While I was getting ready to go this morning, I thought about writing this blog post. I thought about my usual starting point of saying something like, “Well, it’s Wednesday morning again,” or some other such inanity. But then, as I was thinking about that, another, more interesting beginning and an actual, rather interesting, topic occurred to me.
Then, by the time I got ready to start writing—i.e., now—I had completely forgotten what I meant to write.
That’s terribly frustrating, but it is par for the course.
Oh, wait! Maybe what I was going to write was about my realization regarding the effects of having a very uncomfortable crisis, but one that is inherently finite*. It’s probably pretty obvious to you that what made me think of this was my recent adventure with a kidney stone.
Of course, while it was happening, it drowned out everything else, especially in the acute stages. If that had been something without an endpoint, and if there were not sufficient medication to control the pain, then death would have been the only feasible alternative. Even later, with the stent in place and the literal, constant, burning feeling that I needed to urinate for two weeks, things were pretty harsh. But though it did not truly drown out my depression, and it was thoroughly exhausting, it did rather overshadow much of my chronic pain.
The day the stent was taken out I felt a fair amount of relief, of course. But before long my usual existence asserted itself, with all its emptiness, and of course, with all its chronic pain. And I remembered that, really, I have nothing going on in my life at all, nothing to which I look forward in any kind of long-term sense, and I have no further clue about or hope for my future.
It’s a bit reminiscent, on a shorter time scale, of what happened when I was a “guest” of the Florida Department of Corrections. Though I was/am innocent of the charges that were created against me, I took a plea bargain for three years (toward which time served applied) because it was tolerably short and I didn’t want to risk the possibility of the much longer sentence with which the prosecution threatened to try to get, risking the outcome on the potential of a jury of my peers to see past my (apparently) not terribly endearing personality and the simple fact that I was a doctor and thus, to those who might be in a typical jury, a generally hated “elite”**.
I think it was the best available choice at the time. And while I was “up the road” I was able to console myself with looking forward to seeing my children again once I got out—and to see them before they were adults, which would not have been the case otherwise—and that gave me the optimism to write first Mark Red and then The Chasm and the Collision and then Paradox City while I was at FSP West.
But then, of course, once I got out, it turned out that my kids didn’t really want the discombobulation of me having visitation or anything of that sort. While I was heartbroken, I didn’t feel that I had a right forcibly to disrupt their lives when I had already fucked everything up, first with my personal health problems, then with my misguided attempts to help other people with chronic pain that led me to be arrested.
So, I bit the bullet and kept on writing at least, on my own, though I think my stories grew steadily bleaker and darker over time. And I learned to play guitar and wrote and recorded a few songs, and did some covers and everything. But I still didn’t see my kids, and haven’t even communicated with my son other than to receive his email stating that he didn’t really want to have a relationship with me (“right now”).
At least I got to see my youngest when I was visited in the hospital with my kidney stone. That was a gift that was well worth even that much pain. But now I’m back to my nosferatu existence, and like Vermithrax***, though I don’t feel pain as severe as the kidney stone, I still feel constant pain.
There may be people who can have chronic pain without getting depressed about it, and indeed, without losing their zest for life, but I fear I’m only left with the squeezed dry pulp of mine. It seems to be just the way I’m built neurologically.
I suspect that most people who keep their spirits up despite chronic pain and disability do so because they are surrounded by a local support system of some sort****, and they probably do better at connecting with and getting along with other people than I do.
I’ve only ever really been close to specific, core groups of people, and with ones nearby, that I saw nearly every day. I’ve never been good at connecting over long distances, and I have a hard time even picturing people when they’re far away. I mean, I can “picture” them in the sense that I know what they look like, and I will be able to interact with them if and when I see them, but I cannot in any intuitive sense “model” their existence elsewhere. I cannot really get a feel for what they might be doing and certainly not for what they might be thinking.
When even the people I love are far away from me, they really exist more as concepts than as people whose reality I can feel. They are missing in a bleak and rather horrible way. I feel terrible about that fact, and I hope it doesn’t come across as insulting—though it has probably hurt the feelings of people about whom I care on more than one occasion—but it seems to be just the way my brain works. It’s also probably related to the fact that I never have for an instant imagined wanting to be someone other than myself, even though I hate myself; I just cannot even conceive of what that would mean, let alone wish for it.
Oh well, whatever, never mind. I’m back on the train, yeah, and here I go again, on my own…alone again, naturally.
(I do like to quote things, don’t I?)
I hope you have a good day.
*Of course, as far as we can tell, pretty much everything is inherently finite, but some things are much more constrained and contained in time than others.
**This is based on what my attorney, and my attorney’s supervisor, said to me. I don’t think they were trying to be unkind, and though their judgement was and is fallible, it was likely better than mine would have been.
***I know, I’m mixing fantasy metaphors and similes. That’s okay; I like them.
****And most of them are probably not “ex-cons”.

