I’m writing this on my mini laptop computer, because I have a new backpack (the old one was really starting to fail, and has been for quite some time—I can relate, and I wish I could replace myself so easily) and it does a better job with the weight, however minor, of the little computer than the old one did. Also, I just didn’t feel like dealing with the stupid little engine of distraction that is the “smartphone” today.
Ugh, it’s so stupidly muggy already here in south Florida at a quarter to five in the morning that the sweat around my eyes is fogging up my reading glasses while I just sit here and try to type. Why do people live here?
Okay, well, I know why I live here, and it was because I was trying to accommodate others in the past—people I love, not just anyone—and so I was willing to go with their flow and go away from anywhere where I had long-term connections and such like. So, I came here to America’s syphilitic dong, which harbors, or has harbored, such parasitic animalcules as Donald Trump, Pam Bondi, Dickless Scott, Michael McAuliffe, Ron DeSantis, and who knows how many others. What a shit hole.
Mind you, the neighborhood in which I currently live is quite pleasant in many ways, though I cannot consider it home. It’s extremely multi-ethnic and very community spirited, at least as far as I can see. People keep out of each other’s business, they take care of their stuff, they take out their garbage, they mow their lawns, all that. And the houses, though they and the yards tend to be quite small, were clearly built in a time when it was considered normal to construct dwellings that more or less laugh at hurricanes. Full cinder-block walls on smallish scales make for structures that do not readily move in response to anything but a direct-hit nuclear attack.
I’m really exhausted, and it’s only just the beginning of the day. I’ve been exhausted for so long now that I can’t readily remember a time when I did not feel exhausted. I can remember that I have experienced times in the past when I was not exhausted, but I don’t remember what it feels like. So often, it seems that I surely cannot endure much longer, that I surely must collapse at any moment, that I must just crumble to the ground, unconscious.
But biology is my enemy here. Living organisms are selected to be prone to continue, since there’s very little natural selection based benefit in being able to choose to shut down at will. Any being with such a capacity would be less likely to leave behind offspring than those whose bodies simply continued until there was no way for them to do so, or until something else killed them.
I hate it here. And I don’t mean just where I am right now, though it does apply. I hate it in south Florida, I hate it in America (a shocking and new realization to me), I hate it on Earth, I hate being in this stupid universe. I cannot say that I hate everything about it, of course. I love my children, I love my sister and brother, and I even have a few distant friends who matter to me. But for the most part—the overwhelmingly “most” part—things here are nauseatingly pathetic.
I don’t just mean humans, by the way. I’m not one of those idiots who romanticizes animals as innocent and pure and lovely, imagining that they would live in harmony with each other if not for humans. That’s puerile nonsense. Anyone who thinks that is mistaken and/or delusional. This, to me, is the most annoying flaw in The Matrix: the fact that Agent Smith says and seems to believe that other animals achieve some form of self-imposed equilibrium with their environments. I think a sentient AI would not be prone to make such an idiotic mistake, but maybe I’m wrong. It’s not as though I’m not an idiot, too.
But animals don’t choose to be in equilibrium with their ecosystems. The equilibria are forced upon them (when they happen at all) by death, by disease, by starvation and predation, by famine, by pestilence. They no more choose to be in equilibrium than the various atoms and molecules in a complex chemical chain reaction choose to be in their equilibria.
Humans are merely more competent than all other creatures (on Earth) have ever been, and so are capable of pushing their environments farther than any others. That is, unless you count the earliest photosynthesizing organisms, which probably produced the greatest environmental catastrophe the world has ever known—the release of free oxygen in vast quantities, changing the atmosphere and the very crust of the very planet, killing off the majority of life forms until those that remained adapted and became addicted to this new atmospheric drug.
Okay, that last bit of that last sentence was highly melodramatic and judgmental. I was trying to make a point about how non-innocent natural things are*, but I fell into rhetoric, and that actually cheapens one’s arguments if one is dealing with dispassionate interlocutors. Then again, when does one ever actually deal with such creatures?
Anyway, life is dominated by suffering and by aggression of one kind or another, because nature overall does not tend to reward indiscriminate kindness. Humans are, ironically, the only species that seems even capable of the “outside” view, of a compassion and thought for the future and for the suffering of others that goes beyond their local, personal, and even species-specific circumstances. And they are also the only species that can be seen to vilify itself.
Weirdly enough, it is the “good guys”, or those who try to be good guys, those who consider that worthy of aspiration, who are most often subject to criticism, including self-criticism; certainly they are the only ones responsive to it. If you criticize narcissistic assholes, they really don’t care. They’re not trying to be “good” in anyone else’s eyes. They are already great in their own minds. They already love themselves. Just imagine trying to get your average cat to do something by appealing to its guilt, and you will get an inkling of what I mean.
Self-esteem is overrated. I’m not saying it’s valueless, but it is selling at a much higher price than it is worth, like a vastly overinflated stock for a corporation so leveraged that it could move the Earth if it could find a fulcrum and a place to stand. A little self-criticism is good for everyone, at least if they want to be anything other than a force for destruction, decay, and patheticness**.
I don’t know. Maybe destruction is the better way. Creation, and creativity in general, certainly hasn’t served me very well.
Now, in closing: I didn’t walk or bike to the station today. I needed a physical rest. Hopefully, if I can muster the energy, I will do one of the two things tomorrow. But even thinking about it right now makes me feel out of breath. I don’t feel short of breath; I’m not anxious, I’m not tremulous. I’m just without vigor and cannot readily imagine having any.
Oh, well. Life sucks. Have a good day.
*Either everything and everyone is innocent, or nothing and no one is. I mean this on a general scale, not regarding specific uses of the term relating to legal and criminal concepts. I’m using the term from a fundamental, ethical/moral underpinning kind of way. No one made themselves or their circumstances or their nature or their environments, and “free will” is a childish chimera. As Eric Draven said, “Victims…aren’t we all?”
**Apparently that’s not a word, but “pathos” doesn’t carry the connotations I desired here. Maybe “contemptibility” would be better?

Well I “like” this and yet I don’t, if you know what I mean. I don’t know, I’m not in your situation but I find it’s easy to get stuck on a grand theory that proves that everything is crap so why bother? When that happens I try to follow more of a “don’t know” attitude of being entirely in the present moment. Of course I would also get any medical/mood issues checked out as well (though of course I realize you are a doctor).
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