Well, it’s Wednesday morning again, not even five o’clock yet, and here I am, sitting on a piano bench, writing my daily blog post before leaving the house to head to the office. I’m not heading there directly, of course. It’s more than thirty miles away, which would be a ten or eleven hour walk, even if I walked without a single moment’s rest, which is not going to happen. Then, of course, by the time I got there, there would only be a few hours before I had to head back.
I suppose it would be great physical training, apart from the fact that walking 64 miles within the course of a single day would probably exhaust me, and almost certainly give me horrible blisters. I’d probably lose weight, though—much of it water weight, but at least some of it fat.
Anyway, that’s all nonsense; I don’t know why I started talking about that.
I got a few hours’ sleep last night at least—not interrupted, and no more than two between awakenings, for a total of maybe four hours. Still, it was better than the night before. It’s times like these I can sympathize with Michael Jackson over his use of Propofol to get to sleep, even though it’s actually not conducive to a restful, beneficial slumber. I can also envy him for what Propofol did to him and how he no doubt went on his way: while deeply unconscious.
I was so tired and worn out yesterday at work, but apparently it was not obvious to people. I told the boss that I’d only had twenty minutes of sleep the night before, and that I was seriously tired, but as far as I could tell, there wasn’t any attempt to foreshorten or soften things much, and at the end of the day, we still stayed late because a last minute deal was closing. I got on an earlier train than the night before, but because of the way the buses run, I still didn’t get back to the house more than fifteen minutes earlier than I had Monday night. That’s a bit frustrating.
Many things are frustrating in a vague and fuzzy sense, but right now most things are just plain vague and fuzzy. I’m still seeing illusions of insects and even cats out of the corners of my eyes, though at least when I turn to look, the things don’t persist. This is just the predictive modeling system of the brain getting a bit out of whack because of fatigue, but once my foveae are brought to bear, it corrects its models.
As far as I know, I’m not encountering any full-on, persistent hallucinations. Of course, there could be such hallucinations happening, but they haven’t been revealed to me for what they are. And, of course, since I don’t socialize or spend time with anyone, except at work—and I don’t really interact all that much with the people there except as part of my job—it might be quite some time before anyone pointed out to me that, for instance, something to which I was reacting wasn’t even there.
Of course, in principle, someone telling me I was acting strangely could be the very hallucination itself, but this is an issue of epistemology that goes all the way back to Plato and Descartes and then on up to The Matrix. It doesn’t bother me much, anyway. I never do really assume that I have the full and final picture of things. I’m not prone to delusions, as far as I know, and I dislike dogmatism in any form. I’ve often thought that, perhaps, part of the disorder of depression, or perhaps a situation that makes one prone to it, is an under-powered belief module in the brain. In other words, I think that depressed people are less likely to feel that they are right about things than people who are not prone to depression.
In many cases, I think this failure to believe is a good thing. I dislike dogmatism and unwarranted certainty in pretty much all of its guises and incarnations, from religious fanaticism to braggadocio to those who insult others on social media to just people who arrogantly assume they know the answers and are smarter than the people around them. I think intellectual humility—not to be confused with intellectual timidity—is a surer way to advancement and improvement of human* knowledge and prosperity than is any kind of pseudo-certainty (and nearly all “certainty” is pseudo-certainty) or boldness of conclusions. All progress is change, but not all change is progress. Course correction is essential, and must be near constant, if one wishes to arrive at any destination worth seeking.
I mean, I’m sure it’s fun and ego-syntonic to believe that one is right. But heroin, I’m sure, feels pretty good when one first starts using it. That good feeling doesn’t tend to last, though.
As I’ve said before, I don’t want to believe; I want to be convince by evidence and reasoning. Such conviction is always, in principle, provisional. Of course, some things are so close to certainty that they might as well be complete convictions. I am convinced that 1 + 1 = 2 (barring changes in the meaning of the symbols). I don’t need Russell’s formal logical proof of the fact, though knowing that it’s out there is reassuring. I assign an extremely low credence to the possibility that the above equation is incorrect, far lower than, say, the likelihood of a massive asteroid striking the Earth in south Florida tomorrow, and probably even lower than the likelihood of a phase change of the cosmic vacuum state happening tomorrow. Though if either of those things did happen, particularly the latter, I wouldn’t exist long enough even to say, “Well, I’ll be! Who would’ve thought it?”
I don’t know what I’m really getting at here. I’m really frazzled and confused and tired. I’m still taking the Saint John’s Wort—I think it must be nearly three weeks since I started back, but if you lot recall when I restarted it, feel free to let me know. I can’t be arsed to look back and check myself. But my mind and my mood don’t feel like they are improving.
Anyway, I should get going to head out to the bus stop. If I don’t write my usual blog post tomorrow, it will probably be because I just got sick from the stress and lack of sleep, as I fear I might. But, of course, I do have to go in on Saturday, so unless I get so horribly broken down that I no longer care about inconveniencing people or failing to stick to my commitments, I’ll be writing then, and almost certainly Friday as well. And, let’s be honest, I’ll probably be here tomorrow.
I, after all, do not have access to Propofol or any other similar dangerous but relaxing substance.
*And pseudo-human, replicant, changeling, alien, robot, monster, and any other form of intelligent life.