It’s Friday as I write this (and as I intend to publish it), and I do not expect to work tomorrow, exclusis improvisis*. There had been some sort of slight possibility of doing something with my youngest one of these weekends, but I’m not sure if that is ever going to pan out. There certainly hasn’t been any finalization of anything, nor really any tentativization (which is probably not a legitimate word). I guess I’ll find out.
I don’t like to try to push things from my end, because I don’t want to elicit any sense of obligation or guilt in my child. While I definitely want to spend time with them (with both of them, ideally, but that’s another matter), it would be horrifying to discover that such time was spent only because of a sense of remorse and duty, not because they wanted to spend time with me.
Then again, I have a hard time imagining that anyone ever wants to spend time with me, at least not anymore. In the past, I would say that I used to be at least some degree of “fun” as a person with whom to hang out. But I don’t know that I am capable of being that way anymore‒actually, based on many people who have spent time with me perforce, I think it’s pretty clear that I am not pleasant company. Maybe I never really was. Maybe most people just put up with me in the past.
Given such facts, on my current weekends off, such as this coming weekend, I basically just spend time by myself. That’s good for getting rest from the effort of interpersonal relations, and it also lets me rest my back some, but I do feel quite isolated and gloomy and, yes, lonely.
Waah. Poor baby.
I’m running out of interesting YouTube videos to watch, despite there being many billions of such videos available. I do enjoy going for walks when I’m able, usually, and they are good for me overall. Except, right now, at this time of year, the heat index gets well above 100 Fahrenheit here starting quite early in the morning, meaning my body’s cooling mechanisms cannot adequately function to maintain a healthy temperature, so I’m in danger of heat stroke if I push much at all.
It turns taking a long walk into a possibly suicidal gesture (even potentially a deliberate one). That’s a bit fascinating, because they can’t Baker Act you for taking a walk, at least not readily. But overheating and dehydration can put one at risk for kidney stones, and that is something well worth avoiding, believe me. Well, you don’t have to believe me, but if you end up having kidney stones yourself, I’d be willing to bet that you would agree.
Anyway, I don’t know what I’m trying to discuss. My mental health has not been good lately, even for me. By which I mean it isn’t just not good on average, which is true, but that it’s worse than my typical, average, poor state. I don’t know if that’s obvious to people around me‒as far as I can tell, no one can ever see when I feel truly horrible‒but I can certainly tell, even if no one else can.
Oh! This brings up a personal pet peeve of mine (I guess all “pet peeves” are personal, but you probably get what I mean): I despise the recent tendency to use the term “mental health” as a euphemism for mental illness, as in “that person suffered from mental health”.
I don’t understand what people think they are accomplishing‒or avoiding‒by attempting such linguistic gymnastics, but it’s maddeningly absurd and idiotic. “Health” and “illness” are antonyms, dammit. One doesn’t suffer from mental health (though I have seen that exact expression used unironically), one suffers due to a relative lack thereof. It’s as if you said someone went bankrupt from a surfeit of goods and money.
I don’t know why people feel that avoiding words that describe unpleasant things will make those things somehow less difficult, but it doesn’t work, as far as I can see. It just obfuscates the issues and makes it more difficult to improve things. You can’t get your mechanic to look at the part of your car that’s having trouble just by saying that your car is really driving lately. That may not be the best absurd parallel, but that’s okay; the thing itself is so stupid and absurd and insane that it stands alone.
You don’t say of someone who is dying of metastatic cancer that they are suffering from physical health. They are suffering from a terrible illness.
Likewise, depression (and its various related issues), chronic or otherwise, is a mental illness, and it has mortality rates comparable to many cancers, and worse than some. There is also much more stigma associated with it than with such ailments as cancer, which doesn’t help. I’m not sure what can be done about all that.
One thing I can say is that my mental health is poor. That’s nothing new overall, obviously, but it gets just more and more tedious all the time, even as it continues to have its usual effects. It becomes harder and harder to see any point in trying to fight it. What would I gain? What do I have to which to look forward in my life?
Nothing. I anticipate no new revelations or relationships or creations or friendships or companionship (redundant list entries, I know). I anticipate no new accomplishments. I expect only gradual and rather pathetic decay and dissolution, unless I’m lucky enough to have something take me out more precipitously, or to arrange some such thing for myself.
Well, whatever. Sorry. I hope you have a good weekend.
*Barring the unforeseen.


