Hello and good morning. It’s Thursday, and for the first time in three weeks, I’m writing a Thursday style blog post. You can all start breathing again.
Yesterday’s blog post was kind of weird, wasn’t it? I’m not even completely sure what I wrote. I certainly haven’t reread it since editing it before finally posting it, but I feel I said a lot of strange things, and wrote about things I don’t know if I’ve ever talked about with anyone before. Maybe I have. I don’t think there was anything particularly shocking except that it was weird for me to say some of them. Also, I feel it was more erratic and bizarre even than my usual posts.
It’s now the last day of November in 2023 (AD or CE). That’s mildly momentous, or at minimum a mediocre milestone. There shall be no recurrence of the month of November in 2023 (AD or CE) in any of our lives again, unless the ways we “define” the terms are changed. Even if we had a time machine to come back to this day, we would not experience a new November in 2023 (AD or CE) if we were to return to it; we would be re-experiencing the same one, albeit from some different perspective.
I don’t know if returning to the same month would initiate some new Everettian branch of the universe, as in my short story Penal Colony, or if it would instead be some manner of closed, time-like loop in spacetime, which always happens exactly the same way—since it only actually exists in one instantiation—even if you were to experience it more than once. It might be like coming to a crossroad, going through the light, looping around a “cloverleaf” in the road, and coming back to the crossroad in the perpendicular direction, then going on forward. There’s only one route; it just happens to cross itself.
And, of course, if you did a self-Oedipus and somehow killed yourself at the crossroad, its not as though you would be changing your future in any sense; that would “always” simply have been the way you died. So, 12 Monkeys would be much more like the nature of such reality than, say, Back to the Future or Time Cop or that newer time travel movie with Bruce Willis that I haven’t seen.
I don’t know quite how I got on that subject. My mind meanders morosely (and occasionally merrily), and I don’t necessarily know where it’s going. As I noted above, sometimes I don’t even know where it’s been.
That’s why I never eat off of it, if I can help it.
One thing I’ve tentatively concluded after my thoughts from yesterday, though, is that I really am not capable of managing life in the human world. I don’t think I ever have been; other people have helped me out in the past, and I have no such other people available now.
I have skills and tenacity and intelligence enough to survive for a time, and to create an illusion of “getting by” that’s convincing enough for people who aren’t really part of my life—which is everyone, these days—but everything is falling apart, and I don’t know how to maintain it, nor do I have the will and the wherewithal to do so.
You might as well ask a moth to maintain a termite mound. Or even just ask an ant—maybe that’s a better comparison. An ant could sort of get the idea of a termite mound, and if it’s already been built, the ant could sort of help maintain it to some degree for a bit. But really, it’s not where the ant belongs, it’s not the lifestyle to which it is adapted.
Ask a human to try to live the life of an ostrich, among ostriches. The human might put on an interesting show for a bit, and since humans are smarter than ostriches, the human might even succeed at things the ostriches couldn’t from time to time, but if the human is committed to living and behaving like an ostrich—if there are only ostriches anywhere to be found in that human’s environment—that human is inevitably, eventually going to fail catastrophically. It may be a slow catastrophe. Maybe it’s nothing anyone would make into and share as a video on YouTube or Instagram or TikTok. But it would still be a catastrophe. It would not be pleasant to experience.
Drawing closer to home, it would be hard enough for, say, a chimpanzee to try to live with and as orangutans or vice versa. Even chimpanzees and bonobos—as closely related as primates get one to another—would probably not be able to thrive if one were placed within the other’s society. I would guess that a bonobo would probably be abused and die before too long in the company of chimpanzees (who are notorious assholes) but a displaced chimpanzee would probably have just as confusing and frightening a time, if more subtle, trying to blend in with bonobos. It would have a few slight advantages in strength and size, on average, and it might even be able to learn to try to fit in and make its way. But it would be living a lifestyle subtly but profoundly different than the one to which it is adapted.
Anyway, that’s all a bit tangential and weird. I don’t think I’m making myself very clear, and for that I apologize. I just realize more and more that I don’t think I’m going to survive much longer, even if I were to find the motivation and desire to do so. It’s a slow crash and burn, perhaps, but I think I really am crashing and burning. And I don’t think that there was ever a chance for anything otherwise to happen, with me trying to live among and adapt to the world of humans—or normal humans, or “neurotypical” humans, if you prefer those metaphors. So, what should I do? I don’t know.
In the meantime, though, I hope you all are having and have had and will continue to have or (if that’s the best for which I can hope) that you begin to have a very good day and week and a very good new month starting tomorrow and so on.
TTFN

