Posts Tagged ‘support

16
Aug
25

There Is Only So Much Torture One Man Can Take

***

Where to begin?  After all…my last post said this was or may be the end…of me.

I fear the end is near.  And, the past few days have been utter torture.  Every day a new batch of caustic solution is cast upon my emotional and financial wounds…if not also my mental and physical health.

Let me count the ways:

@ My home gets flooded, moldy and all occupants are forced to evacuate the biohazard.

@ My basement collections, including valuables and artwork….let’s just say a ton was ruined by the flood.

@ My family hirers movers to help move stuff to a truck to ship to a storage facility.  And, they spend more time putting stuff in garbage bags than loading anything.  As far as I recall, my sis, brother-in-law and I did most if not all of the loading.  And, my helpers were not the least bit concerned about what happened to what we loaded.  They had no emotional attachment.  All they saw was a clock and wanted to get done fast.  So, they threw stuff in the truck.  And, some fell out…getting damaged.  Why am I paying for storage if you’re going to damage what goes into it?

@ Weather is the worst.  Hot.  Muggy.  Every step you take draws another bucket of sweat from your face.  So lifting one box is a pain.  Lifting three is murder.  But, more rain is on the way; so you’d better get moving.

@ Brother helps by working with the movers.  He throws $800 of valuables on the ground, claiming it was in a wet box.  I highly doubt that.  But, I don’t doubt the collection is now worth about $600 or less.  His assistants fail to bring up stuff I am sure was safe and dry and worth a small fortune.  I suspect that went into garbage bags before going with the movers.  Thieves with cellphones who can look up the value of what they are moving and walk past stupid family members.

@ Brother offers to help move stuff as I myself move stuff upstairs, struggling with the poor air quality.  He drops my most precious handful in the sewage.

@ When I convince myself I need to just walk away and trash a bunch, family tries telling me to wash it off and salvage it, even if mint condition boxes are lost.  If I stop to wash things, they tell me I need to move quicker and load a truck, instead.  If I load the truck, they tell me to take care of the wet stuff coating the lawn.  There is no win.  And, everyone is clashing with each other.  It’s an ugly scene.

@ Sisters say they are on my side and supporting me, but their patience quickly thin, and I am feeling threatened with ultimatums…fearing they will put me in a group home when I totally lose my mind from this disaster.

@ I thoroughly regret ever getting involved with collecting and will surely never collect so foolishly again.  Nor will I be able to ever truly love my family.  They have earned my hate.

16
May
25

The Most Painful of Holidays

***

As I’ve grown older, holidays have lost their charms. They’ve become overly hyped means of stimulating the economy, encrypted teases from our governments. They sure are not the warm, fuzzy festivals of glowing lights and bounties of delicious treats I once thought they were. And, no matter how you try to entice me, it’s not going to be easy changing my mind after becoming so nauseous and bitter. But, please, don’t cast me out into the street to rot. I have reasons.

If you grew up with the “gene” for being a generous provider, someone who likes to lay out a spread of delights on any given special day, you’re not me. I was raised by two clashing deities who may want to be generous but consistently pull back in some way that cripples my own generosity. At one moment, they may seem generous…and, the next, they will reveal how they cut corners or saved a buck. If they can get anything at a discount, they will try. And, if they have to pay regular/retail price, they will complain for days.

While that may all just sound like wise budget thinking, they go beyond wise budget thinking. My dad will go so far that you may call him a thief. My mom can be quite the miser and yet carelessly discard something that should have been treated with greater respect and appreciation. Gifts people thought would please her get “donated” to Goodwill, where she will retreat to spend another dollar on something that once cost five, just to add that to a pile that goes nowhere until she decides to replace it.

When we, their kids, try to do something kind and generous for others, we often get “corrected” by our parents for being too generous. We’re spending too much. We’re trying too hard. We’re just going to pay for it, later. Try as we may to be kind, generous and thoughtful, our parents will find a way to ruin the good vibes…and probably drive whoever we are attempting to please away, for good.

So, when I see others being generous, I feel sick and uncomfortable. I feel like cheap scum. I cannot just fork over money to fill a room with joys. I’m always hearing my parents talk about saving money and how my generosity won’t truly be appreciated. I cannot give someone ten presents instead of just one I think they will really like. Nor can I give someone a present I really like and hope they will like it as much. I tend to shop with the other person in mind…not myself. [And, if you’re wondering why I even bring up such a point, you just need to know my family.]

Certain holidays are particularly unpleasant. They are the parent-related special days. This includes my parents’ birthdays. [I wonder if they will be worse when my parents are no longer able to face me.]

Mothers Day is probably the worst because my mother has drained every ounce of warmth I could possibly feel on that day for her. I have no ability–zero creativity–to please her. Even if I could muster up some craft project or favor I could do her, she would find a reason to complain. That’s just how bitter and wrong she has become. If she is ever pleased by anyone, it’s really hard to know because the best she can do is put on a good face in front of guests. So, first, you have to be a guest stopping by her house. If you have to spend more than a day with her, you’ll surely see her other side. But, if you are just stopping by, you’re sure to get a silly, oblivious smile which will make you think she’s the most classy, charming woman in the world.

If you seek an explanation for what a mother could do to drain her artistic son’s ability to create happiness for her, don’t prod because I will be here all day venting my vile feelings. No therapist could handle that baggage without pushing an escape button. In short, my mother systematically held on too tight and bent me like a stress toy until I couldn’t feel comfortable with myself in any situation and couldn’t trust her for a second. That is not an exaggeration. If you leave something out for five seconds and walk away, she will home in on it and move it because you left it where it does not belong. That is how mad and eerily aware at the wrong times she can be. And, any nice things she could say are washed out by all of the harsh, ignorant and self-serving crap she pumps out in her own sort of internal distress, every day. She has been given a soapbox (to preach from), and she’s not leaving it.

My siblings, particularly my sisters, have no problem being thoughtful and creative on Mothers Day because they “left home at a normal age.” There’s a whole other ball of wax to this case that involves the proper age and conditions for doing “normal” adult things. It remains a painful divide that cannot seem to be resolved, causing my siblings to divide. I hate having to clash with my sisters who seem to always find a way to offer up gifts and other favors to my parents, especially our mother. [That’s easy when you’re mother isn’t harping on you, violating your privacy, speaking highly of the female species and letting you do as you please.] My sisters will admit their mom has plenty of “issues” but continue to appear on special days as if nothing is wrong. They look at me like I am scum when I cannot be as “generous.” And, if I try to reason with them, I might as well be on the road to a jail sentence. I have no lawyer on my side.

My mother should be happy she has caused that much discord. She enjoys drama and tragic stories, even though they get her upset. She can’t get enough of them and rarely enjoys comedy.

So, if Mothers Day is a pain, my mother’s birthday must really be difficult. Yep…

Now, my father isn’t much better. But, he gets plenty of sympathy for being as romantic and creative as he can be to counter my mom’s…ugliness. He tries so hard sometimes. But, when you hear my mother complain, you begin to wonder if Dad isn’t just trying to make up for some wrong he did…long ago…when they were a young couple and us kids were not around. You begin to wonder why you were born, at all, because, clearly, they are not happy with the kids or anything they’ve had since they met.

Even if I could offer my dad compassion for putting up with my mom and trying to be thoughtful, he has spent almost as much time being my mother’s tool. And, his vanity knows no end…yet he can be such a sickening slob! He will pick at your appearance until you bleed from your eyes…but he, himself, can let himself be in such a horrid state that you wonder if he’s even aware of himself, at all. He had some “military time” which I think affected his mentality about everything. There’s a proper way to doing everything, but I’m not sure even he knows what that is…like how to properly raise a child into a man. It’s hard to teach a son to be a man when he, himself, cannot be a respected man in his partner’s company.

[All of my “judgy” speech seems to come from him. But, both parents are too often rude and/or vile…so they should get equal blame. And, I should just jump off a cliff before I upset anyone else I’d like to be a friend.]

He has done her bidding and even picked up some of her weird, invasive habits. It’s sickening. It’s so vile that it upsets my stomach just to write about it. He is in no way a male role model for his sons. He has no backbone except when it gets him into conflict with my mom, his partner. It’s only when he listens to others who are having a good time that he crosses a line with her and lands in the “doghouse.” Dad likes to socialize and have a good time with others.

[Mom can’t seem to decide if she wants company or would rather curl up in a bitter ball in some corner. She likes to talk…oy, does she like to talk…but she struggles with listening and fair play. She will absorb your life story like a sponge and relay it to us, her kids. Mom seems okay when you decide for her and can force her into some nice clothes…almost like a child being prodded by her parents to dress up for a special day…hmm. But, she’s not the best “crowd person,” even if that crowd is just one other person. I don’t think she ever “grew up” before being expected to be an adult and parent.]

[I grew up to become such a self-conscious and anxiety-flooded freak because my parents, especially my father, couldn’t stop finding fault with me, their precious boy. One minute, they tell you that you’re valuable…the next they tear you down by telling you why you’re wrong.]

Mom moans about being lonely and can socialize just fine when put in certain public spaces…but she refuses to adapt and pushes, drives people and opportunities away. She once has neighbors as friends; I don’t think she did anything to get them as friends or keep them as friends other than putting up with surprise visits. If people didn’t knock down her door, she’d be alone and bitter. Yet, it’s the knocking down of her door that has also rattled her so often; she constantly complains how surprise visits deny her from getting household needs resolved.

Just as a vague example…

Mom goes to a store, usually some discount/resale shop, because my parents refuse to look at anything “new.” She runs into some stranger who strikes up a conversation because my parents can make themselves look so…attractive. They will talk for an hour or more. If you hear them, you’ll think this is the beginning of a nice friendship. But, while Dad might like to exchange phone numbers and see this person, again, Mom will silently turn away and go home alone to complain. It makes no sense. And, it hurts, from all sides. If you confront my mother and argue how she could have exchanged information and resumed contact with the person another day, she will give you a list of nonsensical reasons why that wouldn’t work. It’s futile to try.

So, it’s not like my mother couldn’t have friends…she just refuses to let anyone into her heart and space. I’d go so far as saying some past friends burned her so badly that she cannot recover. She was a young fool, once, and she won’t change after being “played.”

And, if my sisters think their mother has anything worth emulating, they are in trouble…as are their husbands and children…and any friends they may think they still have. If my sisters are in any way doomed to act like their mother, the rest of the world should pray for mercy. It may sound cruel, but we don’t need more people like my mother…not her dark sides, anyway.

If I try hard enough, I can remember a glimmer of a happier time when I used to think of my mother in a supernatural way. I used to compare her to Linda Carter’s Wonder Woman and may have even had an Oedipus complex. But, boy, did she tear that apart over the years! It is GONE! You can only pick on your precious son’s face, call him a liar and tear up his trust and security so often before he can no longer give you a greeting card (which she claims to want so badly), among other favors.

[The other strange thing…just one of many…is that no matter what my mother will say she wants, if you try to get it for her, she will find reason to complain. There are epic tales about women who act this way. As all of us men in the family say, there is no pleasing her. And, it’s a very sexist response. If you even mention men versus women, she will ignite and cast out all men. But, don’t think you’re safe being a woman…because, even though you won’t get her hatred, you’ll get plenty of unwanted advice about how staying home to be a mother, while your man supplies you with all the money you could want, is the best way to live. I don’t think that’s sound thinking. But, I’m sure some women will get stars in their eyes. And, that worries me.]

As for their birthdays, it should be rather obvious how they are no better than Mothers and Fathers Days. I mean, I’m at the point when and where I am questioning my own birth, my existence. What good can come from celebrating your parents when you can’t even feel great on your own birthday?…particularly when your parents appear on your birthday and no longer are those people you role your eyes at and smile, anyway, as they provide a lit cake and, maybe, a few presents.

My parents have a fun way of decimating the joy of any special day by quickly turning conversation to what isn’t being done “right” in life. As soon as you open your surprise, life gets back to “serious business,” and you might as well get used to that. New Year’s Day is probably the worst. It’s like Mothers Day but delivers the pain more quickly. There is no joyous ringing in of the new year in my family. It’s just a quick clinking of glasses and a few snacks during the ball drop before talk begins rising about tax season and all the things we should be doing to improve ourselves. It’s sort of like crafting resolutions…but with a lot of pointing fingers and blaming each other. ‘Not exactly healthy. ‘Definitely not warm, friendly family time. [And, if you see my mother leaving the area, she’s just going off on her own to think about taxes for the next few months, which she is sure to bring up in daily conversation until the due date. Isn’t she fun?]

It’s sort of like getting a gift at work. You have your cake with coworkers, if you’re so lucky, and then it’s back to work…if you can manage to pivot like that. How many of us can really enjoy cake and festivities and then get right back to work? If you say you can, you’re one very special nutcase.

I don’t even want to get upset about what I felt my life has lacked on those special days. But, just about any holiday gets sullied and ruined by my family. And, it only gets more painful when you have to focus on the roots of this family, my parents. It started with them. We started with them.

Now, I will take a deep breath and leave this where it sits. I think I’ve said…everything. I wrote this to “breathe” before facing my parents on one more of their uncomfortable special days. I needed this. And, if I’m lucky, I won’t have to explain my time away from the family to anyone. [I’m just…glad?…I had the space, time and ability to write this.]

But, if you can understand what I am saying, can you grasp what a painful life I live, if just about every holiday comes with a measure of discomfort if not pain? My own life is riddled with discomforts because of this. But, it’s even more upsetting when my discomfort pours out onto others who then turn away from me because I, in whatever way, cannot help reflecting the misery caused by my parents (and other family members). In short, anyone else who dares to walk a mile in my shoes would probably do something very unpleasant to themselves. I do not doubt that for a second. I like to take a small bit of pride for myself in being as…tolerant as I’ve been. I hope it’s all worth it, someday. If not, I’m just a fool.

I wish I could be the sort of “normal guy” who can get drunk at every special day and forget what bothers him. I wish I could go without discomfort at and after every family gathering. I wish I could be more comfortable in a group and not get mental impressions from those around me like a sensitive psychic. I wish I didn’t feel withdrawal after every happy moment with another person. Yet, wishing for that would take away what makes me special and able to be uniquely kind to people who touch my heart. So, while I may not be the best party guy, right now…I am what I am. Deal with it…please. Don’t let this spark of life and creativity die miserable and alone.

17
Apr
25

Confessions of an Intolerant Family

***

It seems impossible for me to comfortably speak with any member of my family! EVERY conversation fails to satisfy my emotional and mental needs. And, it’s not like I don’t try or don’t have enough words to contribute. I strain my brain sometimes trying to pivot and adjust to every member of my family, and it’s never enough. It’s never good enough to get a satisfying talk with anyone. So, I go about my life, just trying to get through each day, never feeling quite at peace or comfortable with anyone, and my own family keeps pushing me “over the edge” because I am perpetually “too much.”

Ask for help? I might as well walk through a real mine field. Asking family for help is like pulling teeth and playing Operation. BUZZZZ! I said something wrong. I said too much. I’m too emotional. Have a question about financial papers or health needs? Go pay someone to help. My family has no patience and cannot simply answer any question.

Now, if I bent to that thinking and let their directions decide my fate, I’d likely be locked away in a mental ward, pumped full of hazardous drugs and broke from paying people to pretend to care and take notes on everything I have to say, just in case I pose a hazard to anyone.

One sister (although she’s not the only one to say it) says get a therapist; a therapist has to care about your thoughts and what you have to say because you’re paying them. Ha! She knows nothing. I’ve seen therapists. And, considering they are not only being paid based upon your quality of insurance and whatnot…and they are never really free to be themselves because they are under some supervisor which dictates what they can and cannot do…and because getting involved, emotionally, with any client/patient would be hazardous to their profession…they CANNOT care about anyone but themselves. Their job is to help people work through problems and find pathways to “recovery” (which includes “getting on with life”). They cannot be the friend you lack or the family that you wish you had. And, even if they could, if you are paying a therapist to fill such a role, you might as well be paying a prostitute for a good time. Or, pay your family that money and tell THEM to show some kindness and respect when you speak with them.

Even if I thought a therapist could help, all they can really do is deal with ME and my side of everything. But, when the problems involve many members of a family, no one person’s advice can change or improve that lot. When I previously spoke with therapist-S, my parents were present, and I was regarded a minor who was wide open to experimentation with drugs. I might as well have been a dilinquent drug user, though I never wanted to mess with my own thoughts or digestion (in other words, drug free, people, and preferring it that way). The only sensible advice would seem to be find other people. And, that’s already been a discouraging quest. I’m tired of walking it and I don’t have the energy or will to run.

Even if I left my family behind, moved on, what would that really do for my psychology unless I had a new family already in my life who would welcome me into it? To leave my roots in utter defeat in hopes of finding a new friendly crowd? That’s foolish…hazardous. And, I am not anywhere near that fearless.

Shouldn’t your own family have more decency and kindness than someone you hire, who has to be filled with so much information just to understand you as an individual, not just a “type A” mentality?

The other option to finding a kind, willing “ear” is to join a group, a club, a class of some kind. That’s wishful thinking. And, when you struggle with social anxiety (which I am sure some will say can be “medicated”…and I don’t care for that suggestion), it’s not so easy to mingle. And, with my luck, the only people who reach across the room to acknowledge me are people looking for trouble or who would be trouble if I got involved with them. That may sound cruel and pessimistic, but it’s true.

Other members of the family have had similar luck. I have a brother who perpetually gets sucked into “friendships” with people who make him initially feel like he’s important and valued…and then secretly wish he was out of their lives. He meets people and quickly boasts about how great they are and how they open doors for him (doors he rarely will go through alone for whatever reason). Somehow he retains many of these “friendships” until they mysteriously expire. He won’t say much about the loss of a friendship, unless he gets mad and says the person was a lying “jag,” anyway. He seems to burn up the tolerance of those he calls friend until they awkwardly ask him or do something to drive him away. He seems blind to people’s true feelings and never suspects anyone might be saying one thing when they mean another. [You might say being suspicious is unnecessary paranoia; but I’m suggesting people need to filter what they hear and experience and be somewhat aware of when their own actions or words might be unappreciated. My brother is unaware of all of that, even once he’s been handed the grim decision someone else made.]

When he loses closeness with someone, he turns bitter and alcoholic. He lacks self-control. He’s had so many disasters and wrecked cars, and yet my family has been tolerant and let him be himself, though he never actually seems to be “himself.” Yet, sometimes, he might not try or do something quietly or be down on himself because of failures he hates to mention.

[And, here I am, sensitive to all that, both sorry for him and struggling myself, and I am helpless.]

On the “flip side,” I’ve been struggling my whole life to avoid his mistakes and be “the good guy” in my family, and it’s achieved nothing for my benefit. All my effort gets washed out by my family getting sucked into their own displeasure. We all are sucked into ourselves, possibly because the world has become so crappy. But, I feel like I’m still trying to be nice with everyone…and they can’t be nice enough with me. My hazardous brother seems to get any attention he wants, even if family doesn’t like what he does. I don’t think anyone has ever cut him off or short. But, when I get talking or emoting, it isn’t long before I have to step aside and let the life of someone else through. I am always in the way of someone’s progress.

If you want to know about any sisters, you’ll have to take a number. Unlike the “men” in my family, thanks to my mother, the girls/women have been more respected, like royalty. They are heirs to the throne that my dad never had. Dad bowed to Mom. And, I’ll leave that at that. My sisters are not necessarily rude or spoiled, but they are oddly intolerant with very limited patience for anything outside their little bubbles. They have their own social circles, friends that have helped them get to places and status I can only imagine. It’s easy for them to talk as if life is easy, even when they sigh and complain. It’s easy for them to tell me to do something for myself, as if they didn’t have help.

They didn’t do much on their own…not without someone there to see them through it. They might not be married if I didn’t have a part in it. One sister wouldn’t have kids with the names they do if I said nothing; and if she tried to discuss travels with my other siblings, they wouldn’t give her more attention than I would because they haven’t had the same travels. [Even I get rather ugly and jealous when the one sister talks about travels because I wish I was able to do the same, and I’m not invited.] The other would be a bridezilla if I didn’t calm her down. And, her kids might be dead if I didn’t help babysit (unpaid for years of daily assistance); she could have hired a stranger or “friend” to babysit and dealt with the chances of that (or sacrificed her job to be a good, consistent mother and let the father make enough money to suffice instead of budgeting for whims that pile up fast).

And, have I ever told any member of my family they are “too much?” If I did, I took a break and came back to try, again. I never told any of them to get a therapist or join a club to solve their problems. [Of course, I didn’t have to because, lucky them, they have “friends” of a sort. Yet, if you ask them, they’d say those friends aren’t much help. So, are my sisters actually doing just fine on their own?…or are they not sure how to value their friends?] I didn’t leave them with that to leave them in a hole of misery. [Or, if I did “ditch” someone, I guess even I fail to remember. But, again, I feel my own emotional strength is rather limited by the “food” I’ve been given.]

I have an aunt who has always been a spark of life and witty even when she’s occasionally so blunt that it leaves me troubled. She didn’t have any kids of her own but sort of adopted a big family and seemed to be doing just fine with everything. She, like most of the family, WAS a smoker. Then, her husband became ill, and she had to care for many of his needs. That seemed to crack her. She lost control. She couldn’t handle life, anymore. She ended up in an “institution” with limited family access. As with every other member of this family that has needed “intensive care,” certain members avail themselves while others seem to simply say, “I can’t. It’s too much. I can’t do anything to help. It’s beyond me.” And, those who try to help the “sick” person get mad at those who don’t try, holding grudges for years or cutting people off.

[I feel about as helpless as that “lost aunt” and wish I could help her. I don’t write her off because I can’t help, right now. I still think of and worry about her. The rest of my immediate family…don’t even bother asking their feelings.]

Even if I don’t get along with family, I don’t think I’ve ever left any member feeling like they couldn’t try again with me. Maybe it’s just a no-win situation; maybe we were cursed just the way we were put together, a cursed family doomed to crumble. [Yet, I can’t bend to thoughts of murder or suicide to end it quickly because the ideas make me nauseous. It’s immoral and unnecessary…even if it feels necessary.]

They have had friends to reach out to and spill their guts when needed. I have not…at least, not since I was a kid and had maybe one or two trusted friends at a time. And, even then, I couldn’t be fully myself with them because my parents were restrictive, cutting time short and denying phone calls.

[How is it I have been able to at least try being comforting or helpful to them? Or, are we all guilty of being similarly insufficient to each other? Am I just not fully aware of their limits? I’m not even sure of my own limits but find myself trying, sometimes “over-extending” myself. Yet, if I did less, I’d feel heartless and inhuman. And, if I do more, I feel…consumed.]

Do with this what you will. What does it matter where or what I say? Kindness and thoughtful responses are appreciated. Message in a bottle.

03
Feb
23

Troop Support and My Family’s Obsession with Perfection

***

I’ve got a few axes to grind, so to speak, if that’s the right old choice of phrase. I’ve got bones to pick…issues…with certain matters that keep upsetting my life, including my TV time.

First on the list should be my own family…but I’ve already pecked at that one a few times in previous posts.

So, let’s start with “supporting the troops” who “gave so much for our freedom.”

I’ve been over this, before. I understand the hardships many troops must face. I also suspect some troops do just fine and become merchants of war surplus or go back to school and get those golden degrees that open the world to them. I’m sure some medical officers secretly become makers of modern pills that they then give to hired foot soldiers to distribute to lab specimens, aka low-income humans. But, countless commercials and other appearances suggest the majority of U.S. troops are in bad shape, suffering and in desperate need of money from everyone else. They’re not making a concentrated effort to reach out to people with actual gold mines of resources; they’re slapping every lowly, common TV viewer in the face with sad stories and pleas for money. I highly doubt people who could easily donate those funds are watching the commercials. I seriously doubt it. So, instead, people “getting by” are subject to the advertising much the way they are likely subject to sub-standard health care.

I also see it like this. Those troops sign contracts to submit themselves to the service of their country. That’s basically donating your body and soul to science. You signed your death warrant. Now, you somehow survive whatever horror you didn’t expect to face and survive, only to come back in less than fully functional condition, mentally and physically.

[If you donate a kidney, you don’t go around begging for a new one. YOU donated YOUR kidney. And, if you sign a slip that says you’re donating your body to science (when you die)…but you somehow come back from the dead to go on living as some sort of incomplete undead freak of nature, you don’t reach out to the public for brain or other body-part donations.]

And, some organization, which may not even be legitimate or legal and fair in all aspects, is doing the work of getting money…supposedly…for you broken soldiers. [Again, why aren’t these agents of mercy addressing wealthy individuals and organizations that probably contribute to the wars/conflicts, either intentionally or consequentially. [In case the meaning behind those words eludes you, that means people who contribute to either causing/starting a war/conflict or do business as a result of the war/conflict. Some people/businesses supply the troops going into a conflict. Others provide goods/services as part of the “clean-up” period after the conflict is supposedly resolved.]

So…

Support the troops? Get off my TV and go find those war enthusiasts and materialistic folks who contribute to and/or profit from your choice of sacrifice. I don’t think anyone’s freedom is dependent upon constant warfare. And, if it does, then we all deserve to get blown off this messed up planet because too many idiots want to fight over land we need to share, not claim and dominate as countless past generations have tried and wasted their time pursuing.

Don’t peck at my skull with your sad stories. Like any charity, you could take all my money and leave me worse off than you’ll likely ever be, because I’m sure many if not most of you have better families who could, at least, offer emotional support. And, if not, well, then, no offense, but you probably wanted to die in battle, with honor. The resources my poor ass could afford won’t replace the emotional support you (and I) direly need.

Now, I am sure there’s something else to address here, but I cannot think of it at the moment. So, I’ll go back to snarling at my own family.

Perfectionism. My family is a walking disaster waiting to happen because of, in part, perfectionism. It’s a key contributor to excess stress, distress, panic, etc. My family, most of them, anyway, refuse to give it up. I don’t know who started the hot mess, but I know my parents have been a blazing force of excess distress which has impacted me and my siblings, crippling us to some degree.

Currently, as it crops up just about every winter, it’s snow that divides us. Every year, when the worst of winter sets in, the cold and snow sap patience and understanding like a vampire draining a body. It’s vital to clear the snow away from the home to make safe walking paths and prevent roof/property damage (from freezing and melting cycles which can really tear a building apart, over time). But, no one says you have to scrape every damn inch of snow off of every surface until it looks as clean as it would in springtime! And, you don’t have to look down at a perfectly chiseled wall of snow at the edge of your property, either. And, if you lack upper-body strength and think there may be another way to attack a mound of snow in your way, you shouldn’t have to tackle the task the way someone else insists is better, when it just seems harder on the body and a waste of gas (if you use a snowblower).

[On the matter of snowblowers, you need to invest in and maintain a good one to be effective. But, in my family, it’s too easy to either spend a fortune and wreck something good or spend too little and struggle with a failing machine every year. Both paths lead to madness. And, madness, it seems, defines the “majority” of my family (the “louder” members, anyway). I’ve never been good with maintenance, for various reasons; so I tend to favor relying on physical ability, rather than any machine. If I cannot clear the snow, I’m likely to work around it (or submit) rather than worry about the cost factors and maintaining a machine. Also, even if I did invest in a machine, other members of my family have a horrible way of getting into my business and making personal property a source of unnecessary distress; they’re like flies on rotting meat, some days! ‘Just gotta find something to attack and fuss about. And, here I am, fussing about them.]

But, that’s just MY opinion, which holds no water (ha) with the more outspoken and flaunting members of the family. Softspoken, moderate folks, like myself, just get trampled, every year. So, I tend to learn very little, achieve very little and go away feeling not so good. Kind of like supporting the troops, if I cannot wrap my head around the matter and contribute, I’ll just have to accept the consequences, whatever they may be. In this case, if my perfection-seeking family members kill themselves from laboring too hard, I have to live with the loss…which may sound harsh. But, that’s just reality. I cannot save every member who decides good isn’t enough. I cannot even save one because all refuse to compromise. We’re a hard-beaked lot, apparently.

Just when I thought it was just my branch, I find other relatives experiencing similar mental and emotional difficulties. It’s not just me or my siblings or my parents…it’s the whole damn family tree! It’s riddled with this torment like a tree with rotting leaves still on the branches. It’s a disease, an ailment like blood pressure. And, rather than reaching out to others for support, the worst of the lot would rather go down in their own flames; I cannot even seem to reach out, myself, without encountering difficulty. I’m trying to stay connected and help others (and myself), and I’m being “roadblocked.”

Sometimes, it’s a stupid eight-year family feud that gets in the way of everything; sometimes, certain members of the family refuse to meet/speak with each other for nearly a decade just because they had a difference of opinion. Who needs the on-going quarrels between political parties when I have my own divided people?

I grew up to become a suicidal perfectionist, thanks to my naive and in-denial parents. And, the only way I could save my own life–because they were doing a horrible job of that–was to stop being perfect, to accept less-than and do less work than maybe some would like. It’s not being lazy or incompetent. It’s more like what Scrooge McDuck says in the cartoon series Duck Tales; work smarter, not harder. I am not entirely opposed to hard or long hours of work/labor. [If I see the work is for a good reason/cause, am working with people I can trust and feel up to the task, I’m all in and might work until I collapse or my eyes cannot see clearly any longer (because they’re bone dry).] But, I’d rather do what I feel is only necessary to achieve a reasonable goal/purpose than toil away for perfection until my body collapses under me. I know my limits. I know when I’m starting to falter. And, if whoever I am working with cannot cope with or understand that, they can screw themselves into the grave.

But, that’s too often too easy to say. I cannot just walk away from some work/projects because that comes with threats and penalties. I could lose my job. I could lose sleep, food and the liberties to cleanse myself just because I reach an impass with family (or a boss/coworker). And, that’s just one case in which life sucks, when I feel I, as usual, it seems, with me, have no control over my life. So, when people wonder why I struggle with making decisions…I’d like to confess this. It’s because too often I don’t seem to have a say. Or, my opinion is unwanted, not respected and overthrown by a “higher authority.” So, when am I supposed to feel in control of and direct myself to do anything other than maybe pick a place to rest or pee?

I start to wonder about the point, the value, of life. And, if I can manage it, I vow to die making peace with nature, not some man-made organization or financially-driven institution, not the IRS or any other tax collector. I don’t want to die feeling I am in financial debt to any file-collecting monster; nor do I want to die from working my body too hard just to fall short of pleasing some mad individual who is never satisfied and too quick to gather and replace slaves. I will not be laying my life down to military service unless I am dying right next to a fellow human being who I value as much as myself if not more, someone I consider a trusted friend/lover. I will not sacrifice myself to any cause that isn’t sound in my soul.

And, if that’s too imperfect for your vision, go get some freakin’ eyeglasses to correct yourself. [That’s a metaphor if you’re too stupid to see through my words.]

21
Feb
22

Regroup or Retire But Never Extinguish; a Poem for all Olympic competitors

*****

Listen, now, all who came to compete.
The torch is extinguished; the games are complete.
Your peers continue to celebrate
While you collapse under an emotional weight.
If you weep because you didn’t medal,
You don’t need to step off the eternal gas pedal.
Olympics come, and Olympics go,
With summer heat and winter snow.
The chance to earn gold, silver and bronze may be gone.
But, the flame of the sport burns ever strong.
Your time in the spotlight is at a rest.
But, don’t douse the fire still within your chest.
What lasts longer than a momentary prize
Is the image of sportsmanship left in our eyes.
Who came first, second or third might matter today.
Who we call our friend or inspiration should never go away.
The Olympics are just a small example
Of what we all wish to more than sample.
Those who choose war do not share the spirit.
If you happen to agree, let me hear it.
Television attempts to paint you as stars.
Deep down, only you know who or what you truly are.
So, cry your tears, today, and rest for tomorrow.
Time rolls on, and no one can truly live in sorrow.
As your life remains, so must your flame.
You came to play, and life is still all our game.

Game on.

~Writingbolt, Feb. 20, 2022

 

23
Dec
21

Dear Red-Haired, Fellow Rabbit, I Wish to Support You in Your Time of Grief

****

What do you do when sympathy sparks tabloids?

I have had one strange, painful week…and probably at the worst time, during what is supposed to be a festive holiday season.  There is no holiday joy, this year.  It seems to be getting sucked out by all sorts of tragedies.

Most recently, I have had a rather strange experience with a celebrity I have adored for some time…ever since Mr. Holland’s Opus.  My sister was watching a holiday movie that featured this strikingly pale and red-haired actress; she didn’t care for the beauty’s performance.  I commented how I still adore her.  Then, the next day, terrible news for the red-haired beauty appears on public “feeds.”  Just awful.  And, after that shook me, I strangely chose to watch X-Men:  Dark Phoenix and watch a little red-haired girl lose her parents in a series of strange “accidents.”

Now, being the sort of guy I am and having these inexplicable feelings for a(nother) woman I hardly know, it feels natural to offer sympathy and/or support, any way I can.  Yet, a simple line I read about requesting space and privacy prompted me to think and write this.  Celebrities get “shat” upon so often just for helping create things to entertain or invoke thoughts in us, the “viewing public.”  The rest of the world becomes mosquitoes in the faces of these famous folks, whether we want to know or not.  Some want to get the big scoop and a buck from the “tabloids” that pay them, as if their life depended upon digging up dirt.  Others, like me, might just want to reach out and embrace those who are “caught in the headlights” and steer them toward safer ground, shelter them from emotional and mental storms that could otherwise ruin them.

But, how does one offer sympathy and support without alerting the “mosquitoes?”

In short, without naming names, you, dear red-haired beauty who has been given a bad roll of the dice at the worst time of year for tragedy, I ache with you and wish I could do more to lift your spirit and help you work through the grief that is surely coming in waves.  Let my words and thoughts be a blanket of comfort to you in this harsh time.

[It does not seem to be a good decade for rabbits (if you have any idea what that means, astrologically).  We just have to survive the sh@t storm and continue seeking higher purpose to this life.  Perhaps, dedicating ourselves to service of others will ease the pain.]

08
Sep
21

Emotional Support, NOT Mental Health

****

I’m watching an old Jackie Chan film, for the N-teenth time, and I see this gorgeous Asian actress who supposedly ended her own life. And, I think…how could she do that? She is…was…just stunning and witty. What was so bad that she had to die? What is driving so many to suicide? [And, why am I having that strange “deja vu” feeling, again?]

There are a growing number of people exhibiting upsetting levels of emotional distress; myself included. It may be classified as “PTSD” or “poor mental health” or written off as “a kid with ADD.” But, the truth is not as simple as Type A, B or C. And, despite their reluctance to believe or accept it, parents and other adults placed in responsible positions are to blame far more than the “afflicted” who may carry some of the blame. But, I am fairly certain the guilt of the latter is, at least, in part, a reflection of what they receive from others, not their own personal choices, habits or actions. And, most of the time, the “afflicted” are suffering from being under the authority of others, not suffering from being themselves, which many of–if not all of us–are often reminded to be, even though the “status quo” and corporate numbers don’t agree. [That’s a wordy way of saying the “conventional world” prefers you to follow trends and fads rather than be unique.]

Let me just get one little terminology matter sorted out, right here. The crisis is NOT “mental health.” That makes the afflicted feel sick in the head and a variety of inadequacies no one needs.

If you put “mental health” on a dating profile, you’re flashing a neon sign for rejection. [Or, if you are unusually lucky, someone will think of you like a sad lap dog in need of pity, and that won’t last.] At the very least, “emotional health” evokes an urgency for compassion. “Mental health” evokes images of frightful institutions with stained white walls, scary electric devices and confining clothing.

When I was at my lowest of lows in my teens, I became suicidal. I cracked under the pressure of trying to be the best student I could be (because people told me I was “smart” and “could do anything” I wanted if I just “believed” in myself). Guess what. My belief must be flawed, like so many other aspects of my being, and, becoming aware of that flaw, I broke and nearly ended my own life by starving. I didn’t have an eating disorder or a desire to “cut.”

[Ew. Bleh. I do NOT care to see blood or use sharp objects. I like the craftsmanship of swords but am not likely to use one in combat unless my life depends upon it; and, even then, I could not imagine drawing blood without vomiting.]

I just could no longer live the life I was told I had to live. I quickly fell into the belief that I was mentally ill and needed medical help. I took whatever I could receive with the limited resources my parents could provide, and it nearly killed me. The professional help I sought took away my most expensive possession and provided me with pills that nearly caused a heart attack.

When I learned this, luckily before the tragic event could occur, I developed a temper like this world has probably not seen since Adolph Hitler. I knew then, no matter how “ill” I was, I was not getting the help I needed…from anyone. Not my family. Not any professional my parents could afford. I felt a strange urge to fight for my life (and, later, my faith, after becoming very angry with “God” for not responding to my prayers). How I am still alive remains a mystery.

Fighting to stay alive did not and does not solve the remaining problem. I shouldn’t have to fight, at all. I should be living comfortably and within my means, without concern for perfection, wealth or the “status quo.” Instead, I continued (and continue) to suffer from lacking emotional support.

Emotional support involves people of any age being able to speak openly about anything experienced which evokes feeling and, now and then, share some sign of affection, a hug or handshake, for examples. Emotional support is knowing you don’t have to be alone with any mental or emotional difficulty/challenge; you can reach out and feel relieved when you make contact with a caring individual. Emotional support comes with good friendships and healthy family relations, not quarreling every day or slamming doors in the faces of emotional uncertainties.

And, while many are steered toward professional therapy, sadly, professional psychology isn’t the same as a good friend or counseling parent. [If you are fortunate enough to know a good therapist, congratulations; I hope it works out for you. I remain skeptical and bitter.] Why should an “educated professional” giving individual hours to a number of troubled individuals be expected to replace everyone’s emotional support system? If you cannot be emotionally supportive to one other person or a group of children, how can you expect some stranger to invest their life energy into your problems. If daycare services had to include sorting out emotional difficulties, I suspect the management (and any other employees under their authority) would turn gray and consider pushing a panic/eject button.

Heck. Just look at the typical nursing home. How many cases do we hear about elderly family members being force-fed pills until they can no longer think straight and die in their wheel chairs? Families who can no longer care for those individuals rely on outside help, and the outside help is lucky if they can be the dying person’s friend for a short time before it’s too late. How many in that field are truly supportive and compassionate? Compare that number to the number of employees (and, probably, management) who show little to no care, for whatever reason. Maybe the staff are lacking emotional support, too; and that’s why they work there instead of some other place that requires daily smiles to countless customers.

Well…that’s not good. That’s not being nice to your elders. But, it’s okay. You just couldn’t do any more for them. And, if paid strangers can do no better, well, I guess that’s just life. On we go. Right? Enjoy the unpleasant funerals, eat more and more cake and coffee and keep going.

With professional therapy, you pay this stranger to help you sort out your problems. And, from my experience, as a minor, you get textbook answers and the expectation that someone in your life should be able to help with some of what’s troubling you. [My parents were expected to understand, but they were far from understanding anything and part of my problem.] When the therapist is out of answers, medication is prescribed (or, like me, you are handed over to someone else who handles the legal details of medication distribution, sparing the previous therapy service provider from lawsuits). Or, you may get steered toward a number of other service providers to help with assimilating into modern adult society. But, I doubt you’ll FEEL better, other than maybe a temporary relief for having connected some dots to get something done. And, when you feel a sudden need to be emotional with someone, you may not be able to reach out to that therapist who has many other clients and limited time. Imagine if your own parents said they had other children to attend and to make an appointment. Could you wait two weeks to get a hug or chat with your parents when your emotional distress is at a peak?

Emotional support isn’t passing through an airport terminal. You don’t check your baggage, partake in a strip search, fill out some paperwork and pass through a scanner to make sure you’re not hiding anything dangerous. Oh. Wait, that’s what my therapy experience entailed, along with a few unfriendly individuals who coldly told me to “dry up” instead of trying to improve my mood or guide my attention toward something more productive without sounding like boot-camp instructors, making me feel like I had no privacy and robbing me of sleep.

A large enough number of young individuals with this problem have insufficient parents who are too consumed with what they call work and their own personal “release mechanisms” to give their children adequate time and attention.

[Case in point; my own sister has kids and is lucky if she can talk with them without losing her temper after a “stressful day of work.” The father of the children, who does not come from the most socially gifted of families and typically only talks about food or sports or gambling, will quickly pull out his “smartphone,” plunk on a couch and tune out the world when he’s not “at work.” And, if you “poke the bear,” you get mauled. You might wonder why one child has uncontrollable physical “tics” and why another refuses to discuss anything that might be troubling him. Those kids don’t feel comfortable sharing anything about their emotional concerns.]

[Now, take my own parents. Please. Ha. Heck. Take my whole family branch of the tree (myself included on an off day). If you confront one twig and question their behavior, they will deny any responsibility and point fingers. My mother likes to say her parents could do nothing for her. She won’t go on at length with talk of blaming or shaming her parents. But, it’s fairly clear; my grandparents did not supply enough emotional support. It might explain why my mother was the oldest but last to marry among her siblings; why it seems she had to be forced out of the house in a “fixed-up” marriage (meaning she married the guy her “friend” fixed her up with for a rare date). And, on that note, if anyone offers to “fix me up” with someone, I will Taylor-Swift-ly refuse.]

I used to think my parents were good people. I used to have–no, I cannot even bring myself to say it, anymore. It makes me nauseous. I know I hate when people think I think I am better than them, but that’s how I felt about my parents as a little boy. At least, they made me feel as if they were better parents than those who were not home to cook or “be around” while I was watching TV, my main friend for many years, when other friends seemed scarce or too discouraged to call/visit. But, they weren’t the good sort of parents I’d hope to have. No matter what my one sister thinks, they didn’t read me bedtime stories beyond the age of maybe five. I was told to read myself a story, always to occupy myself while my mother and/or father did whatever they had to do to remain sane every day; and they wonder why I have little interest in reading. How I became a good, dedicated student remains a mystery.

My parents never had “the talk” with me; so, when school decided to teach my class about the “birds and bees,” I was petrified and could no longer feel comfortable in the presence of a pretty girl (or even a not-so-pretty girl). I was suddenly Adam in the Garden of Eden, stripped of my innocence by someone who didn’t give me much more emotional support than I received from my own parents, covering my “parts” and looking for the exit door.

And, if I asked my parents any questions or presented any concern with weighted emotions, I was handed a sign that should have read “CLOSED.” My parents had no service to offer. Their dusty computer-less brains could not compute explaining sex of any kind to a minor…or, probably, people of any age. This “small” failing on their part has contributed to SO much social anxiety and difficulty in my adult life.

Find me a parent who can say they spend at least an hour out of every week having a heart-to-heart chat with their children, and I will feel more assured that the children are doing okay (unless the parent is lying).

But, children are not the only ones suffering. Adults are cracking under the pressure, too. I could run off a list of famous names, some people my age, including a former classmate and the lead singer of a favored band. I suffer a small heart attack every time someone I value ends their life or when I hear someone “like me” does the grim deed. Oh, I’m just like that guy; he’s funny and zany…and he just ended his own life. Why? Why must I be like all of these troubled individuals who never find the happiness they desire and leave this life in a horrible, unnatural way? How many accounts must I hear/bear before I can take no more?

Adults are less likely to be saved before they kill themselves. Kids often get caught, somehow, leaving trails to their plots of demise. I shake my head at any news story about some teen shooting people at his or her school and the family admitting no awareness of the problem’s development; someone’s fibbing and/or not adequately speaking with the troubled teen. [Or, there is a dark force at work, here, and no one is talking about that X-File.]

Adults may exhibit self-destructive tendencies/habits, like drinking or other addictions. Yet, when an adult ends their own life, it’s too often discovered after the deed is done. Too many people flock to the scene to say something about how they “had no idea” or expected as much (but could do nothing to stop the suicide), leaving the blame on the afflicted, the one suffering. [Well, they are no longer suffering if they are now dead. Right?]

[Let me just stop right here to briefly discuss “misconceptions.” Misunderstandings are probably the number two problem in establishing emotional support, second to a lack of comfortable communication. And, if anyone misunderstands my writing here as a suicide note or red flag, they are sorely mistaken. But, thanks, if you are concerned. If you reach out, I’ll respond.]

[Maybe if I did not hold onto a thread of faith–if I did not retain some expectation for a god to be supervising everything that I imagine exists for some reason–I might be more at ease with what others claim is a dead-end life. Maybe then killing myself would be easy enough. But, nothing is that simple for me. And, whatever the reason, suicide scares me as much as living in this increasingly distressing world. My fears of dying could melt your face off the skull. Yet, death, I realize or hope, would be a relief. And, I’ve come close so many times without trying to end my own life, leaving me to wonder…is a “higher power” keeping me alive for some purpose? Am I here to be someone’s guardian angel or counselor?]

Right now, my own lack of emotional support is taking a devastating toll on my physical health. That I won’t deny. [I’m lucky I can eat any solid food, right now.] I have just as much inclination to blame “the world” as I realize my own lack of self-control over emotions. My anxiety, depression and other forms of distress are running wild like solar flares or volcanic eruptions. I cannot talk to anyone about my troubles without getting countered or slighted by some casual defense. People I know are “too busy” or dealing with their own lives. I’m a burden to them. They have no answers. I’ve been advised to take relaxing not-the-most-legal drugs. And, the moment I get emotional, I’m “too much.” The phone call is abruptly ended. The email gets an unpleasant response. Lights go out. Good feelings pop (vanish) like bubbles. Cracks form and streams of distress flow through my body, wreaking havoc where they will.

[On a side note, my mother is terrible with friendships. She has a “friend” who has been calling, at least, once a year. And, if that friend is lucky, my mother will call her back, once, after a day or more, when she “feels up to the challenge.” There is no regular interaction or emotional support. This friend has known my mother since they were young adults, probably before my mother was married. And, somehow, this friend has stayed in touch, reaching out to my mother, all these years. Sure; this friend calls with her share of emotional burdens and rarely has anything pleasant to share. But…that’s her life! That’s her problem. She needs a friend; she needs emotional support. But, my own mother cannot be that friend. And, clearly, no matter how many times she calls me a cute name to suggest she’s my friend, she’s not my friend, not at all. She’s an obstruction and hypocrite.]

This is my life. And, it’s not much different from the life I had as a teen, when I was suicidal and very confused, before I had the temper and cynical outlook I have now.

Is nothing going to change? Is nothing going to improve? How can or will it?

Of course, there are things I am not doing. But, beyond myself, reaching out, I expect to cross paths with other people. And, beyond “professional” or “business” behavior, what can I expect or hope to achieve? Good friendships and other emotionally satisfying relationships seem out of reach. If I step outside my comfort zone or take action that isn’t “normal,” I’m a “freak.” No one seems to approve of passing notes or making friends with the medical staff who call you their patient. Anyone else in my shoes would probably become even more deviant or give up the opposite sex…if that’s even a thing, anymore, considering people are CHOOSING to be “sexless” or attempt to alter their DNA so they might be happier to look in a mirror. [Yet, most likely, they still have some form of deviant sexual intercourse.]

[If I’m as bad off as those other folks who killed themselves, I should be dead. I don’t need heart medication to prolong my miserable life just to add questionable side effects. I’d rather die naturally…even if it pains me to say it, literally.]

Forget climate change. If the climate goes south, humans are to blame. If humans get wiped out, we’re still worse than the dinosaurs who did not use nuclear power or fossil fuels to sell a lie amounting to more money than I can put into words, time and time again, generation after generation.

…..But, I bet you or I would be less tense and less likely to be careless with the environment if we weren’t making excuses for our lacking emotional support. If the problem persists, I fear solving climate change won’t be a permanent solution. It’ll just be another diversion that costs too many people more than they should have to pay, simply because someone tries to play god. A few decades later, someone else will try to sell your descendants a bill of goods, try to make you pay more taxes and fees to keep nature from killing you. And, those still living under the “safe, manufactured climate of control” will still likely be suffering from lousy relationships. Sooo, we’re just prolonging the misery by trying to control the atmosphere?

Climate concerns won’t be resolved today, tomorrow or the next day. And, neither will problems caused by lacking emotional support. But, if we open one door today, that’s one less door we have to open tomorrow.

Do YOU know someone who might need your emotional support?

02
Mar
18

A Family Imbalanced

****

I am, once again, working through some deep-seeded feelings and–if you the reader so decide to give it–get some input.  In this age of short attention spans, I consider it amazing if the average reader can digest all I have to say.  [So, pat yourself on the back if you do.  And, if you’ve read similar thoughts in previous posts of mine, bare with me; it wouldn’t surprise me if I repeated.

NOTE:  If all you do is click LIKE on this post, I will be annoyed because I don’t know what you hope to achieve by doing that.  And, I will feel like a spectacle, standing in public in my underwear.

What inspired this purging of the soul?  Recent events in which I have been giving much of my time and energy to my family and seen little in return.  Sometimes my offers of assistance and input are rejected, with or without mention of how I should live my life differently.  That reaction seems to run in the family (myself included, under certain circumstances).  I just wish someone would step up and say, “Now, what can I do to help YOU?” Or, “How are you coming with ___?  Need any help?”

I seem to be more willing to help my family (and anyone who triggers sympathy in me) than they are willing (and/or able) to help me.  Granted, they have loaded their hands with fairly full lives of their own while I struggle to “get myself together.”  I cannot offer much more than my helping hands, remaining mobility, “over-thinking” and sympathetic brain (for working out all of those little mental wrinkles that plague those with failing memories or certain problems that need solving)…and patience.  And, if a member of my family did anything that shocked or upset my “code,” I might be less willing to offer help.

[IE If someone chose to get drunk and go broke, I might have a hard time offering financial or even emotional support.  That is, in part, because I’ve never let myself be so careless and cannot relate; I don’t feel like I have the “coping skills” to deal with that situation.  I could easily hand over money and risk leaving myself in financial danger, but I am resistant–for whatever reason–to do so.  And, I’ll get more into that sort of situation in a moment.]

It’s actually somewhat amazing I am willing to help my family, at all, when, some years ago, I was at a serious crossroads with the core of my being, and my family essentially looked the other way, treating me like a misfit of society who didn’t want to “go with the flow.”  [Which is ironic after years of chasing fads only to be told this behavior was costly and pointless.]  I realize solitude and defending myself so long has depleted my resistance and left me more in need of human contact and cooperation.

Long ago, in my late teens, I wanted a fresh start, a makeover of sorts.  And, if anyone supported the entities that rubbed me the wrong way, I withdrew from those supporters to defend myself, rather than accept people simply telling me I am crazy for being so troubled by something they saw as harmless.  [This came with trusting professionals with my life and feeling my life was threatened by those professionals.]  All I knew at the time was I needed to purge my being of what felt like a serious mistake, similar to atoning for a sin.  And, my family, my foundation, my roots, stood in the way.

[You might hear or read sources that say you should “be” and “love” yourself.  I have felt unable to do that thoroughly because I continually run into opposition, including family.  If you like metaphors, it’s sort of like being a young bird wanting to fly and having your wings either torn to shreds or weakened by lack of proper nutrition.]

Now, this endured for many years, me unable to trust my family with just about anything and feeling misunderstood.  I had no privacy, no freedom to maintain a room of my own (design) as I saw fit.  [If I left the house, I’d return home many days to find my possessions rearranged, altered or missing.  Thus, each time I wanted to leave home, I couldn’t help being concerned and was denied the option to use locks to secure my space.]  I survived by doing what I had been told to do since I was little…keep myself busy.  But, this wasn’t advancing my life in any good way I could see.  When I wanted to have “adult” discussions, no one could cope with my rapid-firing concerns/hesitation.  And, if they felt like bringing up old news–like that time I was trying to put behind me–any chance of cooperation went down in emotional flames rather quickly.

[Again, ironic, considering another member of the immediate family has had several makeovers and never once had to worry about his own room being invaded/rearranged.]

A bothersome pattern involves me buckling whenever I hesitate to try/do something and seek input from family.  I’m reluctant to ask, worrying about the response I may get.  And, if the response comes with some measure of judgment, objection, insult/offense or resistance, I give up the quest for assistance/input and recoil into a troubling state of helplessness.

Add to this my inability to do just about anything for myself, including stepping outside my comfort zone (if you can even call what I had comforting) to meet new people, to socialize, and I am a rather handicapped individual going nowhere.  Before I stopped going (and began fighting to defend my decision), I couldn’t even go to mass/church with family without feeling lacking in their acceptance, feeling a bit like a reject and enemy.  The church was supposed to be my sanctuary, and it couldn’t be; not with my family and social anxieties.

This is just the tip of the emotional iceberg.  And, after giving these thoughts a few hours of my time, I am feeling lost in thought and depleted.  So, without knowing what else to say, I will stop here.  If I feel up to it, later, I will revise/add to these thoughts.

* I am writing this in addition to a previous post about lacking love and friendship. *

 

01
Apr
15

Fight On, Avril (Lavigne); I Salute You…

…but promise me I’ll never catch you faking.  No, no, no.

I heard about Avril, a lovely Canadian singer who looks smaller and younger than her last reported age of…well, you look it up.  She is reported to have been bitten by a nasty tick which gave her an onset of Lime Disease.  But, when she went in to see a doc and report the symptoms, they didn’t take her seriously.  So, she started adjusting her lifestyle to combat what was troubling her.

So, was/is it Lime Disease?  Or, something else?

Either way, from what the media said she was doing to take care of herself, I saw a piece of myself in the effort.  I feel she and I would get along well.  She’s got “writing chops.”  So, I continue to support and hold a torch for her.  [As long as this isn’t some April Fool’s situation.  I have low tolerance for lies and fake anything.  Which is why I started this piece with that lyric of hers.]

Who’s with me?

12
Jan
15

Profound Thoughts: Do Not Give “Her” a Name

And now, it’s time for more Profound Thoughts with Writingbolt…

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I imagine meeting someone like George Clooney and having a discussion about love and his recent marriage. And, I can hear him telling me, a guy who has yet to come close to any relationship remotely resembling marriage, to go out and find my Amal.

Considering he went as long as he did as a bachelor after a broken marriage left him numb…and the odds of a long, successful/happy marriage in the modern world…there’s one thing I’d have to tell him.

Do not give “her” a name.

Imagine if you met a married someone who told you the same. What if–dare I say it–something unpleasant were to happen to their “one true” love? Does that then mean that your “friend” wanted you to meet/marry someone who would leave you?

You know what I’d say to that? Thanks a lot, you jerk! What kind of crap speech is that?

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