It’s Tuesday, and though it’s merely a pair of otherwise unrelated homophones, I like to think of ways in which Tuesday might be related to a “two’s” day. So, here we go.
Well, it’s June sixth, the 6th day of the 6th month, so there are two sixes right there. And 6 is an even number, so that’s always a multiple of two. And, indeed, six is the product of the first two prime numbers (2 and 3), which provides extra fun. The year, of course, has 2 twos in it: 2023. However, that second part “23” kind of adds a third 6 to the day, which is a tad irritating, and slightly spoils the symmetry of the date. Oh, well. The world is almost never satisfying.
I’m writing on my smartphone again, today, because I thought yesterday’s writing went okay, and it’s nice to have a continuing break from carrying my laptop. I’m sure that, before too long, I’ll wobble in the other direction like a poorly damped spring, and go back to using the laptop. I guess it doesn’t matter. Nothing matters. Not just “nothing really matters” like in Bohemian Rhapsody, but nothing matters at all. Full stop.
The logic of that conclusion is sort of similar to what I used in my video in which I stated that there is no life in the universe. Of course, if one is splitting hairs, I will be the first to concede that the difference between truly zero life and a tiny, unnoticeably small amount of life is more glaring‒it’s a categorical difference‒than the difference between a tiny amount of life and a significant amount of life‒which is just a difference of degree, not of type. But that’s all in how you look at it; again, “see” my video*.
Life is frustrating, and for me at least, there are very few compensations that counterbalance the frustration anymore. Even the increasing success of the office lately means, for me, more work, with more sales to process and record, more new people coming and going on whom I have to keep records and process payroll, and more chaos in the office because of more different voices and noises, on top of the “music” that’s constantly playing, supposedly so people don’t get distracted by their coworkers’ phone conversations.
But how do they not get utterly distracted simply by the level and incoherence of the noise, the lion’s share of which comes from the effing “music”?
Also, with more and more people, there is always a greater chance that every day someone will have a sale that overflows into lunch time or past the official end of the day. I hate that. I don’t get to “go home for lunch” in any case, since I live more than 30 miles from the office and don’t have a car, so I’m sort of a natural resource, and people take advantage without even thinking about it. But I need my mental breaks, and my break from the noise, and my chance to rest my back.
Also, quite apart from that, I simply hate people not following the clearly promulgated (but lamentably not enforced!) schedule. People come in late, then they stay late, as if it doesn’t even occur to them how their actions might affect other people (which it probably doesn’t). It’s reprehensible.
This issue, or this suite of issues, is not unique to my workplace; it’s horribly common in the human world. But at least in some places there are consequences for people being lax about hours and timing‒there are penalties of one kind or another. The only penalty in our office is my anger and frustration, which I do express, but which is not really seriously backed up by the boss, and so the only potential serious consequence is that, one of these days I’m going just to douse my desk and myself with lighter fluid and set it all on fire. Or else I’ll do something else that’s similarly destructive and self-destructive. Many’s the time I have contemplated smashing my black Strat guitar to bits. And this is just counting yesterday**.
At least when people work late or run late in medical settings, it’s usually because illness and injury (and the treatment thereof) don’t follow schedules; things take as long as they take. Also, I’ve never been in a hospital‒indeed, in any of the various other industries in which I’ve worked‒in which people thought they needed to have constant, loud, background “music” to be able to do their jobs (not counting pit orchestras, in which one makes the “background” music).
It’s pathetic. I don’t endorse it or approve or agree that it’s a valid point or claim that it needs to be there. At worst, it’s a way for people to be able to feel more comfortable saying things they wouldn’t want anyone else to hear, possibly exaggerating the characteristics of what they’re selling‒which is stupid, because customers soon find out the specifics and, if they are not what they were told they were, they can just chargeback. And they do. Often they do it within the same day.
Anyway, sorry about the rants and complaints. Life‒indeed, the simple fact of being alive‒is very stressful to me. I’m sure that I need psychological and/or even medical/psychiatric help, but it’s not readily available, and I’m not capable of proactively seeking it out. Maybe I was better at looking after myself in the past, but I’ve never been very good at it. So I just trudge along, unable simply to stop out of embarrassment and confusion and inertia and simply my tendency to be strongly bound by my routines. One example of which is writing this blog every workday morning.
Ugh. I’m sick of this life and I’m sick of this world. I look forward to the time when, like the protagonist of the Radiohead song Weird Fishes/Arpeggi, I hit the bottom and escape…escape. Yeah.
*Really, you can just listen. The visual is just…video of me talking. People seem to like videos of people talking; there are 8 trillion and two of them uploaded to YouTube on any given day, but most throw in little pop-up graphics to give the viewer some distraction from simply watching a person talking. I guess that’s analogous to slides in a lecture, or more recently, PowerPoint stuff. It is weird how people learn, if they learn, and I don’t exclude myself. The vast majority of the material in my college and med school notebooks were elaborate doodles and drawings I made during lectures. I wish I still had my old notebooks. Some of the drawings weren’t bad. Most were grim and dark (since I was the one who drew them) but a few were funny. For instance, during a lecture in which we were being taught about the lactiferous ducts, I drew a picture of a lactiferous duck‒imagine a cartoon waterfowl equivalent of a Saint Bernard rescue dog, but with a bottle of milk around its neck rather than a cask of booze. It made my friend, who was sitting next to me, chuckle.
**That’s jokey, of course, but it’s also true. I often feel like I want to hurt or damage something, but I don’t have the right to hurt or damage other people (generally speaking), and anyway, I hate myself most of all, so my inclination is to break my own stuff and hurt myself. And there’s only so much stuff I can break and destroy anymore, so mainly I hurt myself in one way or another.
