I’m starting this blog post on Sunday evening, which is obviously not when I usually write my blog posts. I’m writing it on my phone, because I didn’t bring the mini laptop with me when I left work early on Thursday, and though I could use my full-size laptop, I have no desire to bring it along with me tomorrow. I tentatively plan to walk to the train in the morning. I’ve given up on the boots; I think they do exacerbate my back pain. It’s very sad, because I like them, but there’s not much that can be done about that.
I still have a bit of a low-grade fever this evening, but that’s okay. I’m not particularly interested in trying to protect my health. I’ve been here in my room‒with some outings to the store of course‒since Thursday evening. I’m not very good company, not even for myself, I’m afraid.
It’s rather amusing; I have recently gotten suggestions for videos on YouTube about dealing with trauma from being in relationships with someone with Narcissistic Personality Disorder, and probably also because I liked a video by a self proclaimed NPD person who did a good video about the Doctor, especially the 12th Doctor, as an example of someone with autistic characteristics.
Anyway, I don’t think I’ve been in any relationships with anyone with NPD, and I certainly don’t have anything akin to NPD myself. Quite the contrary. When I was younger, I used to sort of pretend to be an egotist and to have a huge self-image and I (jokingly) pretended to think I was great and wonderful. I’m pretty sure no one who knew me really took me seriously. I’ve certainly never acted like a real narcissist or psychopath or anything, but there have been times when I envied them their self-love. I’ve even tried‒especially when I was in prison‒to do auto-suggestion with a mantra saying, “I love my life and I love myself.”
After a while, though, I couldn’t even think the words in my head, not while trying to mean them, not while trying to believe them. It feels like telling a foul and terrible lie. I am often amused by people and literature and the like that speak of the (supposedly) ubiquitous sin of self-love.
I don’t think I have ever loved myself, not in my entire life. Not in my oldest memories do I have any sense of feeling that I liked or loved myself. It almost feels like a category error. I never thought of myself as the kind of entity or being or concept such as that to which love might pertain. I don’t think of myself as some identity, really. Who am I? I’m just the specific being that is asking that question, that’s all, whatever that is.
I’m a weird, complex four-dimensional braid in spacetime, comprised of the swirling patterns of all the particles that come together and form this long time-space tornado, bits coming into it and going out of it, everywhere, all the time, the pattern changing as one moves from past toward future, but only gradually. And the overall pattern is continuous, and presumably will last for a bit longer before it can no longer be self-sustaining, and then it will fray and scatter and dissolve, the former bits going to be temporary parts of various other spacetime braids.
L’dor v’dor. Amayn.
I certainly feel continuous with the kid crying in bed with his leg aches when he was little, and who always kind of was watching everything from outside. Don’t get me wrong, I’ve had a good upbringing and a loving family. I had good friends in school, and we did fun and interesting things together. And I loved learning things, and I still do love that. But I’ve always been weird, I know that.
I’ve felt…well, I wouldn’t say I felt different because it wasn’t really about any comparison. Again, it feels almost like a category error. I recently coined a term unsane as a contrast to the term “insane”, to mean something, someone, to whom the very concept of sanity doesn’t really apply. I’ve often sort of thrown that (in my head) as an epithet at the deeds and behaviors of so many people and things around out there in the world. But maybe it really applies to me.
I feel like maybe I’ve always been at right angles to every dimension of all the people around me. But I don’t think I’ve ever loved myself, not even for a moment, though there are plenty of other people and things I love.
I think the person I’m most like, in raw aspects, is my Dad. I had the advantage of being the youngest of three children, and so had support and people I could watch to see how things were done (and sometimes to see what not to do, what sorts of things didn’t tend to work). My Dad was the eldest child in his family, so I guess he had to pick up a lot of things on his own. But to his credit (and to hers) my Mom was with my Dad from when they were married until the day he died.
But he was often the one who in many ways made sense to me, even when I was really mad at him. He was the only one who ever wanted to spend as much time at an exhibit in a museum or a zoo as I do. Everyone else always moves along way too fast. But somehow it’s not as much fun to see such things alone.
I don’t know that for certain, actually. I don’t think I’ve ever tried to go to a museum or library by myself. The closest I’ve come is going to a bookstore by myself, and even that is just blah. When I’m by myself, I have no will to get out and do much of anything at all. I don’t do things for myself. I have no desire to do things for myself. I wish I didn’t have to obey the urge to eat or drink or breathe for myself. It’s all quite boring. I don’t even like to look at myself in the mirror*.
I don’t know why I’m writing this. It’s just what this entity does at this point in spacetime, because of the various internal and external interactions among the various forces and “particles” in this particular spacetime weather pattern. Why does that eddy in that river swirl about in that particular way at that point in a stream? Because of physics. There’s nothing deeper as far as I know.
That doesn’t mean I think it’s simple. It’s ridiculously complex. No system‒as I think I’ve said before‒can ever be complex enough to understand itself completely, for that would require an infinite expansion of complexity.
Anyway, this is already long enough for a full blog post. If this is not the last paragraph**, it will mean that I’ve added something tomorrow morning. I don’t know whether that will happen, but if you’re reading this, you will know the answer, but it’s further down the braid than where I am now. I’m planning to walk to the train in the morning. If I get hit by a car (or a bus or a truck, I’m not picky), or if I have a heart attack or a stroke, or if I’m sicker than I feel and collapse because of it‒none of which would break my heart, except perhaps literally‒I’m unlikely to add to it. Maybe I’ll put this up on WordPress and set it to auto-post in the morning. That way it will go up whether I’m alive or dead or something in between, and some mystery will remain. I guess you all will see.
[Addendum: I made it to the train station, and I did walk. Better luck next time.]
*Though, curiously, I find listening to my own songs and covers relaxing. Damned if I know why.
**Not counting footnotes.

Pingback: Numbers and trains and colicky pains, those are of what this blog post is made – Robert Elessar