Well, it’s just another moronic Monday (with apologies to the Bangles). I did not do any work on Native Alien this weekend. To be fair, it’s basically complete with respect to chords and of course words and melody‒though I don’t preclude any modest changes along the way, and certainly I have not arranged it. But I basically didn’t do anything useful or productive over the weekend, I just vegetated by myself.
I intended to do some biking; I went so far as to pump the tires up to their target pressure and everything. But as often happens, I got anxious over getting on the bike to ride*. I did some walking, at least; not very much, but at least I took some precautions that have mostly spared my knees and my ankle.
I mean to do a decent walk this evening and get that bit more of exercise in. I’m trying to get healthier, but it’s hard to motivate myself when I don’t even want me to be healthy. I don’t like myself. Almost everything about me is frustrating or even infuriating.
But if walking can help me be slightly healthier, it may make me less annoying, in that I hopefully will feel less pain and irritation. So, I don’t really care about my own well-being to any significant degree, but I want this stupid body to be as minimally uncomfortable as I can make it.
I’m supposed to start working this week on the lyrics to my next song, with the takeoff word “humility” this time. I already have a few ideas, though I don’t know if they’ll be what shows up finally. I also intend to do a quick, low quality “demo” of Native Alien that I may share here on this blog. That way people can hear the tune I have in mind for it.
I didn’t do any Brilliant stuff over the weekend, but that’s okay. I do that in much the same way that I have my physics and calculus text books and so on: to keep alive the pipe dream of actually getting to a level of expertise in the various subjects to be able to do something useful. But I don’t think I really ever will do those things.
Not that there’s anything wrong with learning just for the sake of understanding the world better. Indeed, it’s a kind of hunger, a wish to take more and more of the universe into my mind, and thereby to “own” more of it, in the only sense that really works. But it seems unlikely that I will ever find the time and/or the energy to achieve the level of expertise I would like to achieve in those various subjects.
Plus, honestly, my interest in one subject is constantly being derailed by something else, though it happens over relatively long time-scales. That’s one of the reasons it was good for me to be enrolled in programmed curricula; I don’t have to worry as much about being distracted because I need to do certain things in a certain order at certain times. Not that I can’t stay focused on something in which I’m interested; I can do that to a borderline psychotic level sometimes. But I can’t readily choose which interest is going to grab me at a given moment.
Of course, most people don’t do what they want to do most of the time. We all do what we must‒or else we die young, or suffer, or what have you; sometimes more than one bad outcome ensues. Of course, even when we do what we must‒by whatever measure you want to determine that “mustness”‒we often accrue negative consequences.
I’ve tried very hard to do what I “must” throughout my life, for as long as I can remember. I tried to live a clean life and to be productive and prosperous, to be useful to people who mattered to me and to innocent strangers and all that stuff. I never knowingly or willingly, let alone willfully, committed crimes (other than minor speeding and so on), but I still ended up spending three years incarcerated and lost my medical license and much of what was left of my connection with my children, a good deal of which had already been hammered by my chronic pain problem and all the “fun” it gave me.
Also, of course, it turns out that all along I had ASD (of two varieties, the first having been fixed by open-heart surgery, and there may be some problem with that discovered a few years ago, but I’m not bothering looking into that, as there would be little point). That doesn’t tend to have made things easier, I guess, though I have no direct point of comparison, since I have always been I.
I don’t know what point I’m trying to make, which probably means I’m not trying to make any point, I’m just meandering in my mind and sharing the dubious results with you, o injudicious reader. Hopefully this isn’t too much of a bummer with which to start your work week.
But, hey, I’m not making you read this, am I? If anything, I would advise against it, as I would advise pretty much anyone against wasting any time, effort, emotional investment, what have you, in me. I’m a black cloud. In the final analysis, I bring nothing but corrosion and discomfort and misery to those who spend too much time in my vicinity, literally or figuratively.
You should try to find something more pleasant if you can.
*I’ve only recently come to the (admittedly fairly obvious) conclusion that a big part of my anxiety about biking is because I have had at least two accidents on bicycles that hurt my shoulders‒a connective/soft tissue injury on the left that still causes my trouble, and a fractured scapula on the right (which healed very completely, as bones tend to do).



