I expect this post to be brief today, though I’ve been known to be wrong about that sort of thing. I had sort of “intended” to make my headline “Oh, well, whatever…” and then make the entire body of the post “…never mind.” Thus I would be quoting the last verse-line of Smells Like Teen Spirit by Nirvana. The subsequent words in the song are just the chorus and then a refrain of “A denial” repeated nine times (if memory serves).
I wasn’t sure I hadn’t already done this before, though. I could have checked, but I didn’t have the mental energy.
Still, using that last line from a Kurt Cobain song carries a certain subtext which would have served my purposes well.
Or, well, actually, given past history, it probably wouldn’t have served my purposes at all. None of this sort of thing seems to serve my purpose, no matter what I do. As far as I can tell, only one person actually read my (admittedly somewhat long) post yesterday, but though I was borderline explicit about my meaning, I don’t think it did any good whatsoever. That’s not unusual, of course; much if not all that I do never ends up doing me much good.
Sometimes I have to be subtle because I cannot force myself to be open about my internal states after a lifetime of fighting to appear “normal”, to the degree I can achieve that, and to avoid being too much trouble for other people, since I don’t think I have the right to trouble them, and in fact I think (or feel) that I’m fundamentally reprehensible.
I shouldn’t worry, though. The times I am more open and obvious‒even when I am borderline explicit‒don’t appear to be any more successful than when I am at my most cryptic. Possibly, I am just not able to communicate my feelings effectively with humans.
At the very least, my success rate must be below one percent. It’s not quite as bad as playing the lottery, but it’s pretty pathetic. Then again, so am I.
Whatever. Never mind. Ha ha.
But really, though, I don’t have much to say. Quoting iconic songs may be the extent of my capacity to convey myself.
Ironically, I don’t feel the urge to share quotes from my own songs (or my fiction). You would think they would be the best choice for conveying my inner thoughts. That’s not always the case, though.
In fact, though I like my songs well enough, and Breaking Me Down is meant to be fairly explicitly about depression (at least my species thereof), none of them have enough oomph, as it were. Or maybe it’s just that they are not well known*, so no one recognizes and identifies with the words.
I think I have some pretty good lines in Come Back Again, including what’s probably my favorite:
“Only meeting strangers
always losing friends.
Every new beginning
always ends.”
It may seem a bit bleak, but it’s also true more or less by definition. If you’re meeting someone for the first time, they had been a stranger until that point. And friends do become “lost”. And the next two lines are rather obviously true.
Of course, a very good signing (singing?) off quote would be from Pink Floyd’s Time: “The time is gone, the song is over, thought I’d something more to say.”
I’ve always been annoyed that they added the little reprise of Breathe after that and made it officially part of the song, because those other two lines constitute a perfect song ending. I always figured they didn’t want to make the song end on too much of a downer, so they threw in the reprise as part of that song instead of as a separate one. Maybe they were unwittingly invoking a version of the peak-end rule I mentioned the other day.
Anyway, I have a locked and loaded draft of a blog post that already applies that couplet from Time, with the headline being the first half, continuing into the post which consists only of the second half of that quote, followed by the embedded “video” of the final song on the first album of The Wall.
That, of course, is still a draft, and has been waiting there for a while, because if I use it, it’s meant to be my final blog post, and practically my final anything. So I wasn’t going to use it today. Not quite. But I’m close. The Nirvana quote isn’t quite as final, but it is a warning, especially given the fate of the guy who wrote it.
Anyway, consider yourselves on notice. On notice of what?
Figure it out.
*That’s an understatement, eh?
