Hi there, all. It’s Tuesday morning, not Monday; I didn’t write a blog post yesterday. That was not because the office took yesterday off—they worked until 4pm, as it turns out—but because I was at the house fighting a respiratory virus. It’s not a severe one—I had a bit of a low grade fever at first, but it rapidly went away*, and I just felt physically crummy, with a dry, scratchy throat and runny/stuffy nose and the like.
I’m now going in to the office, though the boss suggested that I take a couple of days off. However, if I do take a couple of days off, then when I go back, which would be tomorrow at the latest, there would be so much on which to catch up that it would be overwhelming. Life is overwhelming enough for me nowadays. I don’t need to make things worse.
So, obviously, I’m still feeling physically a bit under the weather**, but I’m going to wear a mask today, and I have a batch of spares with me, in case the first one gets unusably compromised. I actually don’t mind wearing respiratory masks. Quite apart from having needed to wear them sometimes when I was a practicing doctor, I also like to cover and hide my face. I don’t like my face very much. I can entirely sympathize with Doctor Doom for not wanting to show his. I don’t like how I look, and I don’t like who I am.
Weirdly enough, as I think I’ve noted before, my self-hatred doesn’t make me hate things that I’ve made or created. I rather often reread my own books—recently I reread both Mark Red and Son of Man—and I listen to songs I’ve done, either covers or originals. I probably comprise almost the complete numbers of those who have “viewed” my videos on YouTube. I even like to look at my various drawings and the like, which I scanned long ago and saved to Google Drive, thankfully, so they weren’t completely lost along with everything I owned back when I was arrested and sent away for trying to treat people with chronic pain, but naively not recognizing the other things that were happening at the time.
I guess this is a kind of living proof that I never have done my “artwork” (if you will) to please other people—though I’m delighted when other people like my stuff, and I would be more delighted still if more people did—but have done it because it was what I liked. I think, if there’s a story that I would like to read, but no one seems to have written it, I should write it myself.
Of course, if someone has to make a living by their arts or crafts, then they have to cater at least somewhat to other people’s tastes over their own, but I think most creative things happen because the creator just wants to create something, at some level. Then again, I can’t exactly extrapolate the way I feel and think about things to other people—I’m thoroughly weird. I’m not really even the same species as people around me. At least, that’s the way it feels to me a lot of the time.
So, the company of most humans is always a bit uncomfortable, though that certainly varies depending on the human, and I also don’t find my own company particularly pleasant. I mean, it’s often the best option I have available, for what that’s worth—just to be by myself—and I certainly prefer the quiet of solitude to the chaos of whole flanges of naked house apes ooking and shrieking and throwing their feces at each other***.
Sorry. I don’t mean to be so curmudgeonly. I’m just tired, and I’m sick, and I’m sick and tired of most everything. It would be nice if I had the energy and enthusiasm to want to play music—especially to write music—and to write new fiction and all that. Or to draw, for that matter. But there’s only so much I can do for what is, essentially, an audience of one, especially when that one is not someone I like.
Yesterday, I saw the thumbnail of a YouTube video that was offered up to me by the algorithm, Why Do Depressed People Have Low Self-esteem? The specific wording might not be exact, but that was basically the title. I didn’t watch it, because part of me just thought, “Is that a joke?” I mean, that’s part of what depression is, surely. But I’m sure there’s more to the story than that, and I believe I marked it as a “watch later” video, but it is strange.
I am trying not to be too dismissive, though. The YouTube algorithm has been useful at times for pointing me toward knowledge that I wouldn’t otherwise have had. I would never have really thought about autism spectrum disorder—beyond the fact that my character, Michael Green, in Unanimity thought he might be on the spectrum—if YouTube hadn’t suggested several related videos to me.
It is interesting how such thoughtless algorithms can produce interesting insights—thoughtless in that they aren’t actually thinking, themselves, but are merely following a general pathway, like elementary particles obeying local laws of physics, and thereby given rise, in the end, to all the immense complexity of macroscopic reality.
I wish I had someone in my actual life with whom I could talk about such things, or similar subjects, but instead, I’m here on my blog, writing about it—still mainly for an audience of one, though there are other people who read it, of course, and I thank and appreciate those people—you are one of them, if you are reading this. Thank you!
But there is no real endpoint, no point at all, to what I do from day to day, and I have no plans or goals or expectations. It’s merely continuance, like an automated machine left behind and running in a world in which all living things have died. The machine cranks away, mindlessly, pointlessly, no longer benefiting anyone at all, and certainly not benefiting itself. It just keeps going until, finally, it will catastrophically break down, and there will be no one around to repair it, let alone to maintain it, or to notice that it has failed.
I can already hear the belts squeaking and the gears grinding. The whole thing is vibrating in a way that shouldn’t be happening if it were functioning properly. I sometimes even think I can smell smoke coming from friction in the mechanism, but that may merely be wishful thinking.
Oh, well. Enough for today. If you’re still with me at this point, I doubly thank you, yet again. And I apologize. I wish I had given you some uplifting and empowering thoughts. Those, however, do not seem to be my strengths. Have a good day.
*Though, given the amount of NSAIDs and acetaminophen and whatnot that I take, fevers tend to be suppressed. That’s why, when I got COVID and my temperature went nearly to 102 F, I knew I was pretty darn sick.
**Come to think of it, it’s rare that I’m ever “over the weather”. The last time I flew in a plane was more than twenty years ago. I don’t think I’ve flown since before 9-11-2001.
***This is figuratively speaking, of course. Usually.

Hope you are well
Thank you. Better than yesterday, at least.