Hello and good morning. It’s Thursday, and even though I’ve been writing blog posts nearly all this week so far—since I haven’t been writing fiction—this is now my more “traditional” blog post for the week.
I apologize for not writing fiction yesterday and the day before. I’ve been feeling terrible and horrible and no good and very bad and all that other stuff. My coworker is still out, though he’ll probably be back sometime today, or possibly tomorrow at the latest, and anyway, that’s not the main problem. The main problem is that I have been just terribly tense and anxious and have had terrible nights’ sleep even for me, despite trying to sedate myself and optimize my bedtime habits and so on.
Last night I got almost six hours of sleep, which for me is quite good, though it doesn’t feel close to enough. It would be one thing if I slept six hours and awoke feeling refreshed and healthy; then I would know that I had gotten enough sleep, that six hours was just how much sleep my body needed.
Alas, things are not that simple. My body’s optimal sleep time is probably pretty typical at around eight hours, but that particular “pressure” in the system is countered by whatever the various sources are of tension and stress and pain and depression. When the sleep need gets too strong, it overpowers those other vectors, but as soon as it dips below some threshold, those other vectors dominate enough to push me into unpleasant wakefulness again.
I can literally remember the last time I got a good night’s sleep; I’ve probably mentioned it here, before. I don’t know the specific date, but it was in the mid-1990s*. (I’m being completely serious about this—as serious as a bloodcurdling scream for help.)
Last night, I walked about three-fifths of the way back from the train station in the evening—about three miles. It was quite warm out, certainly in the high 80s, so I think I sweated a lot. At least that meant I didn’t need to wake up to use the bathroom! Also, I was physically fatigued enough to rest, and I’d been careful to try to balance my walking so that my left knee wasn’t acting up, which seems to have worked reasonably well for the time being.
I know that’s all very boring. I just don’t have anyone else to whom to talk about these things, so I share them with all of you. Aren’t you lucky? I guess you can always just skim over the boring stuff. I’m not sure how it is that we can tell what’s going to be boring before we literally read it, but people do seem able to do that, and it works. I’ve done it myself.
I apologize for not writing any fiction since Monday morning. I don’t know if any of you were angry at me for that, but I feel that I owe an apology. I guess I really owe an apology for being a big annoyance and a downer, but I don’t know what to do to change those things.
I don’t want to be a blind optimist, of course. I want to understand the world as clearly as I can, as objectively as I can, and as deeply and broadly as I can. Maybe there’s no way to do that without being tense and depressive. The universe is, after all, vast beyond intuitive understanding, and the realms at which fundamental physics applies are tiny and intricate, also beyond ready intuitive understanding, and time is old in the past and so much longer in the future than a person with a finite lifespan can truly take on board.
But I don’t think that must be despair-inducing. I’m much more stressed out by how little humans seem even to contemplate how small they are, both individually and collectively, than I am by my own smallness. As I learn more about how the world really works at deep levels, I don’t feel frightened or overwhelmed by it, like some Lovecraft protagonist who goes mad when confronted with the Great Old Ones or whatever. I feel that I have grown larger—not literally, of course, but the phase space in which my mind exists takes more and more of reality into itself, and it’s really quite cool, if that’s the right word.
I think at least one thing that makes me feel despair is that so few other people seem even to want to understand the greater universe in any depth or breadth. They would much rather imagine that the universe is very small and brief, as long as they are somewhere near the center of it.
But of course, to paraphrase Gandalf, they can shut themselves into their tiny little world, but they cannot shut the universe out. And this in turn invokes not merely the old saw that nature, to be commanded, must be obeyed (for indeed, one cannot do anything but obey nature). But I would say, far more strongly, that nature, to be survived—even to have a chance of being survived—must be understood as well as possible.
If you don’t know the rules of chess, you’re unlikely to be able to win a game. Likewise with any other game, including even simple video games. But those games have rules that humans invented. The rules of nature have to be probed and unlocked and discovered, and they are much more fine-grained and large and complex than any human-made game could be. They must be so, for the entire human world is but a tiny little part of that game, one of the innumerable things it allows to come into being.
Oh, well. What are you going to do?
I guess you’re going to write a blog about it, and in the meantime, try to learn as much about the world as you can, because it is interesting at many levels. And, of course, you can write a bit of fiction, to which I’ll try to return tomorrow morning.
In the meantime, I hope the vast majority of you are getting better rest than I have been getting. I hope you have a very good day. And I hope you have friends and family with whom to spend your finite and precious time.
TTFN
*I remember waking up feeling absolutely refreshed, and though I was too young to think about feeling “ten years younger”, I did feel more alive than I had in some time, almost as if I’d gotten superpowers**. I’ve known people who seem almost addicted to sleep, and if that’s how they tend to feel when they’ve slept, I can hardly blame them.
**Speaking of which, I have a stupid, joke superhero idea that I’ve been too embarrassed to share with anyone in person (I’m sure you’ll understand why): “Bitten by a radioactive wildebeest, Anthony Edward Lopez finds himself with slightly-greater-than-human powers of strength and speed. Deciding to use his new powers to fight crime, he becomes: Gnu-man.”
