Here I am at the train station, to which I arrived quite a bit later than I ought to have done, because Uber switched drivers on me twice, meaning I was assigned to 3 different people, resetting the waiting clock each time. Then the last driver didn’t follow the route recommended by his own company’s app, apparently thinking that taking the interstate would be faster. Long experience with the area leaves me with the knowledge that the route that the app recommended really is the fastest route, especially at this time of day. I was very tempted to give the driver a low tip and a low rating, but since I recognized that some of my animosity is due to matters outside his control‒specifically, the changed drivers‒I would not let him bear the brunt of the consequences.
I need to quit taking Uber. I’ve curtailed my morning walk for now‒working on a different form of exercise‒because it’s been causing my left knee to act up with greater and greater severity. But taking the bus to the other train station adds nearly an hour to my commute, or at least it makes me get to the office an hour later. It’s very frustrating.
Obviously, I’m not writing any fiction today. I’m not really doing much of anything that matters at all to me today (except, perhaps to a small extent, this blog). I don’t think I’ll write fiction or play guitar or sing or study any interesting subject today. By yesterday already, I was too drained and distracted to be able to consider focusing on studying any mathematics or physics or whatever, even just by watching videos. Ear plugs and hearing protectors don’t help noticeably.
Today, I think I’m going to use double ear plugs in each ear. They’re the little squishy, compressible, throw-away earplugs, so they can be rolled down to small enough size to insert even when doubled, I’ll wager. I’m not terribly fond of having crap stuck in my ear canals, but it’s better than being exposed to all the loud voices and noises. At least, I suspect it is.
You’re probably wondering why I keep going to the office and back and all that. It’s a fair question, but the answer is neither profound nor very interesting: it’s just all I have. I can’t see myself trying to find a different job. At least I know the people at this job, and I even like most of them. And I’m at least used to the place where I live. It’s decent.
I am frustrated about the fiction writing thing, though. I haven’t even bothered taking the laptop computer back with me at the end of the day so far this week. I know I’m not going to use it.
I sometimes wish I’d never started doing this daily blog, but it seems I don’t want not to do it. It’s my pathetic little scent-marking on the world, I guess, though it’s probably not very interesting most of the time. For instance, I doubt many people enjoyed my weird asides about cosmology yesterday.
It’s hard to remember writing much of Son of Man on my tiny old smartphone back in the day, but I know I did. I think I didn’t do indenting, but instead just did double line breaks for paragraphs and then corrected the layout after the draft was done. I suppose, in principle, I could do that here also, but I fiddled with it last week at one point using the Word mobile app, and found it very unsatisfying.
Of course, I did not use Word to write the initial part of Son of Man. I used the notepad function on my smartphone at the time, which is reasonably impressive, even to me. But it would seem a shame not to use my laptop computer, now that I have it. I suppose I could bring it with me and write fiction in the morning before even leaving the house, and take the southbound bus to catch the northbound train‒that bus route doesn’t begin until far too late for the early trains. I hate the idea of arriving so late, though, especially since I’m awake anyway in the very early morning, no matter how much trouble I have falling and staying asleep.
I really hate my life, to be honest. I’m sure you picked that up by now; it’s not as though I’m being particularly subtle. I’m just so tired. I’ve lost almost everything that ever mattered to me. What is it Kipling wrote, “If you can bear to hear the truths you’ve spoken / twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools / or watch the things you gave your life to, broken / and stoop build ’em up with worn-out tools…”?
If so, then…well, you’re probably just a stubborn idiot, I don’t know. Don’t get me wrong, it’s a nice poem, very stirring and well-written, and obviously quite memorable. But at the end, your big reward for all the listed attributes is, “you’ll be a man, my son”. That’s it? You get to be “a man” according to the criteria set by Rudyard Kipling? Well, bully for you, I guess. I don’t even feel human, let alone that I’m a man according to a nineteenth century author and poet’s* judgment. I frankly feel dishonest when I have to check the Captcha box that says I’m not a robot, for crying out loud.
Anyway, that’s enough of my shit for today. Unless we’re all lucky and something kills me or severely injures me between now and then, I guess I’ll write another blog post tomorrow, and I’ll probably be no closer to solving my difficulty with fiction writing than I am today.
I hope you’re all doing as well as you can do.
*He was a good one, though. Gunga Din, The Jungle Book, all that kind of stuff was not half bad.
