It’s Friday, and I feel as though I’ve recently run an ultra-marathon‒except that, if I were in the habit of running ultra-marathons, I think I would be more physically fit. I like running, actually; I used to get that famous “runner’s high” endorphin rush, and it made me feel that if I just pushed a little bit extra with my next step, I could take off and fly.
Alas, my chronic pain has made it very difficult to do regular jogging and/or running. I still like to walk, but I have to be careful. In any case, pain saps my energy even for walking, and for many other seemingly minor things.
I’ve had a lot of pain this week, in my usual places as well as in my more newly encroached-upon regions, like my right hand/wrist/forearm/elbow. I wish I could sleep better, just to escape from it, but my sleep has also been even worse than usual this week.
I’m stressed by the laundry machine thing as well, of course. I’ve had to wear old backup clothes and buy quite a few new pieces of clothing, chewing up some of my savings, such as they are, and that’s so frustrating.
I hate my life, but I’m stuck in a sort of slight local bump in the middle of a huge surrounding value-sink, a kind of one-person Nash equilibrium. There is almost nothing in my life (my daily life, anyway) that is much good, but to change my life would nevertheless at least temporarily make everything worse, and there is no way of knowing if it would ever get better.
So, I do nothing but what you “see”, waiting here for the branch* to break, which I’m sure it will do before very long at all. It could be today; I would not be surprised. I barely had the energy to go back to the house after work last night, and I can barely get going to go to work this morning (though I am doing it).
I don’t know why I do it. It’s probably more out of habit and training than anything else. Not only do I find no lasting happiness or fulfilment, I have no even momentary peace of mind. I just occasionally get so exhausted that I am able to become unconscious, but that lasts a very short time before I sort of start awake, as if I’ve heard enemy troops going through the jungle nearby.
I’ve never fought any wars in any jungles, of course. But I just don’t ever feel safe**. And I certainly have no squad, no fellowship, nor even any partner with whom to share the watch or whatever.
Lone tigers can do well, I guess, since that is their nature. But wolves and humans and humanoids (like me) are not really at our best when alone. That was why in the ancestral environment, ostracism was such a serious punishment. A human alone on the Serengeti thirty thousand years ago was a human who was unlikely to survive for long, let alone to leave any offspring.
It’s appropriate for something like I am, I suppose. If I were worth being around, there would probably be people around me. But whatever compensations I was able to generate in the past to make my weirdness worth tolerating, I don’t have the energy or the will‒or the skill, to be thorough‒to bring those things to bear. I’m not even sure what they are anymore.
Oh, well. It’s not like there’s any reason to suspect that anyone else knows what they’re doing or has many true, deep insights. There are a few people here and there in history who figure out useful things, but everyone is merely flesh and blood. Their minds and wills and insights are markedly finite. One can learn what one can from them, but one can expect no deep, final answers.
There may be no such deep, final answers. The universe shows no evidence of having been built for us, after all. We are just epiphenomena. Don’t let anyone try to fool you with any ridiculous “fine-tuning” argument(s). The universe is not fine-tuned for us. There is almost nowhere in the universe where we can survive. I made a video that more or less talked about this, if I recall correctly. Even the Earth is largely hostile to us, and it’s by far the most livable place in the known universe.
The fine-tuning claims remind me a bit of people who say that natural immunity is adequate (or even best) and that we don’t need vaccines. People can imagine this to be true only because they are the recipients of the world their ancestors created: a world where there are few deadly diseases that wipe people out in childhood the way they used to, because of measures like vaccines.
Or‒to think of other people who speak and act out of ignorance of what it has taken to make the world in which they find themselves‒we have those who decry capitalism as fundamentally evil all while writing on their laptops and tablets and smartphones and driving their electric cars to get overpriced coffee-like dessert beverages from international coffee chains.
Don’t even get me started on flat-earthers. The frikking ancient Greeks and Egyptians and Phoenicians and all those ancient civilizations knew the Earth was round. Eratosthenes even figured out how big it was, to within a few percent of our modern measurements, about 2200 years ago.
No intelligent people who paid attention and thought things through (or cared) ever really thought the Earth was flat. If the Earth were flat, on a clear day you could climb to the top of a high building and essentially see to the edge in all directions. With a good enough telescope and no interfering mountains, you could peep through someone’s Tokyo window from Chicago. The Earth is not flat.
I, however, am a flat person‒not in the sense of being roughly planar, but rather in the sense that all my fizz is gone; my pep and vigor are asymptotically approaching zero.
At least it’s Friday. Maybe next week will be better.
I doubt it, though.

*Or the camel’s back, if you prefer.
**I’m actually not safe, of course. No one ever is. But there are gradations of safety, and probability rules ordinary reality. When risk is low enough, one should ideally feel quite different, much more even-keeled, than when risk is high. Unfortunately, that’s often not how things are.

I wouldn’t worry about the “Nash equilibrium.” According to Wikipedia: “Nash equilibria need not exist if the set of choices is infinite and non-compact.”
“If I were worth being around, there would probably be people around me.” Well there probably *are* people around you at some points of the day, right? It’s hard to exist in a vacuum. Maybe reach out to some of them (besides the landlord). 🙂
Yeah, the Nash equilibrium similar was a bit of a stretch, wasn’t it?
About chronic pain, you might find this article intriguing: https://penntoday.upenn.edu/news/select-neurons-brainstem-may-hold-key-treating-chronic-pain
I saw that headline in passing, but hadn’t looked at the article. It is VERY interesting.