Hello, good morning, and all that happy horseshit. I’m writing at least the first draft of this post on my phone, even though I have my laptop with me, because I just arrived at the train station after walking the five miles from the house, and the next train will be here in about 5 minutes. It seemed silly to bother getting the laptop out, starting it up, making a file and whatnot, only to close it and put it in my bag, then get it out again on the train, etc. Also, I don’t know how crowded this train is likely to be‒it’s earlier than the one I usually take (kind of impressive considering I’ve already walked 5 miles), and it’s easier to write on one’s phone in close quarters than on a laptop.
Of course, I pity the fool who has to sit next to me this morning, as sweaty as I am*. I have been told by reliable sources that my sweat, in general, doesn’t smell too bad, since my hygiene in general is good. Still, it’s June in Florida, so I’m not just lightly sprinkled with a tiny amount of perspiration. I sprayed myself with one of those “scent bomb” sprays when I got to the station, just to minimize the offensiveness‒unless one finds those scents offensive, of course.
Still, no one has a right not to be offended (not usually, anyway).
That calls to mind my own tendency, that I’ve only recently recognized, that I implicitly don’t consider myself to have a right to be comfortable. It’s a sort of fascinating thing to come to understand. I realize that I really don’t like loud and chaotic noises (of most varieties) or crowds, or certain smells or textures or whatnot, but I’ve never thought that my disliking these things was relevant to my behavior, or at least not primarily relevant. I suppose, all else being equal, if I saw an easy way to avoid things that were irritating, I would do so, but it was never my primary concern.
Evidently, though, effacing one’s aversions and just letting them wash over one can, over time, wear one down. I wonder, sometimes, if this has contributed to my depression and related issues. It’s hard to be sure, but maybe it has something to do with that thing that happened to me on Tuesday, where I just lost all impetus, as I think I put it.
I remember, as early as the beginning of high school, and maybe earlier, that occasionally I would get these episodes of profound emptiness, just a feeling of being all used up, rather similar to what happened to me the other day, but with less physical disability. Sometimes‒often, really, and perhaps most times‒I would also feel like I wanted to die, or at least to be dead in those moments**. Sometimes I would address these attacks by going for long walks, and sometimes it even helped. The episodes were not infrequent, but they didn’t happen as often or last as long back then. I spoke to very few people about them, and was probably not all that clear when I did, since I didn’t have even the faintest understanding of what they were or why they were happening***.
The walk this morning wasn’t really to try to counter such things‒which is just as well, since I would have been disappointed. I just want to try to get into walking longer and longer distances. I meant to walk from the train to the house last night, but the office once again didn’t finish in time for me to be able to do so and get back at a reasonable hour. Don’t get me wrong, almost everyone else was gone. But I can’t leave until the last person is done, whether at the end of the day or during lunch. So, other people only stay late occasionally, whereas I stay as late as the latest person on any given day. I open the office, too. But the prospect of doing some different job, meeting new people, learning new duties, perhaps going someplace different and moving my stuff, is frankly horrifying. I can’t see any point in finding a different job. If I leave this one, I think it will be to leave the world.
I would like to be able just to walk and walk and see what happens, if my body can be conditioned to tolerate it. Maybe I could achieve something worthwhile, call attention to something important, and perhaps achieve some manner of spiritual insight. Otherwise, I’d be just as happy (so to speak) to walk until it kills me. In fact, to keep myself committed to walking this morning, I reminded myself, “I’m trying to hurt myself, so it’s fine if I’m uncomfortable or in pain while doing it.” It’s the pain which sometimes follows that’s most annoying, but at least I seem to have avoided any serious recurrence of blisters so far.
We’ll see what happens. Maybe, if I can arrange it, someday I’ll just wander off, and no one will ever see me or hear from me again. That wouldn’t be so bad.
In the meantime, I’ll probably be back writing a post tomorrow, but not on Saturday. I hope you all, at least, have a good day.
TTFN

*It turns out that’s no one; this train isn’t very crowded at all, despite the apparently large number of people at the station. Curious.
**Do you get the distinction? Dying is a process, an event, one that, by nature, for good, sound, biological reasons, usually involves pain and fear‒it’s the potential energy wall of the metaphorical chemical or physical reaction‒whereas being dead is just a state, or a lack of states, perhaps…the equilibrium of the completed chemical reaction. It’s a state essentially identical to the one before we were ever conceived. Permanent oblivion can be intimidating and perhaps even impossible truly to contemplate, but the painful processes leading to it are often the real impediment to the transition.
***Heck, when I started having migraines, I had no idea what they were, and I didn’t know, until I was in medical school, that my horrible, queasy, light-phobia-inducing headaches, presaged by a growing patch of twinkling light in my eyes that didn’t go away when I closed them, were migraines, and indeed were what are called “classic” migraines. Thankfully, those don’t happen all that often now.
