Life as an Extreme Sport

when other people say it better

Intensity, that’s what I miss. I used to be driven by an inner sense of intensity, a purposefulness that I could draw on in times of need, that would spur me into doing what needed to be done. Now I don’t feel it and I don’t know how to draw on it. It has to be inside, somewhere. I have to still be able to pull out my passion, right? I almost feel like I’ve had a lobotomy, and so nothing stirs me to the depths of feeling I used to feel. I have to believe it’s still in there somewhere.

I don’t remember where I read this, but it so certainly and strongly rings true.

rooms

Do you ever stop and think about how your mind is organized? I do, I aways have – it fascinates me, the way we access memory and thought and storage, and even talk about it. Tonight I’ve been thinking about how my online/mental interactions with friends, via IM and Facebook and LiveJournal and email is structured. My social world is structured like a large house and surrounding grounds; people come and go all the time based on who I’m talking to. Right now the game room has a couple of people hanging out, and I wander through to get my ass handed to me once in a while. There are a few people in the kitchen; one’s baking birthday cakes, the other is working on an art project. Out back there are some goths under the gazebo (Goths Under Gazebos! new band name!), having tea and looking like they just stepped out of Victoriana. I’m in the living room, on the couch, reading a virtue ethics book and talking about communications issues, leaning against a friend working on Plato stuff. A few other people are sitting around working on papers or projects, a girl is watching AI but threatening to boycott over the loss of Michael Oz; people are wandering in and out as they pop up on the various communications systems.

It’s interesting; I can see it all in my mind, and the impression it leaves me with is definitely that of hanging out with friends, relaxing, having companionship even if not directly in front of me.

About the only truly sad thing about it is that a good number of the people I’ve constructed are within 15-30 minutes, and you do have to wonder about the focus on the digital when the meatspace is so close and possible.

waffles

Life is hard, and a lot of it is not about the mistakes you make, but the lessons you learn after – and how you react. Do you integrate and learn and modify, or do you stay in a rut? It’s tempting to stay in ruts – they’re worn out and comfortable and familiar. But you feel better if you learn and modify and grow. No one ever likes to be stagnant.

I’ve never been shy about what drives my pull, sometimes, to drop everything and turn course, to go into forensics, do something Extremely Stupid like join the FBI. It’s not really the work, it’s the depictions of camaraderie. It’s why the military always appealed, even though oh my god, can you imagine me in the military, or anyone trying to give me orders? Yeah – it just doesn’t end well in your mind, does it? But camaraderie. The group of people that gets together once a week around a table to have dinner. That calls each other up randomly to invite out, that talks late into the night about fears and dreams and hopes. Who shoulder the weight of each others burdens, because sharing makes the load lighter.

I have a habit of getting into load bearing situations, though, where I take and take, but rarely give. I loved so much of CHID because it was the first place I had found since probably my early (early) teens where everyone gave and took with equal free abandon, and I was so happy there. Paired with the few close friends I had made in the goth community, and I was just genuinely happy – I was beyond happy, really. I was eudaimonic, I was flourishing.

No one would accuse me of flourishing much these past two years. I might have started to, but then Mom got sick, and it slowly dawned on me that I was repeating my mistake/inclination to give without receipt in a situation I originally thought so vital to flourishing. I’ve really floundered about, and badly. (Where are the greek speaking geeks when I need them – what’s the opposite of eudaimonic?)

And now I’m in a situation where there’s a small group of active and social and happy people who seem to like me, and I so very much like them. We all seem to want the same thing – the people to hang out with casually, the closeness, that your family is who you make feeling of dinner and movies and casual familiarity; friendship and belonging. It’s been fun, it’s been exhilarating. And overwhelming and scary and hard to trust, hard to believe I might have found something that it always seems like other people but never me get to have. So I’m afraid I’m going to self destruct, shoot myself in the foot, test too had and continuously, push away.

I don’t know how to work through the caution without singularly giving in to abandon. Or, as a friend so eloquently stole from Nietzsche, I don’t know how to give a semblance of organization to the chaos of my passions – but I really ought to go about figuring it out. Before I self destruct. Again. And then have the added hell of knowing I was so close to reaching out and touching what I so very much want, but through my own actions was unable to receive.

Six Months

There is an emptiness inside me – a void that will never be filled. No one in your life will ever love you as your mother does. There is no love as pure, unconditional, and strong as a mother’s love. And I will never be loved that way again.
from Motherless Daughters: The Legacy of Loss by Hope Edelman

wait, I thought it was Tuesday?

Yep. It’s been a day, complete with random power outages and a really pissed off cat. (Can’t wait to see what he pees on now that the house is picked up – I expect something truly creative from the little furbeast.)

I had a test due today in epistemology, and I knew from the getgo I was basically going to get to school, say hello to some folks, turn in my test, and maybe sit in class 20 minutes before heading home to collect Lunar and then head out to the vet. He’s had a raw patch on his left ankle that we’ve been fighting to keep clean an uninfected for months now, and a combination of it getting worse once again and my general lack of patience for the merry-go-round we’ve been on led me to scheduling the appointment. Problem is, with the particular academic schedule I have this semester, and when my vet likes to do this kind of mild sedation procedure, I was going to have to miss one of my classes. I picked this one before knowing the test would be due, largely because I had missed a day in my other class to head off to NUBC.

Right. All logical.

Until I wake in an utter blink panic – my alarm hadn’t gone off! My alarm was flashing something like 06:18 over and over (until, of course, it turned to 06:19 – the flashing stayed persistent, though), and it was late. Like, hurry and my ass’d end up at the vet on time late.

Thing is, between my house guests and NUBC this past week, plus a few other things, the insomnia has been strong – and the lack of alarm clock apparently assured my body it was time to just sleep until caught up. Fuck.

Collect cat. Go to vet. Wait, wait, then wait longer as an emergency visit is rushed through, wait some more. Finally have cat returned, only to wait in a bit of traffic to get home. Get home, watch cat come further out of being stoned and get madder, write professor regarding the tragicomedy of my life,…

Sounds like a Monday, doesn’t it?

Here, have a picture of a pissed and drugged cat: