barker
Model: Jess 

A little intro...

So here we are.

It's probably a good idea to do a little intro before we begin to completely divulge  every thought and feeling, to give you an idea of what to expect on this blog. This is our baby right now, our diary, a way of life, and our personal project for the year. So expect a little bit of everything: philosophy, bad fashion, feminism, beauty, whining and wondering about this great big thing we call the world!

Together we dream of dropping out of uni (big aspirations, yay!), going to art college and travelling the world in a van with a lot of paint and people who never shower. But for now we are living together in the great city of Auckland, NZ and studying... So hopefully this blog will stop us from going completely insane.

Just to give you a little picture of us:

Rachel is a wild redheaded brit who paints watercolours, writes poetry, takes pictures, pretends to read intelligent books on feminism and dreams of living in a Sofia Coppola film. And Phoebe, a short-sighted lipstick wearing queen, who enjoys the odd tequila shot on a saturday night, but is always ready for church on a sunday, and dreams of a big white wedding.

Pls enjoy. Peace out and God bless.

P.s Expect quotes. Lot's of quotes.