I was out sick with some form of enteropathy* yesterday, so I didn’t write a blog post. I frankly haven’t done much of anything that’s in any way productive since Friday, and I’m not sure I did anything productive then. I hope no one was too bereft by not being able to read my writing for three days (ha ha).
I’m now sitting at the train station, waiting for the train to the office (well, it doesn’t actually go to the office, but I think you know what I mean), not looking forward to the fact that I’ll have to do extra catch-up work from both Saturday and yesterday. I really don’t want to have to deal with any of it or with anything at all.
I don’t know why I keep doing anything whatsoever. I can speculate on certain causes, of course‒habit, the evolved drive simply to continue to survive, a dislike for causing inconvenience to other people, all that sort of thing. Also, I guess there is the idiotic hope that maybe, just maybe, I will find some answers, some meaning, or some solutions to at least some of my problems.
Honestly, when I get sick like over Sunday through yesterday, I get the wild hope that maybe I’ll need to be hospitalized, and while in the hospital, I’ll be able to get some help for my psychological issues as well as my physical ones. It’s stupid, I know. I need to stop hoping for anything. Hope is a waste of my time.
Ironically, it’s hope that keeps me writing about the fact that I’m having problems going on, problems dealing with my issues and my loneliness and my depression and insomnia and pain and all that crap. I hope that somehow, by talking about it, I’ll either arrive at some insight or ideas or some semblance of understanding that might lead to some modicum of peace. Or I hope that someone out there in the WordPress world‒perhaps it should be called the WorldPress‒will have some new ideas or insights or some help to offer. Or maybe some old friend of mine will read what I write and will reach out and offer a hand or something. I don’t know what they could do, or what I could do. But anyway, it is hope that keeps me writing, I guess.
But it’s getting old. I’m getting tired of it.
When I don’t just dwell on morosity (I don’t know if that’s a proper word), I write about weird shit, like I did on Friday. I could write about current events, I suppose, but most of those are discouraging and boring. It’s basically about as fun as writing about the interactions of a very large colony of baboons from the baboons’ points of view. Baboons don’t want to admit to themselves that most of their choices and motivations are almost entirely simple primate dominance, mating, and social jockeying behaviors.
Humans really are just baboons with delusions of grandeur, some of which are excusable, many (perhaps most) of which are not. They’re weirdly built and strange to look at, with very rare exceptions. They think their culture and society and civilization were made somehow, deliberately‒by them it sometimes seems they imagine, though that cannot be possible‒when really, it all just sort of happened and continues just to happen, like any weather phenomenon or termite mound. This is nothing of which to be ashamed‒it’s the nature of everything as far as I can see‒I just find the hubris disgusting and inexcusable.
Even nature itself seems just weird and rather twisted and horrifying when I look at it these days. Maybe part of it is that I’m down here in Florida, but when you look closely at the very ad hoc, cobbled together, misery-laden natural world, in which even green plants compete ruthlessly against each other, while insects gnaw the tree trunks, and birds eat the insects and cats eat the birds (when they can) and meanwhile ten thousand other such painful and fear-ridden interactions are taking place in every acre, at all levels, from viruses to bacteria, to yeast, to protozoa, to slime molds and lichen and moss and mold and mushrooms up to grasses and bushes and trees and worms and snails and arthropods and fish and amphibians and reptiles and birds and mammals…everything ultimately just churning away at low entropy energy and converting it into high entropy energy…well, it all seems horrifying and discouraging and very, very dark.
Everything in the world seems alien to me…which I guess must mean that I am alien, since everything else is just there, doing what it does, being what it is, and I’m the one that finds it all daunting and repulsive.
I often bring up the concept of Sisyphus, and it now occurs to me that, maybe, Sisyphus is gradually wearing away the mountain on which he rolls his ever-falling boulder, slowly grinding it down until, finally, it’s level, and the boulder will no longer roll but will stay where Sisyphus puts it, and that will be the state of the universe at very high entropy (I want to say at maximum entropy, but I don’t think there is a maximum overall entropy**).
Of course “maximal” entropy is a state that can go on for a very long time. It’s like the fable (as told by the 12th Doctor) in which the Emperor asks a shepherd boy to tell him the meaning of eternity. The shepherd boy says there is somewhere a mountain of pure diamond. It takes an hour to climb and an hour to go around. Once every hundred years, a tiny bird comes along and sharpens its beak on the diamond mountain. And when, after so many repetitions of that once-a-century sharpening happens that the diamond mountain is finally worn down to nothing…then the first second of eternity will have passed.
Even once the “heat death” of the universe comes to pass‒assuming that is what will come to pass‒and all is a haze of elementary particles, barely above absolute zero in an endlessly expanding but empty spacetime, which will come potentially after more than 10 to the 100th power years, that will only be an infinitesimal instant at the uttermost beginning of the eternity of nothingness.
In that quantum vacuum, even a direction of time will have less meaning than would any possible sense of up, down, left, right, forward, and backward in the heart of one of the intergalactic supervoids, in which not even a single distant star or galaxy could be seen with anything but the strongest telescope on long exposure. To the human eye, in a supervoid, all would be blackness and emptiness in all directions, and in the heat death, that would apply to time as well. With no change, the past and the future are indistinguishable.
Yet, eventually, new universes, or Boltzmann brains, or other esoterica might yet come to be. Eternity is a long time. Or maybe they will be found to have been in what seems to be the future but which is, eventually, the past of some universe with an opposite-pointing “arrow of time”.
Anyway, my point is, the universe is weird and harsh and the hubris of self-important creatures would be laughable if it were not so nauseating.
I don’t think I can do all this much longer. My stop is coming up soon. Have a good day.
*You can look it up.
**There is a maximum amount of entropy that can be fit into any given region of spacetime, and that is the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy of the area of an event horizon of a black hole that would enclose that region, expressed in square Planck lengths. Actually, if memory serves, it’s the logarithm of that surface area (probably the natural logarithm). If you tried to “add more entropy” to such a region, the black hole would grow, and the horizon would just get larger…you wouldn’t get more entropy “within” the given region.
