How I survived in perfect conditions
By Elliot Chan, Opinions Editor
This year I turn 25. I donāt feel a day older than 18āthat is, until I stand beside someone who just graduated from high school. I donāt feel that young either, until I stand next to someone with kids, a spouse, a mortgage, a pension plan, and a will. When I look back at all I have accomplished in my 25 years of life, I realize that my achievements are internal. For a quarter of a century, Iāve been living the Canadian dream and if I could go back in time and tell the six-year-old version of myself what Iāve done, I think he would be proud.
I dreamt big as a child, as most children do. I wanted to be an actor, or at least someone with the opportunity to be creative. Here I amānot an actor, but definitely creating. I feel pretty accomplished in that sense, not because I have achieved anything extraordinary (anyone with an opinion can write for the Other Press), but because Iām persistent and Iām staying true to my values.
Regardless of your age, I hope you are too, and that youāre not looking down on me for doing so.
I think reaching the 25-year mark still aiming for the goals I had as a child is remarkable. After all, think of all the other stuff getting in my way. Yes, the real life shit: money, education, relationships, entry-level jobs, parents, and peers. I see my high school friends, all of whom are turning 25 this year as well, moving out, getting engaged, and being promoted. Theyāre settling down with their lives, and it makes me so happy to see, because another trait I want as a 25-year-old is to be supportiveāthe same way I want my friends to support me and my silly choices.
But does that mean Iām a failure because I donāt have any of those things my friends have? Not at all, because like I said, what I have achieved is inside of me. Itās my own investment.
If the objective of life is to get a mortgage, then sure, Iām failing so far. And by the looks of it, Iāll continue to fail until, well, maybe my mid-life crisis. Yet, I have succeeded in recognizing that I would trade in a small two-bedroom house in exchange for travelling or writing a novel or getting a robust education. I believe when Iām 65, Iām going to be proud that Iāve indulged in life as a 25-year-old instead of taking roots in an existence I have no desire to grow old in.
I glance back on my successes and failures, and dwell a little bit on the failures. Yes, I wanted to be an actor and failed. I wanted to be a film director and failed. I wanted to be a standup comedian and failed. I made money as a dishwasher, a barista, a background performer, a sandwich board advertiser, and a door-to-door canvasser. I look back now and I canāt believe I did thatāthe same way I canāt believe I went bungee jumping. Itās weird what Iām proud of: not my successes, but my failures.I canāt believe they felt like the right decisions at some point. I canāt believe I did those things. But I did and I survived and itās a part of me.
Up until now, my life has been a wrestle with adversity. But man, what an experience thatās been. What a great 25 years Iāve lived. What fantastic people Iāve met along the way. What wonderful privilege I had for being able to chase my dream and for being able to continue doing so. I donāt care what your age is, you should still be able to chase your dream. Or maybe Iām wrong. Maybe Iāll never grow up.