Thursday, December 24, 2015

Merry Christmas!

I've come to the conclusion that I'm destined to be single for the rest of my life and that I am most certainly going to die alone. Stay with me, here. It's a combination of being too nerdy, socially awkward, damaged, fat, and esoteric. On their own, each of those flaws aren't necessarily deal-breakers. Taken together, however, they more or less disqualify me from the dating pool. Allow me break it down and elaborate.

My interests and hobbies are seemingly harmless enough; there is an ever growing number of women who are interested in science, technology, gaming, and related areas. However, my passion is far too in-depth and is off-putting to the average individual. I can name every enemy in every Super Mario game, all 721 Pokémon plus their base stats and movepools, and can richly describe every last detail of every JRPG I've ever played. I'm known as something of a walking encyclopedia, knowing tons of trivia from science, history, language, and so on and so forth. This tells people that I have absolutely no social life and no one wants to become involved with such a person. Human beings are social animals and not being social is cause for concern and ostracization. My social awkwardness ties into this as well. It's simple biology and sociology. The fat thing is easy enough to explain. Being fat is being unhealthy. And I don't care enough to change that. And health is, in an evolutionary sense, predictive of a person's ability to provide. Again, it's biology. I'm a very damaged person, emotionally speaking. I have non-existent levels of confidence and self-esteem and cannot function day-to-day on my own. I'm needy, unreasonable,  pedantic, and demanding. I have nothing of value to offer in a relationship and in spite of my desire to have one, I don't deserve one. If you want something, you don't deserve to have it. You must continue living your life without actively seeking that which you most desire. If it happens, then great. If not, then you must accept that and move on. But I cannot operate like that. It's not who I am. I don't know how to accept and move on. Therefore, I deserve to be alone because I am not capable of change or growth. I am who I am. I can pretend all I want to be the kind of person someone wants to be with, but I will always know in my heart that I'm living a lie. I want acceptance and love. And if I pretend to not be a shitty, broken shell of a human being, then whomever I would end up with would be accepting of the lie I created, not me. If I can't be accepted for the monster that I am, then I'd rather be alone forever. I hate myself and everything around me, drink heavily, self-mutilate, cannot regulate my own intense emotions, have entirely unrealistic expectations and desires,  and am incapable of change. I am undateable and unlovable. The only person who understands me is my mother, as we have similar psychologies. I'm too indecipherable and difficult to relate to. The amount of effort it would take to truly get to know me and to see past the layers of bullshit is too much and the payoff is far too little to warrant even putting any forth. But it's all right. I actually find myself caring less and less as time goes on. I'm just another gross internet nerd, destined to die alone and unloved. Just like every other lonely nerd out there. All the time, I read about this 30 year old dude or that 50 year old bastard who lives alone, is a virgin, and contemplates suicide every single damn day. These people are everywhere and I'm just like them. Except for the virgin part. That notwithstanding, I'm one of a huge group. What are the odds that I'm any different, that I'll be the one to break free and find love? Negligible. But that's fine. This is just how I was meant to live. And I can't change that. The steps to change that would render me a different person, I would cease to exist as the person I know myself to be. I cannot deal with uncertainty and have a tenuous grasp on my identity as is. Change would result in the literal and figurative death of me. So I reiterate, I don't deserve to be in a relationship, and no one deserves to be dragged down into misery with me. How can I be expected to maintain a relationship when I can't even maintain my own self? I'm going to die alone and that's okay,

Oh, and Merry Christmas.

- K

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

A mini update

I don't why I even bother getting upset at anything any more. Honestly, it should cease to surprise me whenever something bad happens. I received a call when I was working this morning, they left a voicemail. I checked my voicemail on my lunch break and it was from Community Mental Health. They called to inform me that my appointment with my social worker, scheduled for November 13th, was cancelled due to my therapist being on leave. She won't be back until sometime after the new year. At which point she'll call to schedule something.

This is the second time she has cancelled on me and I haven't even met her yet! Last month, I went to the ER with suicidal ideation and seeking admittance. They turned me away, saying I was not in any kind of critical condition and they didn't have the resources to care for me. They did set me up with an urgent care doctor, who then referred me to the mental health clinic. I met with a woman there, who then set me up to see a social worker who specializes in dialectical behavioural therapy, the principle treatment strategy for Borderline Personality Disorder. I was supposed to see her last Thursday but she cancelled on me, rescheduling me for November. Then that was cancelled today. Everyone always says that suicide is a serious matter and that is should be addressed immediately when someone displays signs of being suicidal. Well it is certainly evident that no one actually cares whether I live or not. Help is nothing more than a pipe dream. No one cares, so why should I? I know that something is going on in my therapist's life that is preventing her from working, I understand that. However, if the system was at all concerned, they would have at least tried to get me in to see someone. I don't like placing blame on others, bad that things that happen to me are usually my fault. But I feel that this is beyond my control. If I'm found dead in my apartment, they should place the blame on the mental health system for not caring enough to prevent it from happening. The funny thing is that it would take at least a month for anyone to find me dead. I have no friends to check up on me and my family rarely calls anymore. Hell, the one to find me would be my landlord and only after my rent checks started to bounce. I really should just end this already. I just need to summon the courage to do it.

Until next time.

- K

Saturday, September 26, 2015

No matter where the sun strikes us, knives will grow

I feel detached from the world around me tonight. It's like I'm existing in my own little bubble that is technically within but entirely separate from the reality in front of me. My thoughts and emotions are racing and cycling rapidly, my insides tingle with unspecified anxiety and stress. It's like I'm floating in a void and the processing of incoming environmental stimuli is blunted or scattered, understated. I guess a somewhat comparable example could be seen in the case of absorption lines as seen in astrophysics. Each and every element on the periodic table scatters some wavelengths of light and absorbs others. Let's say a star has a planet orbiting it and that planet has an atmosphere. We can tell what that atmosphere is made of by measuring what portions of the visual spectrum of light, or photons, are absorbed when the star's light passes through the atmosphere. This will appear as black bars, or absorption lines, on a rainbow displayed on a spectrograph. My experience is sort of similar; just as not all wavelengths of light make it through an atmosphere, not all sensory information is making it through my CNS to the various processing centres in my brain. I feel foggy, hazy, everything feels similar but different. Something is being lost, I feel like I'm existing outside of everything. It's very difficult to explain. My memory feels impaired as well, I have a very hard time remembering even what happened yesterday. My eyes are heavy and objects in the environment even look fake. I don't know if this is some sort of mild state of dissociation but I wouldn't be surprised.

I decided to go for a walk, to see if that would snap me back to reality. I had a compulsion to go quickly, like there was a stress inside that made my legs move faster and faster. I power walked and eventually ran until I ran out of breath and started to hurt. As I came upon the shopping plaza down the road, my eyes darted around to the stores, cars, and people around me as I moved. It all looked so fake, the people didn't even look like they were real people. They may as well have been automatons. I know that they're real people, I know everything around me is indeed real. I'm not in a psychotic state or anything, I'm aware of everything. I'm just saying that it feels different. The best explanation I can really give is that I was existing as a separate entity from everything and everyone else and that everything else feels muffled or something. I say "was" but it's still going on now. I would say that perhaps I'm slowly going insane from lack of social contact, but that can't be it as I work with people Monday to Friday and am usually texting someone when I'm off. Even interacting with the cashier at Walmart felt a bit off. It's like I was talking to a doll or something. The people there, they looked unreal almost. When I got home, I cut a couple times to see if that would bring me back but it didn't real do much of anything except give me an endorphin rush. Which was nice but not what I was looking for. So then I poured a drink and came on here to complain about it. I'd like to say that drinking and writing go hand in hand and that I'm engaging in a ritual that has practiced by writers worldwide for time immemorial. But I am no writer, I'm just an idiot writing a stupid blog. I'm no more a writer than a 16 year old girl with a diary.

A thought occurred to me while I was writing just know, so I might as well flesh it out. I find myself withdrawing from social contact more and more as time goes on. I know I work with people, but I'm interacting with them only is required to do the job, I don't engage in any sort of chit-chat. I'm not hostile or anything, I just keep to myself and stay more or less quiet. But at the same time, I know that I'm craving social contact more and more as well. You would think the two would be inversely proportional but that is not the case. You know what I want more than anything in the world right now? A long, full body hug and to cuddle with a girl while watching a movie. Pathetic, right? I sound like every neckbeard basement dweller ever. But the thought of actually do doing that scares the hell out of me. Maybe I fear the inevitable rejection that accompanies those things upon the realization of who I really am. I feel like since I began cutting again, I moved past the point of no return. Any attempts to engage in meaningful human contact would be met with failure and abandonment. I'd have to lie to the poor girl about who I am. I would know that were she to see the scratches from the razor, she would leave immediately, believing me to be some sort of monster. She wouldn't be wrong to do so or think that. It would be hard to blame her. Self injury is an extremely difficult thing to accept about another person. I know, I witnessed it in some of the people in my life. My mother compulsively picks at her skin as has large scars from it and my ex girlfriend from high school, Erika, used to cut as well. Both have made suicide attempts through pill overdoses. That was hard on my head and no one should ever have to put up with that. I wouldn't want to put any other person through that. But, paradoxically, I want someone to have close that I can admit these things to, these self-destructive behaviours, uncontrollable emotions, and abnormal thought patterns without fear of judgement or abandonment. It's another case of emotional brain being disconnected from and in opposition to my logical brain. My emotional brain wants that intimacy, that closeness and reassurance that everything is going to be okay, but my logical brain knows that that is nothing more than unrealistic expectations. People will get hurt upon learning the truth and leave to save themselves any further grief. It knows that it's better to withdraw complete and not subject anyone to my madness. Yet my emotions leak through and I talk to the odd person about some of what I'm going through. I feel like such a bad person for letting that happen, they don't deserve that kind of treatment. I hate myself for it and that's the punishment that I deserve for not keeping it in. I'm beyond redemption at this point and any attempts to make any meaningful connections with others is futile and ill advised.  And I can't stop the wanting and yearning. I really am the worst.

Until next time.

- K

Thursday, September 24, 2015

On nights like tonight, when no one's around, I sit in the dark on my hands on the ground

I feel so light that it's as if I'm floating. My whole body is tingling. My mouth is agape in awe. Allow me to explain. This entire week, I've been physically and emotionally numb, like I've been disconnected from the world around me. It feels like something isn't quite right or that my sensory experience is missing something, like some information is getting lost in processing or isn't integrated properly. It's hard to really explain. It's like I'm here but I'm not. I haven't been feeling anything except incompleteness. My entire central nervous system feels slowed down, sluggish. It's strange, isn't it? One moment my emotions are that intense that I am out of control and the next, I have none whatsoever. I've been holding back certain impulses for a while now and tonight, I decided that I didn't care and to follow through in an effort to feel something. So when I got home from work, I got undressed, went to the bathroom, used some peroxide to sanitize my skin, then proceeded to cut my shoulder with a razor. Yes, yes I know, totally teenage, angsty, emo stuff. I'm beyond caring about that. I locked eyes with myself in the mirror and slid it across my skin slowly. It hurt, I winced in pain, but adrenaline and cortisol began to course through my veins. I used a bit more pressure than I have been in previous sessions and it definitely hurt more. The cuts were deeper. Instead of blood just welling to the surface and more or less sitting there in little beads, I drew enough blood for it to start flowing down my skin. I hate the sight of blood and it was hard to see my own flowing like that, but it was strangely fascinating. Even now, I look to my shoulder every couple of minutes to revel in its appearance. It's some sort of sick pleasure. But I got my desired result. I feel good, light and airy, cathartic. My fingers and toes can hardly move from the endorphin rush, even typing is somewhat challenging. Pain is starting to kick back in, my shoulder stings but I don't mind. It's filthy and disgusting and one of the worst things a person can do, but that hardly matters at this point. Sure, I hate myself for it but I see it as a necessary evil. What's another bad habit, anyway? It's not like I'm doing any serious damage. Alcoholics and smokers are far worse to their bodies than I am. They're causing irreparable organ damage and I'm just causing superficial tissue damage. It'll heal up over the next week like it always does. It's not like it's in any visible areas, either. I choose to do this, it's my body, and no one has to see so really, who am I hurting? I don't even know why I'm trying to rationalize this, I have nothing to prove or defend. Regardless, I should be good for the next month or so anyway. It's been about a month and half since the last time so I was about due.

Some recent discussion has brought me to an interesting topic of thought: mental illness and loneliness. It's an interesting conundrum to consider. The top contributor to a positive prognosis of a mentally ill person is a strong social support system but over half of all mentally ill people rate themselves as feeling lonely often or constantly compared to less than 10% of the normal population. Many mentally ill people have no close friends and families that avoid having to put up with them. Whether that's due to the stigma surrounding mental illness or the inability for others to handle the mentally ill remains to be seen, but it's probably a combination. A likely scenario is that the public view, or stigma, of mental illness fills normal people with preconceived notions of what to expect, which in turn may alter their perception of behaviour and traits that may or may not be as alarming and disgusting as they actually are. As I stated in a previous entry, this is likely due to normal people being unable to take the perspective of someone who is mentally ill; there's that disconnect in inferring mental states due to ignorance. A normal person can read up all they want on a mental illness, read every article ever published in every psychiatric journal and they still won't really know what it feels like or what thoughts go through the mind of someone who is profoundly disturbed. There's simply no way to share that unique experience with another person unless they are also suffering from that affliction. So normal people and society at large shut us out, labels us as monsters and demons, and we get swept under the rug. This perpetuates because no one wants to deal with us, put up with our unpleasant thoughts and self-destructive behaviour, our abnormal and indecipherable thoughts. As a result, we become more hated and the cycle repeats. Hell, in the US, a good portion of medical insurance carriers flat out refuse to provide coverage for the treatment of borderline personality disorder because they literally believe that borderlines do not get better so they would just be wasting money that could be better spent elsewhere. And we're completely aware of this. We know we're ridiculed, stigmatized, hated. We retreat inwards so that no one can hurt us any more. The stronger of us pretend to be happy on the outside, praying no one finds out the truth. Social support and companionship is elusive and we begin to hate ourselves for it. Because we're avoided, something must be wrong with us. We're bad people.

Me, I'm a bad person. I've come to that conclusion over years of gathering evidence. Every single one of my friends throughout my life has abandoned me at some point or another. One of the few consistencies in my life. I'm such a drag to be around that I'm always left out of everything. Friends have invited others to go out, have fun, do things but never me. I'm always an afterthought. Even with Tiffany, I always felt like I was nothing more than an afterthought to her. She would go out and chill with people she didn't even know and never thought to invite me out. She would go on to justify this behaviour by stating that she could never predict how I was going to react or feel in any given situation. I was too stressful to be around was what she was basically saying. I guess I can understand where she was coming from; I can hardly even predict what I'm going to do next. That is probably what everyone else in my life has thought as well. I don't have a support system because I'm too unpredictable, too chaotic, too depressing. I'm no fun, I ruin everyone's good time. They avoid me. It really reinforces the idea that there really is something fundamentally wrong with me. I really am a ghost, aren't I? A mere shell of a human. Humans are predictable, they have patterns in their behaviour. Not me, I'm all over the place all the time. But it's all I know. I consequently alienate those around me. Things get tough and they leave. We drift apart, my entire life is basically a story of drifting apart from others. No one ever calls me up to do something, I barely get asked how I'm feeling today. And whenever I am asked, I have to lie or at the very least keep information back because I don't have anything to say that they want to hear. Not once has the question "How are you doing?" ever asked earnestly with genuine concern. All that they want to hear is "I'm pretty good, how about you?" If you're feeling bad, the best answer you'll get is "Oh, that sucks. I hope you feel better soon!" or "Cheer up, it's not that bad!" I want to strangle those people. Complete lack of concern, no empathy or compassion. Everyone is all so selfish and unsympathetic. When faced with real, tangible pain in another person, they run away to preserve their own happiness. They post inspirational messages and pictures on Facebook, thinking they're making a positive difference in the world. They share then move on to the next thing on their news feed. It's sickening. Sometimes I wonder who the real monsters are here.

But I suppose it's not like I really deserve any compassion. Allow me to elaborate. The world can more or less be broken down into good and bad. Life strives to achieve good and avoid bad. Pleasure is good and pain is bad. It's biological. Something that causes pain is inherently bad. Organisms learn to avoid that which is perceived as bad. People have a tendency to avoid me, ignore me, ostracise me, but only after they see who I really am. When I'm hiding behind a veil of pseudo-happiness or just not telling them how I really feel, I am talked to and fairly well tolerated. But once someone gets to know me, learns of my self-destructive habits, uncontrollable depression and anxiety, erratic behaviour, and inconsistent thought patterns, they keep their distance, sometimes pitying me, sometimes just hating me. Therefore, I can safely conclude that based on these premises and evidence that I am inherently bad at my core. People avoid what is bad and they avoid me once the real me become apparent. Therefore, I must be bad. It's simple logic. And why wouldn't they? Who would willingly subject themselves to the pain and frustration that I cause them? It would make no sense if they did. It's hard to blame them, I even scare myself. It's their job when pushing comes to shove. You ultimately have to look out for yourself and no one wants to waste their time or risk their happiness on someone like me. You really can't trust anyone. You put yourself out there and you're met with rejection for being you. So you need to be a fake you, a you that people can like. For me, however, that takes too much effort. I'd rather hated and real than liked and fake. I'm terrible at feigning happiness anyway, I'm not the one in control here. Despite all of this knowledge, these conclusions, I still desire companionship more than anything. I want someone in my life who actually accepts me for who I am without running away. I want someone compassionate, understanding, truly empathetic, and patient. Am I even right to ask this of the world? Is it really that an unobtainable and outlandish thing to want? It must be. I feel so greedy and selfish for even wanting this. I feel like a terrible person. Many people live their lives every day without anyone in their lives and they get along fine. They don't need people, they don't need anyone. They work, come home, watch sitcoms and eat supper, then go to bed, then wake up the next morning and do the same thing without a second thought. Why can't I be one of those people? I suppose a person must be really grounded for that sort of thing. Something I most certainly am not. No one should have to put up with me, anyway.

Until next time.

- K

Sunday, September 20, 2015

I'm just a ghost

I was talking with my mother today and we began discussing an interesting topic: what does it mean to actually accept something? It's not nearly as simple as it appears on the surface, there is a strong abstract component to the idea. You can say that you accept something but words are more or less meaningless unless there's a behaviour and thought process attached to them. Therein lies the problem: what kind of thoughts and behaviours do a person who has accepted something exhibit? That is something that I have struggled with my entire life. People say that you must accept something and let go in order to move forward in life. I haven't the slightest idea what that actually entails! It's not like I can just force myself to stop thinking about something that bothers me. The thoughts race through my head, growing in intensity until they're all I can think about. Even the words "acceptance" and "letting go" make absolutely no sense to me, they're gibberish. I find it so difficult to even express in what ways I cannot comprehend the meaning of acceptance. It's just a word to me. I know that it means that you no longer care about whatever it is you accept. But I don't understand that concept as I always care and give mind to everything that has happened to me. There are a lot of things that happened to me during my childhood that I don't really remember. Is forgetting the same as acceptance? That can't be true because acceptance requires a conscious awareness of the thing you are accepting. I think there's a sort of realization that nothing you can do can change the circumstances in question and that you stop fighting against it. That makes no sense to me, either. In my experience, that just leads to depression and hopelessness. Life is awful and it doesn't get better. I know this to be true, I have the experience to back it up. But it doesn't make me feel any better. And letting go, I have no idea what that is. It's synonymous with forgetting as far as I'm concerned. I think there is an element of giving up control on a situation that you cannot change. Again, this leads to despair as the negative emotions overwhelm you and flood your system. It brings to mind questions such as, "What's the point of it all?" Giving up control means to stop fighting the negative emotions inside. When you stop fighting them, they overtake you and permeate your entire being. You stop caring about what happens, accept that you're destined to feel this way forever, and contemplate the meaning of your life. That's what acceptance means to me. Acceptance is death.

Who is to say what the true thing to accept is, anyway? They say to accept who you are. What about the chronically depressed? If I accept that I'm depressed and always will be, the I'll logically continue to be depressed. But what if I accept that I'm depressed but that things will get better? How do I know which situation is the true one to accept? If I say that things will get better, isn't that denying the chronic nature of depression or dysthymia? It's a lack of acceptance. In fact, it's more likely to make you more depressed because you're giving yourself false hope. People, as a general rule, don't change. Personality is broken down into temperament and character. Temperament is genetic and is more or less inherited from your parents. Character is the result of learning behaviour and responses from environmental stimuli. Temperament determines how our character will develop in response to any given stimulus. Personality and mood disorders have strong genetic components and are based on one's temperament. Therefore, change in temperament and full recovery from something like major depressive disorder or borderline personality disorder is unlikely at best. They are resistant to therapy and in the absence of continued upkeep, an individual will always return to that disordered baseline. That gives pretty solid evidence to the notion that accepting that you will get better and move past your inborn disorder is akin to lying to oneself, to accepting a false truth as reality. Acceptance and change are mutually exclusive concepts. If you accept who you are, then you also acknowledge that change is not necessary. They are incompatible and paradoxical.

What about those who have identity disturbances, such as myself? How can one accept oneself if one does not know who one is? I was told that you need to start by defining your core values and interests and move out from there. But what about the person who has no values or interests to call their own, whose values change and drift over time depending on circumstances and people? What do they accept as true? How can they accept truth when nothing about them is true? These people have no truth, no depth, no self. There is nothing to accept in the first place other than nothingness. Is it even possible to accept nothingness? It seems incompatible with the human experience. A huge component of our stress and anxiety is that lack of identity. Accepting the emptiness inside is unthinkable, it would lead to more stress, mental breakdowns, and suicide. To be empty with no identity is not human. If we aren't human, then what are we? Monsters? Empty husks? Ghosts? We know in our minds that we are biologically human beings, homo sapiens. Yet a part of us knows that we're different from the others. We lack a certain something that makes us the same as them. We fight it, trying our damnedest to fit in and pretend to be human. But that vital spark we lack, it's unavoidable. If we accept that emptiness, we throw away whatever little shred of humanity we thought we had and indeed, we become ghosts. The emptiness wins, takes over, and the incongruence between emptiness and humanity reaches a climax and we are presented with a dilemma: do we shut ourselves out from the real people or do we cease to exist entirely by ending it all? Our bodies tell us we're human but our minds know we're not. The only logical thing to conclude is that our lives are wasted and meaningless. We're fake humans. We hate the real ones simply for being what we're not: human on both the inside and outside. We become jealous and filled with rage. When we accept the emptiness, we accept that we aren't human. That stress destroys us. Such is the nature of our existence.

One last subject I'd like to touch on tonight is the notion of happiness. Happy people are the absolute worst, they're delusional and ignorant. An old friend of mine, who suffers from schizophrenia, once said that happiness is nothing more than a distraction. This really made a lot of sense to me. Consider the chaotic nature of life. Evolutionarily speaking, life has and always will be centred around danger and the avoidance of it. Stress, fear, and anxiety all exist to keep us alive long enough to reproduce and raise a family for the express purpose of proliferating. That's what life does, that's the point. To continue existing for as long as possible. But life must constantly fight against the forces of nature in order to do so. Evolution occurs as a result of environmental stress. So the circumstances surrounding life are clearly stress and danger, that much we've established thus far. Everything life does is in response to that. Therefore, wouldn't it make sense to conclude that happiness and it's associated neurotransmitters exist simple as a distraction from the stress? Stress comes first, happiness comes second. If a person is anxious and fearful all the time, the body begins to break down from constant sympathetic nervous system arousal and stress hormones coarsing through our veins. Organs will fail due to poor nutrient extraction from the digestive system being in standby mode and muscles and tissue will break down from constant arousal with no rest period. Happiness would seem to be a sort of temporary solution so that our bodies can rest and gather resources for the next period of stress.

I probably made little sense tonight and indeed, I was all over the place. Barely coherent and full of logical fallacies. I don't really care.

Until next time.

- K

Monday, September 14, 2015

You can't rectify me

I got thinking about something during the bus ride home from work this evening. I constantly hear from mental health professionals and even other people that it's what we do that really matters in the end. Not what we think or what we feel but what we do. On the surface level, this makes sense. To the average person, results mean everything. The overt effect and influence you have in the actual, physical world around you is what really matters in life. But I wholly disagree with that notion. Nothing in life is ever as simple as it appears, so why should this?

I firmly believe that context is everything. Without context, nothing makes any sense. The internal experience of consciously making a decision to behave in a particular manner is just as important as the behaviour itself, if not more. In order to understand anything in this world, you need to investigate the underlying and mediating factors. The five W's: what, who, where, why, and how. These apply to behaviour as much as they do to anything else. Here's an example: you're walking down street and an older gentleman in an expensive looking suit trips and fall down. You have two options. You could help him up or you could keep walking. In either event, there are an infinite number of motivations reinforcing your behaviour. Assume that a person decides to help the man up. One person may help him up because they saw a person fall and it's the prosocial and good thing to help him, regardless of who he may or may not be. Another person may help him in the hopes of receiving some sort of monetary reward. In the former case, the person is simply a good person for helping the man up for its own sake. In the latter, the person's morality and depth of character are shallow as the motivation to help is for an external reward. Had the man have appeared homeless, the person may have simply walked past him without a second glance. Even though the behaviour illustrated is the same in both cases, the internal processes governing the behaviour demonstrate that one of these people is a good person and the other is bad. In another case, the person walking by help the man up simply because of a perceived social pressure to do so. He does not care about the welfare of the fallen man but helps him because of a fear of being judged negatively. This person could be judged by an informed observer, such as ourselves in this example, as being weak and pathetic. If behaviour is all that really matters, then all of this would be irrelevant. It wouldn't matter if the man was being helped up by a genuine good person, a more insidious one with a hidden agenda, or a weak, easily manipulated fool unable to think for themselves. A psychopath could also be considered here. They may help the man up but only do so to appear normal and a normal member of society. The man would obviously have very different reactions if informed of the type of person who helped him up. A poorly thought out and shallow example, but I believe that it's somewhat accurate.

I was once told by a counsellor that it is actually behaviour that precedes emotion and thought and not the other way around. She told me that what I ought to do is to act the way I want to feel and eventually, behaving that way would be become second nature and the thoughts and emotions normally associated with that behaviour would follow naturally. It makes sense on a neurological level. It builds on the concept of neuroplasticity. Continuously acting in a certain manner will activate and maintain new neural connections while simultaneous pruning the old, defunct, and unused connections associated with behaviours that no longer occur through extinction. It's supposed to introduce contradictory responses to maladaptive internal stimuli. I said it makes sense but it is quite different in practice. I tried it out for a while and it simply didn't work. I acted certain ways and pretended to be happy but any person with major depressive disorder will tell you that that does absolutely nothing to improve one's mood or general outlook. In fact, it may make some people feel even worse. Take me for example. I'm a highly egocentric individual, I will openly admit that. For the most part, I don't really care about the thoughts and struggles and lives of the people around me. Conversations are nearly always based on me and what I'm doing and I constantly fail to reciprocate and ask about the other person. I've been making an effort to do so but I only do so if I manage to remember to. The fact that I have to remember to ask how another person is doing really says it all. It shows a callous lack of concern and empathy for those around me. When something bad happens to someone with whom I am acquainted, I act the way I am expected to act by society. I look sad and behave in a way that would suggest that I feel bad. But I know as I'm doing it that it's all a ruse and constantly wonder if other people can tell that I'm faking it. My reactions are based on how those around me are acting, social referencing, and how I am expected to react according to society's standards. I occasionally wonder if I'm really a sociopath and just don't know it. I know I'm not a psychopath; I feel emotions and have a marked lack of control while under their influence. It's just that my emotions are tied entirely to myself. I care only about me. Maybe it's because of my lack of a solid identity. How can I be expected to worry about others when I'm not even clear on who I am?

This brings me to the subject of change and growth. The sheer thought of going to therapy and getting better, feeling better, liking myself, and being a fully functioning member of society scares the living hell out of me. I've always been a person in need of structure, consistency, and predictability. In the absence of those things, I become an anxious wreck of a person. I've felt badly about myself and my life for so long that it's the only thing I know. My low self-esteem, my lack of confidence, my self-hatred, my anxiety, my depression, it's all I know. In a world that is constantly changing, those traits have always been there, waiting for me, defining me when nothing else can. When things in life go to hell, it's sort of comforting to know that I have some semblance of constancy that I can fall back on. It's like my depression is an old friend who has always been there for me. Maybe not the most helpful friend, but the only one I have been able to count on every time. People come and go, they run when I've become too much for them to handle, but my self-hatred is always there for me. Maybe it's that consistency that I find so soothing. I don't know what it's like to be a happy person. I'm certain that I've been happy in the past, but it's like my brain has blocked it out. I can't remember. But I always remember the bad times. Because they have always been there for me. Being a normal person is uncharted territory for me. With my already shaky identity issues, it's like if I get better, I'll end up losing myself in the process. I'll cease to be me. I can't even comprehend what that really means, but it's frightening as all holy hell. What if everything changes? My interests, my goals and aspirations, my idea of my place in the world, my intellect, my soul? I'm not a strong person. I'm easily broken and sway back and forth like a sailcloth in the wind when presented with different perspectives and arguments. My core would be broken by such a change, I'd never be able to keep a grasp of who I believe myself to be. I'm not grounded. My depression is all I have. Without it, I'm nothing. I don't want to change. I'd rather suffer for eternity but have that consistency rather than run the risk of losing myself for something "better". Who's to say what is better, anyway? Normal, healthy, they're all just abstract terms that represent the centre of a bell curve.

I hate normal people. They are bland, have no experience or internal narrative. What drives their behaviour? The pursuit of good and avoidance of bad? How Epicurean of them. That's not interesting, these people are shallow husks that fail to operate on any sort of complex level. Their lives are automatic and ultimately disposable in a manner of speaking. Not that anyone deserves pain or death, but they're all living the same sort of cookie-cutter life with defined start and end points. Similar courses. Similar interests, beliefs, behaviours, everything. When you think about it, pain is the defining factor of who we are. Our negative experiences always leave bigger imprints than positive ones. It's biological. In order to ensure a long life and reproduction, we become very sensitive to the things that hurt us so we know to avoid them. Consequently, it's the negative things that shape our identities, our personalities. A child can be raised in the most loving home imaginable but all it would take it one traumatizing event to disrupt that development and the child grows up into a barely functional, mentally ill adult. Even my own brain appears to be extremely sensitive to anxiety; it forms anxiety-based connections and associations in as little as one trial or exposure, often through nothing more than my own thoughts. I get anxious about one thing and that anxiety quickly spreads and attaches itself to every relatable subject under the sun like a virus. An anxious thought forms an uncontrollable chain that destroys my entire way of thinking about something, occasionally ending in an area entirely unrelated to where the anxiety began. It's like my mind gets compulsions to continue thinking about things related to the anxious thought, I purposely think about certain ways to fuel the anxiety train. And I hate it. But it's beyond my control and it destroys my life and relationships. People who don't know true emotional pain are not people. They're not human. They're ignorant automatons. "But K!", I hear you shout at your screen, "Everyone has their share of pain. It's how they react to that pain that defines who they are, not the pain itself." While that is true in a sense, it still centres around the concept of pain itself. Some people are lucky enough to be born with a high level of resilience, being able to maintain perspective and keep a level head through painful occurrences and life circumstances. I'm not sure what to think of these people. I want to say that they're delusional, lying to themselves and ignoring what's really going on around them and inside them. They ignore how they really feel. Somehow. That part I am less clear on, the mechanisms behind it. People say that ignorance is bliss but I think that that is complete rubbish. What sets us apart from the other animals is our self-awareness, curiosity, and desire to learn. Therefore, it's the logical conclusion that to want to know everything is the most human thing you can do. That means rejecting falsities, refusing to take things at face value, and willing to accept any and all discomfort that stands in the way of the truth. Life is all about the pursuit of truth. It is all that matters. The most noble profession in the world is that of the scientist, one who has dedicated his entire life to the pursuit of truth. Anything less is inhuman. If you reject the truth and choose to live ignorantly, actively deciding not to learn everything you can about everything around you, you are scum. Well, maybe not scum. That's a harsh word. Perhaps puppet or dog would be more appropriate. The truth can be maddening but to accept any less is unacceptable.

I know I likely made a lot of inconsistencies in this post, but I'm nothing if not inconsistent. It's why I'm constantly yearning for constancy and certainty. Just some food for thought, though I'm not entirely certain regarding how deep or thought-provoking these notions are. They're probably entirely nonsense and superficial as you can get. Such is me.

Until next time.

- K

Saturday, September 12, 2015

Careful, you be careful

Society's obsession with positivity and optimism is really starting to rub me the wrong way. Positivity and optimism are essentially the result of a "normal" person's inability to comprehend the mind of a profoundly disturbed individual. Allow me to illustrate.

I argue that these things are nothing more than wishful thinking based on sympathy rather than any real empathetic compassion towards another person. I understand that no one wants to see another person in pain. It's inherent in our wiring, our DNA. But to be presumptuous and arrogant enough to believe that you actually understand the mind of a mentally ill person when you yourself do not suffer from any such affliction is insulting and highly ignorant. To any normies reading this, do you know what it's like to wake up every morning with a feeling of intense anxiety of the coming hours because of the stress of not knowing what is and is not going to send you crashing down into the pits of despair? To stare into the mirror and look with contempt, calling your reflection a worthless piece of human refuse? You fucking people are disgusting. You know nothing of the pain of the someone else's existence. I hate myself in every way imaginable. I can't even take a simple compliment at work, that I did a good job and went above and beyond what was expected of me. I tell them that it's no big deal and that it was just work that needed to get done. I was doing what is in my job description and nothing more. Whenever something bad happens, I blame myself every single time. Even if I know it's something entirely out of my control. Because it's easier for me to blame myself and feed my ever growing self-hatred than to accept a compliment. I don't know how to accept a compliment. I never learned. And I never will.

Do you truly understand what it's like to have the impulse to walk into oncoming traffic? To just end your life because it's better than the circumstances of your life? You say that you need to be strong, to move past the pain, to ride out the storm to a better tomorrow. Well guess what. People are weak. Just look at the number of suicides every year. Every single one of them, weaklings. We choose to end it because we know better. People generally don't change. That is something that I have come to learn. People are stubborn and stuck in their ways. I'm a miserable piece of shit and I don't even want to change. This is all I know and it's comforting in a twisted way. At least I have some semblance of identity through my pain. My pain is who I am. My constant mood swings, my unresponsiveness to medication, my lack of a moral compass, my hatred of myself and everything around me. Even not having a stable sense of identity is my identity. It's easy, it comes naturally to me. The ignorant people in my life tell me that I need to get back to me, to who I am during the breaks in my negative mood. Those moments are so few and far in between that they hardly define who I am at all. The bullshit that they see, the suicidal, self-destructive, self-harming, cry-baby, alcoholic, emo bitch is who I am. It's more me than anything. There isn't a shred of good in me. I fail to appreciate how comfortable my life actually is. I know that I am independent, to the degree that I can live on my own, have some friends, am appreciated at work, have food and shelter, have a loving family. That makes it all worse. I know I have all these wonderful things but I still feel this way, I still hate everything and everyone regardless. I know how ridiculous and paradoxical that sounds. It makes me feel worse about my situation because there is no reason why I should be feeling this way. There are so SO many people in the world who have it worse than I do, but here I am hating it all and constantly questioning why I should even be alive. I'm a hateful monster and I accept that. But it doesn't make the hate go away. It festers inside and consumes me. All I can do release the tension of these feelings of hopelessness and emptiness by drinking, popping whatever pills I can find, and slicing myself up. I swear, cutting is such a pleasurable activity, you don't even know. It's not the endorphins or anything like that. I don't get the same kind of rush stubbing my toe or whacking my head off of something. It hurts and I hate the pain. But when it's all over, my body goes limp, I tilt my head back, and relief overcomes me. I feel light-headed and I giggle a little bit. I exhale slowly, take it all in. Then I dab the cuts with some peroxide on a cotton ball so that it doesn't get infected and I can keep doing it. Can you understand what that feels like? Unless you're as disturbed as I am, I highly HIGHLY doubt it. You normal people are just as worthless as I am. You're ignorant to the plights and pain of everyone around you. You just share your fucking Facebook images and think you're making a difference. You go to sleep at night smiling because you believe you're doing good. Miserable cunts. You deserve to die more than I do. Yet you'll live on in your ignorance while my rotting corpse is discovered in my bathroom a month after I kill myself, found only when my landlord can't get a hold of me due to bouncing rent checks. No one fucking cares, not any single one of you. Why the hell should you? I don't, so why should anyone else? Just don't pretend you care. That's the worst of it. Straight up tell me that what I'm going through means nothing to you. Abandon me just like all the informed people. You can't handle the real me. I can't handle the real me. No one can. So don't subject yourself to me. Because you can't help. Because you can't understand. I think, therefore I am. All we know is that we exist. Everything else is up in the air and subject to interpretation and conjecture. Oh yes, I realize how many paradoxical statements I'm making. I realize that the lack of understanding applies to me as well, that I can't comprehend how a normal person's mind works. I don't, I'll admit that straight up. But therein lies the issues. A lack of understanding on both sides results in a sort of incommunicability. I don't know you and you don't know me. Nothing can ever change that. You will never understand the comforting idea of suicide, the nearly orgasmic high of self-injurious behaviour, the lack of knowing who you are or what you even like or want, the overwhelming physical and emotional pain of eternal emptiness. So don't nose your way into my mind, thinking you know me or can predict what I'll do next. That's why everyone leaves. They can never predict what I'll do or say or how I'll react. That's what Tiffany did and good on her. She got the fuck out before I wrecked her any further.

Which is why I need to contain myself. Prevent others from getting close to me, subjecting them to my madness. I've been keeping to myself this past while and it's been making the world a better place. At work, I'm just known as that quiet guy and who shows up, does his job, then goes home. I don't interact with anyone unless it's required of me. I'm not opening the floodgates this time, I can't do that to myself or anyone else any more. I did that at my last job and it made things so much worse than it would have been otherwise. I'm done opening up to people. You know, except for this blog. It's emotionally exhausting but it is therapeutic in a way. Doesn't make me hate myself any less but I enjoy bitching about my frustrations.

Do you follow? If so, good on you. Keep up the good word and I'll somehow track you down, dox the living shit out of you, and mail you a gold star. If not, well then I can't say I blame you. This was meant to be a small rant that was sparked by a stupid Facebook post and at its core, it still is. Just a little longer than expected. I apologize for the profanity, I was emotional. But I'm not sorry enough to actually go back and edit anything. I really don't care that much.

Until next time,

- K