Wednesday, January 26, 2022

[945] Jerkin' The 'Ol Hate Boner

I don’t understand “lazy” hatred. I don’t understand hating something just because you can. Put another way, the “reason” I didn’t like Miley Cyrus or Nickleback had nothing to do with how well I knew the words to Wrecking Ball or Photograph. I did it because I was young, and that was a “cool” cliché thing to do. Am I fan of “I’m like a cool rebel” pissing in the street or albums where I can’t really tell the difference between songs? Not particularly, but now at least we’re talking about slivers of what might be understood about a given artist.

Aren’t there so many things worth hating that you could be just as lazy about? Can’t you like hate fascism before you tell me what Trump did for Black colleges? Then, at least before we pretend you’re going straight to Politifact after saying so, we’ve at least picked an appropriately shared and coherent frame from which to discuss the nature of influence and power.
 
Can’t you just hate disease? My god, how quick we could have gotten through the pandemic if people just hated being sick! You want to pretend you’re not living among modern day miracles of technology and knowledge before you just lazily hate the idea of being sick? I hate being sick so much I chug Nyquil and sleep until I’m done coughing! You think I won’t get as many shots as I need to avoid losing lung capacity altogether?
 
Can’t you just hate evil? Can’t you hate it when the evilest thoughts creep into your mind about what you might do to yourself or other people? Can’t you hate that you have practically no control over what your mind is going to make you think in any given moment? Can’t the atrocity that is your potential, or wasted potential, and the evil it lends itself to be worth a million memes?
 
Or pick any major atrocity happening exactly right now that needs no “both sides” argument. Chinese internment camps spring to mind. Mandatory minimum sentencing. The environmental disregard of basically any major company. How do all of those slip between your fingers before Jordan Peterson?
 
How do you justify the energy, the shares, the likes, the smirks and “lols” for a position weaved together via meme? Is that not indication enough you might be a touch batshit? Like, you know, not like some difficult “know” like just what percentage of gay you might be. You know explicitly if you’ve read someone’s book or watched their lectures. And when you haven’t, that’s what will prompt you to chime in? You saw the comic? You have meme groups dedicated to your hatred?
 
This shit isn’t even hard, and you’re like getting worse at it as you get older. Here’s a few clues you have no idea what you’re talking about:
 
1. You’re completely unwilling or unable to quote from the people/thing/example you’re bitching about.
 
2. Your entire position rests on personal experience, support from a raucous peanut gallery, and memes.
 
3. You are perfectly unable to check the sources of your information, dare you share an article or two, against any actual fact-checking publication or publication that detracts.
 
We don’t need to go on all day, because most people are “arguing” via meme spam, silence, and unfriending well before we discover that mental health problems are also a growing concern as we age.
My theory, people hate themselves. They hate themselves so much, they do this hate performance so their lived reality more aligns with their basest conception of who they believe themselves to be.
 
They’re taken out of context all the time! So fuck everyone else, they don’t deserve a fair shake. Their good ideas are ignored or resented. Time to take idiot-proof truisms and turn them into “You’re a Nazi!” You have to obliterate meaning and respectable conversation when you don’t mean anything to yourself or respect what it means to be alive. You’ll teach your kids to do the same, passing trauma and lazy abusive cliches. It’s the circular-logic of life.
 
I’m particularly sensitive to this notion of hating for no reason because I think it underpins so much of the bullshit I catch or “friendships” I never really had. You know what I haven’t liked or “hated” about the people in my life? Stealing from me. Leaving me to clean up after them. Lying to me. You know, things, that happened, or cost me something or measure of distress that, in theory, weren’t just about their “personality.” I wasn’t made “uncomfortable” by exes or things people said. I couldn’t handle getting screamed at for no reason or the consequences of self-harm. You know, SHIT THAT ACTUALLY HAPPENED.
 
It’s never seemed to matter to onlookers my intent, version of events, or attempts to reconcile. I’m just the enemy. I hate that, have always hated that, and will continue to. I don’t think anyone deserves to be treated like that, not Nickleback, not the prisoners I’m going to be counseling regarding their addiction, and not you, wound up in whatever hateful narrative that grants you license to do it others. It’s a sickness, both in heart and head. I know my mom is sick like that. Do I hate her more than I respect what I’ve learned about that illness? Have I shared a million memes about my childhood? Like, I read a fuck of psychology and philosophy books, and keep my distance after delineating what about her illness I don’t want infecting me.
 
You owe it to yourself to carry on like more than a lazy fucking cunt and idiot. And if you don’t, I’ll be the first to recognize and point out how bad you're hiding what you're really saying under that cough.

Sunday, January 16, 2022

[944] Puurrrson

I find my cats remarkably annoying. It’s remarkable because I’ve had pets a good portion of my life, and only ever felt compelled to describe them as annoying now. My cats growing up were in their own world and de-clawed. My dogs were intelligent and chill. It might have been annoying to clean up dog poop or cat puke, but those weren’t things you could blame them for. Brushing isn’t super fun, necessarily, but petting a soft animal tends to be.

Pets are all about a qualitative verse quantitative discernment. The joy, companionship, compliments, or sense of ownership and responsibility tend to massively outweigh the negatives. There are hidden benefits you might not even consciously realize in being able to relate what you’re thinking or doing to something alive verses the incidental face your faucet might make. One of my cats just showed up one day. The other I got from a pet store thinking it was kind of messed up for me to leave a, formerly, mostly outdoor cat alone for days at a time. This means, of course, they don’t get along or play with each other.

What makes my cats annoying is that no time spent cuddling or in my lap is enough time. The outdoor one, Scampi, has a homing beacon for shit I don’t want him to jump on. He’s always underfoot while cooking or using the bathroom. He’s tried climbing on me 3 times since I started writing this less than 10 minutes ago. He’ll dart out the door when I’m about to leave for days, leaving me wondering how he’s navigating the cold. He’s straight up hit/clawed at my face when he’s gotten annoyed that I showed the other cat, Maxi, any attention. Fuck this cat, and the endless stream of farts after he gets into the trash or opens my fucking toaster oven to lick a greasy pan dry.

Maxi likes to sleep on top of me, and both cats start shit where no shit need be started. I’ve yet to throw Scampi out to live back outside courting worms and ticks. I haven’t taken Maxi back to the store. They’re cats. I’m a human. Everything about them starts and ends with me. My cats aren’t annoying, I’m allowing myself to be confused about our relationship, my responsibility and agency.

I question how much I actually enjoy having pets verses the things about animals I didn’t have to deal with before I found myself living with my ex-girlfriend’s cat. I don’t like buying litter, food, and medicine. I don’t want to have to remember or plan on feeding every day. I’ve bought like $400 worth of things to try and automate as much as possible for as long as possible. I need a cat door that doesn’t let in the current strays I see on my camera. I like the idea of occasionally petting an animal considerably more than really any aspect of the upkeep. My neck and back cannot abide sleeping in ways that doesn’t constantly “disturb” the animals wedged around me.

How likely is it I get rid of my cats? The probability is almost zero. Animals present you with a constant reckoning. Can you really not be bothered, not afford, not care, not remember, or not try? What does it say about you, if you let your feelings, small, incidental as they are, trump your obligation and choice to care for a pet? There’s an overriding quality that pervades pet ownership that can hardly be reduced to words. At least, there must be if people are willing to put up with the kinds of animals I encounter in other households.

What else would I be doing? Hanging out with friends? It’s not either or. Looking for another housemate or girlfriend? I don’t know that I’ve ever genuinely looked for that more than rolled with the moment. Is my life so occupied and fulfilling I’m just above errant cat dealings? Hardly. I re-did the math around my rural lifestyle and each time it really sinks in how ridiculously low I’ve managed to get my bills. One paycheck pays the internet for the year, 2 the electricity, 1 more my property taxes, car registration, contacts, and if I’m really feeling frisky, 1 more knocks out car insurance. For those keeping score, that’s 2.5 months making $20 an hour. Another way to say this, that’s 400 hours on the clock to buy 95.5% of my time doing otherwise if RENT got the math right. What wouldn’t you do with 5% of your time in order to have a place to shit, shower, and sleep for a year? If anything, my major push is to condense that 5% of time into speed-renovations so I can actually focus my time verses merely have it available.

This is how I train myself to ask what is the quality of what I’m doing. It takes practice and examination. Quantitatively, I’m around $8,000 in debt. Qualitatively, I know more than half of it is what I’ll spend each year on bills, car repairs, or buying tools/toys throughout the year. I don’t feel absolutely miserable like I did when I had the same amount of debt in service to a new car. When I glance over my shoulder at my table saw, I’m filled with hope and potential, not regret. Prioritizing respect for my time and attention is how I leave functionally zero effort “free money" jobs, and persuade myself I’m not sacrificing larger conceptions of my being in taking on more “normal” soul-sucking roles.

I think I have insight into how people weaponize their feelings by being informed by this. I had to work and earn my perspective, but you don’t have to work to feel in and of itself. Whatever peace, clarity, or motivation I derive from organizing my life this way, every person has their version, healthy and productive or otherwise. And you have to ask what would happen if they didn’t have whatever feeble version they were clinging to if they’re unwilling or unable to do the same kind of work. I, of course, want to vehemently defend my decisions and place in life. I just happen to think it’s objectively better to have more time to do “whatever” with, even struggle with the potential aimlessness or wasted anger on cats, than it is to be enslaved, metaphorically or otherwise. It’s a perfectly debatable point. It may only be answerable at the level of the individual, such as there is one well-enough defined.

An individual is a type of focus. If it’s whatever a lens happened to rest on, like a cat, then you can’t expect anything more than you would of a cat. My unfocused lens is annoyed by cats. My focused lens reminds myself to not let the cat’s folly be my own. My focused individual gives myself the gift of a 5/95 split thought and reminder that small steps are still steps. That quality of my feelings needs to constantly be jostled back into the quantity of time I’ve spent trying to shape a deliberate perspective and type of work. I’m not okay otherwise. I’m not in a good place when I’m not doing the right kind of work. And if I don’t have the focus, can it really be said that I’m working more than “doing” or “killing time?” My TV shows don’t mindlessly run in the background, but it’s the wrong kind of work to memorize every character’s name.

I don’t know where to sort a recent Instagram post of former friends getting together to paint one of their houses. It’s hard to say why I follow them save the familiarity. They posted that they wouldn’t have been able to do the work without the other 2 that came over. The house appeared to be about the same size as the one I just got done painting by myself. The first shot even looked suspiciously like the same studiously-taped window. We’re all working on dramatically different things even if they look or sound the same. I can paint a house, just not with 3 friends. And I don’t want to work to maintain those kinds of friends more than paint my next house. Perhaps most people who have some relationship-ending problem with me know this as well.

Not cats, though. They don’t give a fuck what I want or where they sit with me psychologically. I can keep them fed, warm, and healthy until they die and it’s only going to have cost me money that could have been burgers. It’s a lot easier to get through life when you understand people like the pets who prioritize their coat or comfort or act confused you’d get angry when they lash out or fall to temptation at the trash can. It also feels fair to think of people like that. It feels like the underpinning Randian or New Left thought-policing fascism. “If you trust cats to vote, it’ll be law the right to eat your face!”

It feels fair to understand other people as though they are pets because the work you feel you’ve done to understand or take care of them is constantly betrayed. They want nothing to do with you anymore than your cat needs a warm cushion and scratches. Pretension is as much a self-protection mechanism as much as fascism. Both destroy the means of understanding the nature of work. It’s not to ingratiate and enrich. It’s to orient.

I’m working for the privilege of a focused series of directions that I think will most reflect my values. I understand that statement can be hijacked and co-opted by anyone. I don’t need more nights out with good-enough friends or acquaintances. I don’t need more stuff. I don’t need more attention. I need things to make sense. I need to feel like I have the tools and time to create the means by which things can make sense.

I genuinely wish I never clenched my jaw again. I wish I were never anxious. I have this remote dream of finding this level of chill and self-assuredness that just carries me through doors without having to touch them. I think I’ll get there when I have the money to put so many details of my annoying-cats aspects of my life on auto-pilot. I don’t find the zen in daily routine feeding or scooping. I’m not content in half-truth conversations about desire and shared goals. That’s what mostly constituted my college relationships. I want a counseling business as much as I’ve wanted any nondescript business. I want the freedom. I want to be able to demonstrate what my effort and personality has conjured without the self-loathing and confused bureaucratic baggage.

I don’t want to resent people anymore than I do my cats. I don’t know how to do that while considering them whole individuals who make the decisions they do. I don’t know how to do that thinking and writing about how and why they’ve clawed at me. I can accept my cats on their terms because they aren’t going to change. They’re especially not going to change for bad or nonsense reasons. Cats, at least in some cat form, desire my food, scratches, and warmth indefinitely, selfishly as any animal. I can’t pay people to take what I’m offering in time or otherwise. It’s an offer of a very particular kind of work they don’t feel they need or want or whatever. It’s dirty and chaotic, and they insist it must be lonely. My cats are terrible at pretending they aren’t lonely.

Sunday, January 9, 2022

[943] Little Big Planet

Someone I respect for their reporting is Matt Taibbi. He’s, broadly, an even, detailed voice about things most of us are keen to glean from the headlines. I recently listened to him downplaying the idea that January 6th was an insurrection attempt. His criticism mostly focuses on the media and the language they use. He points out all of the things that Trump or the republicans don’t have, like control of the military or people generally smart enough to stay organized and persistent. He says coups don’t have selfies and shit smearing if they’re to be taken seriously.


I think, just like anyone I respect who gets something so wrong, he’s missing the mark because his lenses are too focused. Anyone who is otherwise consistent in their ability to offer measured analysis of detailed issues, until they aren’t, commits the same error. When I get myopic about my struggling or misery, I’m usually tired, hungry, need to shit, and in the wake of too many little things that have annoyed me back-to-back. When “smart” people get lost in the weeds of their analysis, the direction of the wind can become wholly obscured.

We live in infinitely complex systems. Not “incredibly” not “vastly,” but infinitely. There is literally no telling what to make of every force working on you, through you, in any given moment. When you pause, you might notice your breath, heartbeat, temperature, hum, an itch, a tightness, a dryness, the lights, and you won’t have even moved on to what it takes to get you up and out and worrying about what you haven’t done with your day.

In that spirit, people can be forgiven for their missteps. This is why we have concepts like forgiveness and accountability. You can’t be blamed for a miscount if no one taught you how. You can’t live in perpetual shame and blame without functionally killing yourself and often many things around you.

Jordan Peterson has been flirting with the same error as Matt Taibbi. He tweeted that Joe Rogan is to be trusted in a way CNN is not. What’s the level of analysis there? CNN and Joe Rogan aren’t even measured at the level of the individual. Is it legacy then? Aggregate truthful statements or apologetic retractions? It’s a generally bizarre and imprecise thing to say. Are all CNN news anchors complicit? Are purported news programs to be measured on the same level of popular MMA comedian pontificators?

I happen to think that we’re living in incredibly dangerous times, big and small. I live in an area where there’s unlikely to be Proud Boys roaming the streets, but they’ll be sourced from my neighbors. I think local governance has been under attack, and it continues, with little to no repercussions. I think small, irrationally motivated groups are all it has ever taken to reshape history. I think I’ve never had good healthcare coverage. I think our financial systems are wholly corrupt. I think my version of an appreciable “middle class” life is as much of a mockery of what I expected to have growing up as anyone else’s who might still be paying off student debt.

Fundamentally, I’m not happy. I’m not content. I’m not in a privileged headspace that can deny my anxiety about what I think and feel is coming. I want to move, I want to build, I want to invest, but I don’t even trust that anything I do in service to those desires will last. I mean, maybe a couple years, but not so far back in my head is still the idea of selling everything and attempting to escape to a different country.

I consider myself lucky that I have so much writing. I can see instantly that, more than my ability to ceaselessly complain, I’ve been identifying or calling out issues that haven’t been resolved for at least a decade. This suggests to me they aren’t going to be resolved and no one is aware, capable, or cares enough to even try. I don’t think there’s a political party that’s clued in and effective. I don’t know of any local or independently organized movement. There’s a few speaking explicitly, Sunrise, Diem25, individuals on the Left, but operating major levers of power? Hardly.

Sometimes, it’s enlightening to read an account from an “average Joe” on the ground during a historical tragedy or genocide. Provided you weren’t in the path, as if you knew, of a roaming violent hoard, you’re basically presented with an off-grid survivalist challenge. You have to get food, have places to hide, and keep your wits about you in who you talked to and about what. You just kind of wait, in relatively extreme discomfort, for the killing to stop. It seems like one would need a fantastic imagination to consider the practical reality of this in an American context.

That’s precisely the pacifying impulse. We have every reason to write-off our dramatic thoughts. That is, except the countervailing evidence. The problem is, we don’t know how to weigh it. There is no objective measure of “insurrection.” There are only modern definitions of words and how many or most use them. We’ve used such hyperbolic language in our media, all the people “slammed” and “eviscerated” for what might be whispered disagreements or passionate-adjacent speeches. So, we sleep. We pacify. We wait to be compelled. We program ourselves to default to a passive environmental selection process that may or may not leave us alone or shuffle us on trains.

I also recently listened to an absolutely brilliant Know Your Enemy podcast with Pat Blanchfield on how to understand politics from a Freudian perspective. Where an initial impulse to see hypocrisy or point out contradictions, you can instead ask yourself, what is it that the belief the hypocrite is holding is serving? Why do Evangelicals like someone who wants to fuck his daughter? Why do pro-democracy Chinese dissidents find themselves incapable of the irony of escaping only to rally for American fascism?

At bottom, there’s just an immense amount of suffering. It isn’t coherently organized. It can’t be approached through some kind of talk therapy or mass psylocibin trip. At every level of our being, something is being violated. You can take a snapshot of any given life and just apply traumatic statistics. Most sexual violence happens from someone you love or who is in your family. Most people are still reeling from child-rearing practices that are almost designed to induce long-term trauma. The U.S. has the 6th highest divorce rate at 50% in the world. You can flip a coin on your romance narrative. 43 million people have student loans. 31.1 million don’t have insurance, and most of us are familiar with how shitty what’s on offer actually is. Jobs aren’t paying enough. With your master’s or doctorate, you might be able to squeak out a middle-class life if you’re willing to work in what have morphed into human factory farms for addiction, “education,” or ill-defined “services.”

Most people start from a considerably worse place than what I considered my cohort. Most people are fat, and ugly, and on the losing parts of many a bell curve. Their jobs are stressful. Their kids suck. Their cars are breaking down. Their family incidental or fleetingly familiar with the intimacies that you may regard as constitutive of your being. Why did Trump get elected? Have you ever just looked at and listened to the people who support that? Do we need detailed historical analogies and 24-hour speculative punditry? Why do people believe even one lie, let alone an endless stream shot from a water cannon?

At the top of hierarchies, at the bottom of hierarchies, we all hate to fucking be here. Every unifying narrative is just and only that. It’s a narrative. We’ll rally behind Spider-Man and the Avengers. We’ll light candles and incense for a series that was cancelled too soon. Whether we pick up a liberal narrative about the underlying hatred and racism or a conservative narrative about downplaying the underlying hatred and racism, whatever our mind finds most satisfying is to be believed. Maintaining perpetual doubt is not necessarily conducive to survival, let alone a semblance of happiness or Insta-worthy posts.

In modern times, we talk about inequality in ways that feel dead or inarticulate to me. Not even a hundred years ago, the rich and poor were dying of things like Covid, or considerably more treatable conditions. Even now, we get a vaccine in a year because the rich, connected, and talented are at least selfishly aware of their own mortality in a way that our over-riding cultural narratives might otherwise dismiss. We’re not all in this together in the most important and forward-thinking ways. We’re desperately clambering to insanity-making narratives about our own worth and what we have the power to control.

What else can you do but wait? My feeble and disorganized attempts to rally people to connect and conceive of different ways of living have been feeble and disorganized. People don’t just fail to talk, but the more I do, the more I chase them away from the thought that they should even bother. I’m not in ongoing dialogues gaining perspective from my “friends” at different levels of their social and professional hierarchies lol. I’m just “ranting,” courting likes from my 3-5 fans, as we all watch our respective struggles or indulgences. There’s no shared goal or uniting quality beyond ever-winnowing history.

The crazies have an enemy. The crazies feel at home and like they’re defending something. “Us?” We’re writing op-eds about how leaders are failing us and reporting on the front lines of those patrolling the streets with guns actively campaigning to normalize their behavior. They’re “proud,” we’re scared. They’re lashing out about their powerlessness and confusion; we’re retreating into intellectualized fairy-tales about how bad we really feel as well and how it’s manifesting.

Do I hate “everything?” Is “life” constantly annoying? I grew up in my abusive household with ticks I haven’t completely shaken off. I’ve experienced the repeated “grind” and “burnout” of abusive work-environments. If I don’t choose debt, I can hardly dream, because my goals are not to merely live cheap, alone, in the middle of nowhere. If I don’t resolve myself to endless complicity in systems that destroy people, including my best conception of myself, I court becoming an explicit victim of those systems myself.

Do you pull out and feel guilty and speculative about what you “could” have done? Do you “radicalize” and tie yourself to some movement, moving almost certainly for the sake of it, because you’re psychologically stuck? Do you ignore how you’re perpetuating the abuses and exploitation that molded you? Ask yourself what narrative you’re already perpetuating and why it feels best.

At a conceptional level, what do you do when presented with the infinite? Many pick the “godly” thing, in lieu of the “right” thing. It’s a convenient and familiar narrative that has evolved to morph with what objectively may be a more rational or more right way of existing. It’s confusing, often deliberately. Just like the family member who molests their child. God loves you! He’ll also pretty much ignore the systematic ass-rape of little boys and righteous genocide. Woo! Everything you could ask for and more.

I think there’s a lot to be said about the storm of consequences of unremitting crazy or violence, but the most compelling story is the one actively worked and shaped. It’s why I feel adrift and useless if I’m not “doing something” or able to show you what my effort is manifesting as. It’s why I have to write. I am always looking, always processing, always trying to locate a source of inspiration or thing to incorporate into how I move in the world. I think we’re living in incredibly dangerous times, but not so much that I’ve arranged to sell everything I have and flee.

It takes an infinitely small shift a fraction of a degree to not embody the out-and-out hypocrite moniker invoked from an outside judge. “If you care about babies…why not after they’re born!?” You’re in an entirely different realm of existence, let alone discussion, with a charge and question like that. Even if you hate yourself, you care about yourself first. You care how you feel above all else. So, no, they don’t care about babies. They haven’t figured out how to care for themselves anymore than a baby has. Perhaps you and I barely have. I know every day I’m going to want to eat, and desire to witness some “progress” on one or dozen of my goals. I know I wish I wasn’t haunted by the prospect of abandoning it all to survive.

Most people don’t see things the way I do. The ones who are close are more than an infinitely small degree away from empathizing with my experience. They aren’t feeling the same obligation to move more independently of what the environment dictates. They’re undoubtedly watching my experience, my flail, and figuring their form of carved-out suffering or captured privileges will suffice. And we’ll continue to watch each other on our respective ice drifts. We’ll continue to take seriously that we really know anything about “most people” beyond our shared suffering we’re not interested in addressing proactively. I mean, after all, I’m not suffering, not really, not like them over there.

Thursday, January 6, 2022

[942] And, I Stress

I just got done watching a movie in which a reviewer said something I agree with. They were sad about what the movie “could be.” There were elements that were interesting or entertaining. There were thoughtful twists and intriguing narratives. But it was messy, and kind of got away from itself. The tone was disorienting and it’s as if too many thoughts went into how it unfolded.

I used to think it very weird to criticize movies or art in general. I can appreciate a pretty face and broadly prefer order to chaos, but my perspective heavily skews towards “I don’t know” or “I can’t recognize” what it is people like aesthetically or artistically. I like things that make me think. As such, most of what constitutes life I’ve already categorized into neat, uninteresting categories which do not serve that purpose. I’m not watching movies to get lost in each one, nor reading to confirm my biases.

For example, a “cool” car, to me, is one that works, gets good gas mileage, or operates as a useful tool like my truck. My opinion on color, body style, year, special features, engine rumble, yada yada is non-existent. We already know how much I’ve suffered the anger or resentment for not being able to take in the scenery of whatever we might be wandering through or past. My own sense of presented “style” is what makes the mot sense for the sheer amount of mud and dust I tend to experience. My curls are almost always pulled back out of the way.

To say any given movie needs to serve a purpose might suggest you haven’t seen very many. Sure, many want to make money. Obviously, there are genuine entertainers and writers hoping to make people laugh and feel. The impact of any given piece of work has always felt incidental to me. Whether or not someone is a brilliant performer, painter, or other kind of artist does not dictate what the masses or observers are going to respond to. Joshua Bell performing on a 1.5-million-dollar violin, on the subway, to maybe the appreciation of 4 people, one a child, over the course of an hour comes to mind.

What could have been? What might you make out of the experience of a world class musician on a world class instrument if you caught the pedigree, ear, or dialogue of classically renowned music? You’d have another check on your list of experiences? You’d feel it resound in the depths of your soul? You might walk away with an autograph?

I’m the kind of person who stops and watches street performers. I dance and sing to songs playing in stores. I saw a performer in Colorado doing something of a circus act. As much as I noticed and appreciated him practicing his craft, I’m also the kind of person watching the people who walk past. He had about 30 people watching him when I joined the crowd. He ended the performance with more than double.

Why? Did they all appreciate his show like so many $100 a ticket buyers for Joshua Bell the night before his performance in the subway? They clapped. Many gave money. He’d clearly been to some sort of school for crowd work. Did any of them walk away thinking to themselves, “That would have been really cool if only he had…” We know people buy-in to the crowd and environment as much or more than whatever’s going on on stage.

Our experience is just that, ours. When I find myself struggling to figure out what to do, I try to pay attention to what anyone else might be suffering or sacrificing their attention to. It’s our struggle, unlike so many dictators. We’re all, mostly, trying to live well and die peacefully in our sleep surrounded by loved ones. We’re all attempting to do meaningful work and find recognition for those things about us it’s impossible to put into words. Certainly, I’ve continued to talk and never feel complete.

I take on a lot of things at once. Until recently, I’d never really describe my life like that. I take on what I think matters, what I think I can pull off, and what is worthy of someone like me. But, it’s a lot. Where I see people find the focus, or limit the pain, of pursuing one thing in earnest, I want it all. I want to flip houses, and start a business, and evolve my space, and read everything, watch everything, and make fleeting stabs at staying decent on several instruments. It’s not structured, it’s not consistent, and at least for the last few months, it’s felt like an incredible amount of stress.

I think I conceive of stress differently. To me, it’s inevitable. Things piss me off pretty much by default. It’s stressful to have a problem with…existing. So, you build it into a certain kind of ethos and coping strategy. It’s not going away; it’s a chronic condition. It becomes a challenge to yourself to pick what kind of stress you want. That’s maybe harder than it seems with a lot of unknown unknowns in terms of consequences. I had to start by denoting the kinds of stress I didn’t want.

Let’s say in relationships. I used to be the open ear for all of the drama in my friends’ relationships. Trust issues are core. Communication staticky at best. Whom has the most feelings for whom, and when, and why, if so, did they so disappoint? I didn’t want any of that, so I stated my values about sex or commitment that, let’s say have yet to be fully appreciated by anyone flirting with partnership. I didn’t want to cite my mortgage as a perpetual reason to justify my inability to change jobs. I want to continually experiment and explore routes to both independent wealth, and free exercises of my time.

This shit is hard to live up to. It’s not just hard to carry your giant torch burning with all of your values, dreams, or intention, but it’s fucking raining constantly. I’m proud of the work I do in getting this house flipped? Well, just take it on the chin and move on when your buddy’s dad comes down and says most of it needs to be redone because the aesthetic is wrong. It’s an aesthetic you can’t recognize and was in fact discussed and decided upon weeks ago. It’s “wrong,” seemingly likely to devalue the house if not fixed, and you’re left adrift, wondering if this vitally important and specific thing needed to happen no matter what, why does it no longer feel like “our” struggle to convey to me how it needs to be. I don’t need it to be that way, and, not for nothing, I barely know what I’m doing.

What is the work for? Mine is the experience of any artist. To grow in your craft. Every exceptionally rich and famous person has been told drastically more disparaging things than “this has to be redone.” All in all, it’s not even an overwhelmingly time consuming or difficult task. But it hits deep and is extremely stressful nonetheless. Before you find the temerity to judge the work, are you asking yourself what you could have done to improve it, inform it, or understand it?

When I at least have some consistent beat or obligation, I tend to even out in my pursuit of constant stimulation. Even a bad job can be a consistent job or subject of gratifying focus. I haven’t had that in a while. The work on the house is in spurts. I’ve, not once, returned to the house where a thing discussed that might be done in my absence was done. It’s not “our” struggle. It’s my series of limited crises, until I get around to doing the work. It’s my increasingly desperate search for evidence that things will be okay or progress when I’m not there. I’m struck down again when I get to learn my work isn’t worth what I thought it was either.

Meanwhile, I have already hours-a-day level problems in attempting to navigate insurance companies and bureaucratic grudges. I have a replacement outdoor unit, and now a wood burning stove, neither of which are installed or keeping me warm. I need to find a job, a car, and keep my pissy and combative cats alive. It all exists as a measure of my chosen mental fog. It’s “better” stress that, once I work my way through, I might have a lot more money, working knowledge of things I didn’t previously, and if the cats are good for nothing else, an inability for too-late critical feedback is a major plus.

I wonder if I’ve learned how useless it is to ask for help. People rarely seem to understand me, even if they can appreciate the jokes or just before the resentment for the work kicks in. My buddy’s dad said, “I wish you guys would have called me.” We have, a dozen times, and with him not on site, he’d either offer advice that didn’t quite fit, or we couldn’t make sense of it. He flirted with changing the decided-on wall color. It was suggested that the floor I laid down in the kitchen would need to be pulled up to accommodate where the cabinets would sit. This has been an emotionally traumatic roller coaster. It’s not because of the work in and of itself, but because my face is pressed right up against a burning “What is the work for!?” sign, and I’m not coming up with good, emotionally gratifying and consistent answers.

There’s always the “one day” narrative. I know “intellectually” how things can play out if we crank out a nice house and I learn to match the “right aesthetic.” It gets a little less fun and meaningful at that point. It feels less like learning and more like the same parody of “professional” environments. It’s not lost on me that this house should in no way resemble mine for a “normal” market, but I return to, it’s not like I’m getting paid for my time, and by the time I do, I’ll have made considerably less than minimum wage. I’m dealing in a certain kind of “promise” currency, in which I promise to keep myself available and working indefinitely, and they promise around the time I’m in my late 30s maybe early 40s, I’ll have everything I expected of myself by 30, and maybe 5-10 grand in 10 months.

Man does not eat faith, hope, and dreams. I have zero real genuine belief or inclination my buddy nor his family would fuck me or are less than sincere or capable of supporting what we might become. I’m still poor, and my inability to find a satisfactory monetary path makes the idea of tearing down what I’ve been working on all the more searingly painful. The idea that I’ve lent myself to this task over one just as important and potentially lucrative and revolutionary in how I wish to construct it, starts to feel like I’ve betrayed myself or have been incredibly naïve, again, to make such a large bet on something I don’t understand.

I need structure. The unfortunate reality is that it will most likely be imposed by another stultifying transitory work environment. Whatever guilt I might conjure for not having done “enough” in service to any of my chosen stressors will get to compound in the hours I’m driving or stacking or taking direction from someone born to be middle-management. Are we in it together? Am I not persuaded that it’s my burden, nay, responsibility, to weather every critical review or unintelligible insurance form? I have to keep myself warm, even if the cats are quick to jump in next to me. Who am I kidding? They’re first to jump on top.

Monday, January 3, 2022

[941] Centered

I need to get centered. There's a certain undefinable point I feel you reach in life where nothing you say, pretty much ever, gets to be classified as anything beyond a kind of indulgent bitching. At the same time, there are credible problems everyone faces, at all times, be they pertaining to health, social environments, or the struggle against whatever constitutes an unforgiving and unrelenting existence. Maybe some day I'll stop qualifying my need to vent and organize at the top of blogs. Today is not that day.

I'll start with the first scene that keeps coming to my mind. In an episode of “How To With John Wilson,” John finds himself at the residence of an extremely rich man who bemoans how his dozen high-priced vehicles are stored in $500,000 dollar garages with lift systems. “I'd love to go subterranean,” he states, describing the hassle of having to pull a car out and lower the car above in order to drive it.

John also finds himself attending a baby shower for the wife of the Bang energy drink CEO. It's a costume party. The CEO shows John around his house, and appears incapable of saying anything, about his preferences or otherwise, without tying it back into his product line. He lives in a mansion, and discusses the property that will be the biggest in the area, on an island, they have in development. He seems like a hollowed-out shell of a human being, wholly subsumed by the overwhelming narrative woven into his drinks and financial success.

I dream, often enough, about being “rich.” That's the superficial understanding of the dream. I want flow. I want to be unburdened by thoughts that I find incredibly boring and taxing for their resemblance to brick walls through which I can't burst my head. How many hours of my life have been spent worrying about my car breaking down? How many tense hours has my jaw been clenched as I pretend, through sheer wishing and will, that my engine will keep it together until the next stop?

Ever busy, when one aspect of my busy-enough day is going right or wrong, it's no struggle for my mind to race to the cascading series of issues that will arise. Car won't work? Okay, is a friend's available to borrow, or is an insane amount of debt in rental fees coming? When you make plans, like buying cheap concert tickets, it feels like the universe is punishing for your hubris to think you could anticipate your ability to get there. Is that money wasted? Or just an opportunity to spend more, maybe on Uber?

I didn't get this job I had forgotten I applied for and, in my heart of hearts, don't want anymore than any other job I've applied for. My mind, in spite of myself, let the thoughts about what a consistent paycheck could enable. I envisioned a new (old) car payment, perhaps some of the toys I didn't see fit to add to my Christmas spree. I went ahead and just paid my internet bill for the year. Why not? They're getting the money anyway. It's all debt at a perpetually existential level. I'm not *realistically* leaving this plot of land any time soon, no matter how much I cite the encroaching fascism and speculate on exit strategies.

I'm one snapshot of everyone's situation. I know I certainly have it better. That becomes the default cliché mode of thinking. Well, who has it worse? Who's sicker? Who's poorer? Who's currently getting physically beaten up by people they love? This is how we curtail what may otherwise be a persistent fire to change our circumstances. What more could we ask for than to be alive in the first place? Isn't it enough that the worst of all possible tragedies didn't strike today? I get sick of my fucking self when I initiate a “grass is greener” protocol and some disingenuous weighing system of plight and privilege.

I suffer most when I let myself desire things. I start to act impulsively to usher the envisioned future of obtaining those things. More often than it feels currently, when I get what I want, I'm able to “get to work.” When I think of all of the reasons I'm unable to work on what I please, the darkest modes and feelings take over. What the fuck is the point of constantly struggling, not to push your limits and learn about yourself, but to merely hang on with some pathetic prayer to nowhere that “it” or “things” will “get better?” Would any fish fight so hard upstream if it knew there was zero chance of breeding before the trip?

I forgot which philosopher imaged Sisyphus as enjoying the labor of pushing the boulder up the hill. Find joy in the struggle, you'll never be sad. Find purpose in the fight for fighting's sake, you can always return, like overworked cliches, to a stable conception of your place in life. You can temper your goals and be reasonable about your purpose like a character from In The Heights.

I think I've worked incredibly hard to not just persistently speak to, but actually demonstrate work in service to my values. I don't know the first time I wrote that I wished to be in real estate or flipping houses, but I do know the second I was handed the tools and house to work on, I began turning it out faster than anyone else involved was prepared for. I'm not “stuck” in getting this counseling business running so much as literally half a dozen bureaucracies, around the holidays, don't really care to help people, answer questions, nor return phone calls and emails. The world isn't designed to help and improve, it's to “conserve” around whatever you wish to make of the evolving systems.

In this precise moment, I need to fix my truck. In a world that made sense, I'd have a car I could afford that ran well enough to not need thousands a year. I'd have an appreciable job that paid for that car, and a house that didn't start as a shed. I wouldn't need a Masters to be “middle class.” I could count on the things I plan because I could budget and only dip into credit cards for dire emergencies. Not a single moment of my life since graduating college has operated that way. I've scrimped to make up for negligent and lying roommates. Rent payments beckoned. Cars broke down. The jobs on offer are incredibly difficult or horrendously managed. I'm fighting to maintain a basic conception of myself, well before I think of “more.”

The totality of it all comes to a head in a moment too. It's the lunge of the engine after 3 days of crossing fingers and toes as you baby it down the rural road. It's after I've hopped out of the shower only for a muddy not-my-problem to call to me from my front yard where my last feeble attempt to make “passive income” gets stuck in the fucking mud. It's when your annoying fucking cat keeps trying to jump in your lap, verses play with the other annoying fucking cat, which you only got to try and keep either entertained.

Am I capable of fixing anything, ever? Or am I always at the mercy of circumstance? I went into more debt getting a replacement outdoor AC/heating unit. You know what I can't install because all of my tools are at the house I'm fixing up? The house I couldn't complete months ago? I get to anticipate the energy bill as I sit next to a wasteful, inadequate, space heater. But I should be thankful, right? People like my house-fix pictures. I'm not literally freezing to death.

I feel sick at performing a kind of “glass half full” version of the world. I'm about balance, right? But within a concept of balance, you're allotting for a seemingly endless torrent of bullshit provided you're able to square it with some hopeful or meaningful narrative. All sins wash out in judgment or forgiveness of your god, right? Let's couch all of our sense of accountability in death, just in case we might otherwise be prompted to fucking do something else or better in life.

I'm sneaking the best parts of my life away like crumbs from a cake that was never offered to me. I have to dress up living in poverty with terms like “hood rich.” I have to elevate concepts like “grit” or “resilience” when sense or decency can't be found. I have to retreat to my coping mechanism because I can't pull myself any further from dreams or desires without turning wholly self-destructive. There's always a missing piece. I wanted x, but it didn't come with batteries. I got x, and batteries, but a newer model was released, cheaper, improved, the next day. I went to return the first one only to discover THE GOVERNMENT BROKE THE MAIL! So I retreat and try not to recall what I know about x and its evolution. I personalize the responsibility for appreciating my lot and the conditions I'm forced to work under. Who really needs the latest and best anyway? I can't fix the mail, hell, I could barely, and if I'm honest not really, afford x to begin with. I'll get by.

Yeah, maybe, until you can't.

My ex was/is incredibly high-strung and never felt “stable.” I'm sympathetic to this, but I try considerably harder than she did to not turn my feelings against the people I'm trying to enlist in changing the feeling. My best friend is the complete opposite of her. Things are pretty much always going to be okay or are considerably better than we've maybe the ability to consciously appreciate in any given moment. His style betrays my sense of urgency when I've got the tools and intention to use them. Her style builds a wall of increasingly unjustified doubt and resentment for anything that might qualify as good. My experience attempting to balance either most often results in qualifying opening paragraphs and a search for the next things I could conceivably work on when dealing with either creates their different kind of barriers. This blog feeling like the most pressing and worthwhile.

It's really easy to trick yourself into a sense of “accomplishment” in buying something. I have a goal of eating every day. I'm not done with my obligations or work because I hit a drive thru. I think we have a severely stifled conception of just what it is we're buying ourselves. It certainly isn't time. We're buying into narratives about the value of how that time is spent. Provided the money you make covers some bare-minimum you consider a worthwhile existence, whether it took you 10 or 100 hours, it'll feel “worth it.” You buy yourself friends or work associates who will feed your self-soothing narrative, excuse-riddled, comfortable, complacent idea of who you are and where you fit. “Everyone's car breaks down! Fix it and move on!” you'll exclaim, happy to pretend you've never heard of planned obsolescence. You can afford the fix, right? You can't afford yourself the endless burden of shaping a culture that would otherwise design itself to fuck you and everyone like you.

It's easy for me to believe I've bitten off more than I can chew in my ever-feeble bid to shape the world. At the same time, I know it's a battle worth someone like me. I don't really get a choice if I'm going to do more than splash about kiddie pools of human interaction. I don't get to be a hermit. I don't get to pretend I'm more afraid or exhausted than I am. I don't get to front like I'm a “family man” or “do-gooder” only concerned with the story of my effort more than the tangible accounting. I am living spite, after all. I'll break my dick off while getting fucked just to reach back and fuck you with it harder.

I don't know where that comes from. I've yet to discover a more consistent or resolutely truer way of describing what keeps me moving in the world. Surely it's some preverbal survival instinct. I don't want to mythologize it though. I don't want it to look like my best last option for bothering to live at all. I don't want to be incidentally at the end of yet another unconscious force dictating the rules, lending itself to personalized cliches and hidden insecurities. I want the things I want for good reasons. I work on the examples I wish to set. I create what's in my mind's eye. I at least create an incredibly messy version of what's in my mind.

“Things” would be incredibly easier for me if I could ever believe the timelines people give me for how things work. People, mind you, who've watched their culture be revolutionized by science and technology that's tantamount to miracles happening nearly every day. When you really drill down into how you're pissing away your time, it's no secret why you might only aspire to so much, or why you're comfortable writing off my anxiety as a quirk of my nature and not a black mark on your sense of responsibility. This, regardless of whether or not you can seemingly do anything more than I appear to be doing. Where's your perspective?