It’s Tuesday morning.
It’s odd how a night can seem to last for a thousand years, and yet, nevertheless, the morning can come far too soon. That’s the situation in which I find myself, today. It’s nothing particularly new, but it has been a night that’s tending toward the bad tail of the bell curve, by which I mean, it was worse than most of my nights.
I keep wanting to write some form of the present tense, as in “it is” a worse night than most, because there has been no real boundary between last night and now. My back and leg pain has been more or less continuous, and though my consciousness has been waxing and waning, there has been no real rest.
There’s a rather famous philosophical notion that, as far as one knows, after one has gone to sleep, when one wakes up, one might have died and been replaced during the night, and one could be a completely new being in the morning, with just some implanted memories from the person who came before. Of course, this could also be true in any given waking moment, since all we know of our personal past is our memories of it, but there’s a definite feeling of continuity during a given day—sometimes there’s too much continuity—that is interrupted when we have a true night’s sleep.
Well, I definitely feel a rather strong continuity now with yesterday; I have no sense of having been significantly unconscious overnight, though I know I wasn’t fully conscious the whole time. And now I have to go to work, where my only regular, pseudo-social interaction happens, but which also tends to make me stressed much more than it makes me feel good, mainly because of noise and irregular interruptions.
There are exceptions, of course. There are many people at the office whom I like, and even one or two with whom I can have enjoyable conversations, at least about some things, though not about very much. I know, it’s my own fault that I have no friends anymore. And by “fault” I mean, I know that I am faulty. I’m a bad product, a lemon. Any sensible consumer protection agency probably would have demanded I be recalled to the factory if there were such a thing. I was born with both cardiac and (apparently) neurological defects. These things should have been covered under the warranty.
I know, I know, melodrama, right? It’s curious that I express myself so over-much here in this blog. Apparently, in person, I’m rather wooden, and don’t smile very much—though I get the impression that when I talk about music I like or about math or science or things of that nature, I light up a bit. Certainly, I get more energetic. And then people’s faces soon tend to glaze over and look either confused or bored or whatever.
I used to wake up with leg aches a lot when I was little. I don’t know what the cause was, really; they used to think they were “growing pains” or something along those lines. I just know they hurt an awful lot, and they often woke me up. When I started having my “new” onset of pain—it turns out almost certainly to have been related to a back injury—as an adult, I thought that it was some kind of recrudescence of the problem I had as a kid.
I underwent all sorts of tests to see if there was a neurological/myological problem of chronic, perhaps congenital, nature. I even went through electromyography, which is a lot like getting a protracted series of intramuscular injections in which the needle is just left in the large muscle group and then you’re told to flex the muscle while it’s in there. I don’t recommend it as something fun to do, even if you think you’re something of a masochist, which I am not.
Anyway, they didn’t find anything like that, at least nothing obvious, and I eventually learned I had a seriously ruptured/torn L5-S1 disc, and ultimately had surgery on it. To be fair, the surgery reduced my pain, but it clearly has not eliminated it.
Sorry, I know this is all boring and repetitive. Such is life, though, isn’t it? It’s boring and repetitive. At least, it’s repetitive. I guess when one has family and friends and loved ones, people with whom one can spend time doing nothing in particular in each other’s company, the repetitive doesn’t feel boring. I’ve been in that situation before, and for long periods of time. I had a good, close family, with good parents, brother, sister, cousins, uncles, aunts, grandparents, and so on. I had friends growing up, in school, and in college. I was married for fifteen years, and that wasn’t boring, certainly. I had friends in med school and residency, and I had my kids. That was all truly great and wonderful.
I am now tired and worn down, and quite alone/lonely, but I don’t necessarily want to want to die, though I often do feel that I want to die. I want to want to live, which is not quite the same things as wanting to live, unfortunately. I need help.
I feel like the narrator of the song Hey, you, asking if people can feel him, if they can touch him, if they would help him to carry the stone. But, of course, it was only fantasy, as the song goes on to note. The wall was too high, and no matter how he tried, he could not break free. And so on (see above).
Pink Floyd does seem to resonate for me, and it has since I first started listening to them, especially their big four albums, Dark Side of the Moon, Wish You Were Here, Animals, and of course, The Wall. I’m clearly not alone in this, which is actually somewhat ironic. Isn’t it?
Oh, by the way, based on the way I save my blog posts in the computer, I’ve just realized that the day of the week for the current date is one day later than it was last year. In other words, July 18th (today) is on a Tuesday this year and was on a Monday last year. This means that every seven years it should come around to the same day, except that leap years make the cycle irregular.
It will be five or six years instead of seven between returns to a given day, depending on whether there is only one leap year embedded in the course or if there are two. There can’t be more than two, because leap years are every four years, but there are only seven days in a week. I guess that could mean, though, that it could be more than seven years before a return to the same day, if the year when one would be returning to it is a leap year, and then that day might be skipped over again, leading to a longer course of time between. I could try to work out the potential maximum length of time between when one date falls on one day of the week next time, but I’m already getting bored of this. In any case, in the long run, it ought to be on average that the date falls on the same day of the week one out of every seven years.
Except February 29th, of course. There are more than seven years between any repeated day for February 29th.
Anyway, I’m going to go. I’m in so much pain, despite what meds I have available, that I think I’ll call a Lyft or something to get to the train station. I hate doing that, but I’m just worn out. Also, it’s not as though I’m saving money for some possible, imagined future retirement; I don’t see how it’s possible that I have a future of significance.
I would like to have a future. I would like someone, somewhere, to find me some kind of answers or help or something. But that’s pretty unreasonable to ask of other people, all of whom have their own problems and pains and troubles.
I guess the show must go on, at least for now. Have a good day, if you can.
