It’s Not Going To Turn Out The Way You Thought

It will happen later. His best friend will ask you out instead. You’ll be kissed in the movies instead of on a beach. You’ll end up going to a different school because the one you thought you’d get into didn’t work out.
She’ll move away. Someone else will move in next door. She’ll be a little weird at first, a little more shy, but ultimately really good at riding bikes and playing dolls.
That part you always wanted will go to that other girl instead. And you’ll rock it out in the chorus like your life depended on it. Because on some level it does.
The road you were going to take will be flooded and closed. The inn where you were going to stay will be under renovations. He’ll be taller than you thought. And have a funny accent. But will be a good kisser nonetheless.
You’ll get a flat tire on the way to that crucial meeting and end up peeing your pants laughing with the gas station attendant over a copy of Us Magazine. And someone else will fill in for you because they always do.
You won’t get that dream job like you thought you would. It will go to someone else with far less creative drive and vision than you. Someone far better suited for a cubicle than you.
You’ll be put in groups with people who put your panties in a wrinkle. You’ll sit next to someone on the plane who you’d never talk to except that they won’t shut up … and you’ll end up staying in touch for years and taking family vacations together.
Five years after you graduate, life won’t look anything like you would have imagined. You’ll be single when you thought you’d be married. You’ll have kids when you thought you’d be in the Peace Corps. That trip to Laos will get delayed because you’ve got to stay home and take care of your grandmother. Laos will be there. You’re grandmother won’t always.
He’ll move overseas and oddly the Atlantic Ocean between you will bring you closer than you ever dreamed possible. You won’t get engaged, married, or pregnant when you thought. You’ll miss the bus/train/plane/ferry that you thought you just HAD to be on.
You’ll fall off the turnip truck. You’ll jump on a different bandwagon than you intended. You’ll get fired when you thought you ought to be getting hired.
You’ll realize you forgot the outfit you had planned to wear and that the shoes are all wrong now that you have a full-length mirror to see the whole outfit. Your shirt will be wrinkled and you’ll spill red wine on your white jeans.
Your dog will eat your five-year plan. You’ll drop your Blackberry in the toilet (at least once). Your computer will crash, and you’ll delete the first draft of your magnum opus. You’ll accidentally delete your hard drive and end up with a clean slate.
You’ll show up late to the date with the guy you were sure was going to fit into your husband suit and realize he’s less than graceful under stress and not so flexible (better to know now than later).
When you thought you’d be baking pies and living behind your very own white picket fence you’ll find yourself doing something so entirely different you couldn’t have even imagined it a year before. There will be moments when you’ll look around and not even recognize your own life … in a good way.
You’ll take a wrong turn and end up in an entirely different city than you intended. You’ll dial the wrong number and end up in love with an entirely different person than you intended.
You’ll flunk out and end up taking five years instead of four to graduate. You’ll have your heart broken when you were sure you were with the one and then meet the other one a month later. You’ll move to a new city to start a new business with those perfect new business partners and then it will all go to shit. And you’ll move across the country again only to realize that that’s where you belonged the whole time.
You’ll drive as far away from home as possible thinking that it will make you feel free. Then you’ll get homesick and drive back four months later because you suddenly feel trapped.
You’ll imagine the open road, country music playing loud, you singing at the top of your lungs and flirting with a new man in every town. And then you’ll invite someone to come with you on a whim and realize driving around the country by yourself was a terrible idea anyway … and that it’s way more fun when you’re traveling with someone you love.
You won’t do it at the right time.
You’ll be late.
You’ll be early.
You’ll get re-routed.
You’ll get delayed.
You’ll change your mind.
You’ll change your heart.
It’s not going to turn out the way you thought it would.
It will be better.
Earlier this year Kate traveled 19,000 miles by car and 11,000 miles by plane (plus 300 miles by boat) on her Freedom Tour. Follow her adventures today as she embarks on The Freedom Tour 2.0 by visiting: katenorthrup.com.
Photo credit: jeco
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24 Comments
Oh, Kate sounds interesting!! Will have to check out her blog!
Yea, Kate! Here’s to living life on the edge…xoxo
That’s what I love about CSL, you get to meet new and exciting people. I just added Kate and Bindu to my favorites. Thanks Kris.
I LOVE this post!!! I have so often been stuck by what was “supposed” to be or what “should have” happened and this is a brilliant reminder that life doesn’t work that way…and that’s a beautiful thing!
I just have to say that this is my favorite post on Crazy Sexy Life to date! I couldn’t agree with the sentiment more as I find it rings so true in my own life. Thank you for writing this, Kate. I loved it!
What a wonderful post — so inspiring — especially for a Monday morning! Thanks for sharing.
Love Love Love it!
So true :)
This is simply … true. Which makes it wonderful.
This is one of my favorite blogs of all times. And i’m one proud Mama!
So beautiful, thank you. Scary, inspiring, true and lovely.
You always know what to say at the right moment….The very second it seems my day/week/month/year has gone crap I read this and it all makes it seem ok- so for that- I thank you, endlessly.
Loved that!
“You’ll have kids when you thought you’d be in the Peace Corps.”
lololololololololololololololol. yes. sigh.
:)
jen
I loved this Kate. I heard something a few months ago that took about a week to resonate with me.
It is kind of the synopsis to your beautiful blog. Here it is: “The detour IS the road” !!!!
This post made me so happy. Things haven’t exactly worked out the way I’ve planned these last couple years, but they’ve been better because of it.
That’s what I needed to read RIGHT NOW!!! Thanks!
I LOVE this!!.. and it is SOOO TRUE.. and resonated with what I am going through this minute in my life.. and you know what… the UNKNOWN and unexpected and planned for IS a gift in so many ways.
Thank you, thank you, thank you. I’ve been having a crappy week feeling like I’m just spinning in circles instead of moving forward. Your post is helping me put perspective on what’s been happening. And the bit about Laos made me smile – went there on my honeymoon with the man I told people for over a year was “nothing serious”, and now he’s the center of my world. :)
Maybe I’m just having an emotional day, but I’m am welled up with tears at work reading this. This is SO what I needed to hear. Thank you so much for sharing and for giving me some more hope. I’ve realized lately that the life I have is NOT the one I thought I’d have, and yet 2 weeks ago it changed again and I had to realize it again. The only constant in life is change. And thats a hard bite to swallow… Thank you for sharing. It awakened feelings deep in my core that I’ve been hiding for months.
You are leading that pleasure revolution and living life up as it is served! Go you! Expect the unexpected and live the Truth of the present moment
beauty.
You’ll contract HIV. But it won’t turn into full blown AIDS.
“Five years after you graduate, life won’t look anything like you would have imagined. You’ll be single when you thought you’d be married…”
I can so relate with this. I just just recently accepted the end of a long 7 years relationship with the man that I thought was my soulmate, the man of my life, the future father of my kids, my future husband, my best friend, confident, lover, etc…and nope, it’s not it. It did not happen the way I thought it would. It took me one long month to finally accept the break up (to let go of him, of us as an entity), to finally accept that he had changed and wanted out (that there was no compromises and bending that could change that), to finally accept that I am single now, and all the plans I thought would happen will not happen…at least not like I thought they would ;)
This post gave me even more strength and confidence in knowing that even though life doesn’t always happen the way you planned it (and gives you a lot of pain to deal with because of it), it is important to always stay positive and trust that the best is still ahead of you no matter what.
Thanks Kate for this wonderful post. I’ll come back to it when I feel scared or down :)







Kate,
Loved this post! How very true it is. Good luck on your new adventure!
August 15, 2011