I’m writing this post on my smartphone today, because I decided not to bring the lapcom back with me on Saturday. I was very tired and sore and worn down from the week and felt that even that small extra weight was more than I cared to carry.
I got at least a bit of physical rest yesterday, but my mental rest was poor, and was somewhat disrupted by a few seemingly minor things that happened. Worse, though, is the fact that I tried to sedate myself on Saturday night somewhat, but still woke up by two in the morning, after maybe four hours’ sleep.
It’s quite frustrating, as I’m sure you can well imagine. I suppose it’s better than being one of those people who never seems to be able to wake up on time or to get places on time. I don’t know how such people would have survived in the ancestral environment. I suppose it’s just as well for them that they don’t live in such an environment.
So, anyway, I was both rather stressed out and unrested on my “day off” and now I’m no better rested, because I slept even less last night. Also, my pain, which doesn’t like to become too boring (except in describing the character of the pain), has shifted its focus, and now it is my entire lower half (umbilicus down) that is achy and sore and doesn’t want to move. Neither side is worse, but neither side is better*. Although my left middle back and side are way more tight and sore than the right, and my left shoulder still has that weird, seemingly neurological, stiffness and pain.
It would be nice to be able to walk to the train this morning; the weather is not bad for it, and it would be a slight money-saver, though a time loser (but my time is mostly wasted time, anyway). Unfortunately, I don’t know that I am physically up to the task, and I fear it might exacerbate my pain. That’s never a good thing.
I wish I still had a scooter, or one of those electric scooters or bikes‒or better yet, that I could ride the bike(s) I have without having to fix their tires and such. Maintenance of such things is really difficult for me, though; it’s not difficult to do as it were, i.e., the tasks are not in themselves particularly challenging physically or with respect to knowledge or dexterity.
It’s a matter of will in a sense. Also, these kinds of tasks seem to do something akin to or analogous to creating an allergic reaction: they make my mind itch horribly, and itching is, of course, a kind of pain, and my mind only has the reserves to deal with so much pain at any given time.
I seem able to regenerate less and less of that reserve each day‒either that or just my reserves are constantly being depleted at a rate faster than they can recover and so there are no “reserves”, just a base rate process that is in the net negative on average every day, and which will eventually run out and that will be that.
I don’t know what will happen then. I’m honestly surprised that it hasn’t happened already. Maybe it has. Maybe this is me without any actual capacity to deal with anything other than those things which are more painful for me not to do. Hmm. That’s a vaguely interesting thought.
Whatever the best description is, I am very worn out. More and more‒or so it seems right now‒I have no sense of any future for me. I can’t even readily imagine my own future; I can’t see how a future can possibly happen that entails anything but quietly catastrophic dissolution. And, of course, my pain doesn’t help my mood disorder(s) and my mood disorder doesn’t help it. It’s another one of those cycles that has a vicious streak a mile wide.
Whenever I mention a vicious cycle, part of me nearly always thinks of the words “viscous cycle”, and I think vaguely about what might constitute a viscous cycle. If any of you have any amusing thoughts about that, I would be delighted to hear them. I could use a bit of a laugh today.
I’m really worn out, and it’s only Monday. I don’t know why I bother. I mean, I could give causal explanations, of course‒all things that happen in the ordinary world have causes‒and my descriptions would probably be fairly accurate and correct, though probably incomplete. But as for reasons, that’s another matter. Coming up with those is more difficult, and some of them are quite tortured.
In Man’s Search for Meaning, the author and psychologist Viktor Frankl points out the notion, not original to him but poignantly and painfully rediscovered by him in a profoundly visceral way in the concentration camps of Nazi Germany, that a person can endure nearly anything if they have a purpose, a reason, a meaning. But such meaning is not always there to be found, and I don’t want to try to embrace a false one; and though it is possible for people to make meaning for themselves, my knack for that has worsened over time.
Again, the pain wears away so many things, as it has also stripped away so many people and so much property and so many accomplishments in my life. I think I would be quite a different person, or at least there would be a real difference in balance in my personality, if I could be free of anything but more ordinary pain.
I wouldn’t even complain about being “comfortably numb”. I know pain is biologically important, of course, but mine has gone well into the region of diminishing marginal returns, then rounded into negative marginal returns, and its net value crossed the x-axis downward a long time ago. It might be nice to experience at least a brief period of having pathologically too little pain. Even if it would make me vulnerable to injury and illness, I wouldn’t mind much. It’s not as though I don’t crash up against illness and injury (in some sense) every day anyway.
Oh, what’s the point? I’m sorry to bore you all with this nonsense. I really should just call it quits, because this is at least as pointless as anything else I do, and that’s saying a lot. It almost certainly does not do the world any net good, and I’m not sure whether it does me any good.
I guess I’ll keep doing it until it becomes more painful to do it than not to do it. Or until I die, I guess.
*I sometimes like to indulge a clever paradoxical descriptive trick I picked up from Piers Anthony by saying something like “each leg hurt worse than the other one”.


