Tag-Archive for » 9-to-5 «

I’m ending this year considering the things I’ve considered all along: am I victim?  Do I show my good side enough?  Do I talk about the good, as well as the bad?  Or am I a constant whiner?  A constant thinker?  Constantly aware of all the discomforts, do I annoy people as much as I think I do?  Actually, forget about people.  Am I happy?

To answer the question, I need to ask myself what I would and wouldn’t change about myself or my circumstances.

I need less TV, more reading, more exercising, of course.  But a more serious look at my life reveals something that needs more than the yearly “do more” fill-in-the-blank can address: control issues.  Again and again, my desire to completely control myself and everything around me inflames my depression through workaholism that eventually drives me to illness with self-destructive patterns like restricting food and self-applied pressure to “succeed,” to surpass expectations, to be honest with myself.

Yet I have my words.  I wonder if I would remember the good parts of life if I weren’t writing it all down, deriving meanings about my person from my every choice, accidentally journaling my life, hopefully preventing myself from repeating history.  It’s difficult to denounce the obsessive thinking that, given the refocus I’ve given it this year, has become a great means to healing.  And so, I won’t denounce it.  Instead, I’ll promise myself to continue to focus this merciless tic on questions based in reality, not the chamber of fear behind my eyes.

As I review the last year, as I note the way I’ve matured and the ways I’ve failed myself, I realize there’s more to be said than I can get down tonight.  As the 9-to-5 circumstance begins to weigh on my stamina, I’m beginning to find myself exhausted midway through writing any post.  That upsets me, but it’s also forcing me to consider what my time is really worth.  Looking into the new year at my new job and my new life, as new and ever-increasing responsibilities make greater demands on me, the value of my time will, no doubt, increase.  Who and what will make the cut?  The answer to that lies in a simpler question: if I’m getting tired midway through writing a post, what’s taking up the time writing used to occupy?

But I’m thinking again.  Too much for one night.  I need to go to bed.  More tomorrow.  I’ve promised myself.

Today was a good day.  I was nauseous and had to force myself to eat a salad for lunch; I was exhausted in a very literal sense; and I experienced stabbing stomach pains as I panicked during the last half hour of work—all while making sure I didn’t waste the company’s time.  It was a good day because I only experienced pique panic for an hour or so.  I went through most of the day distracted by deadlines and meetings and passive aggressive emails.

On the one hand, it makes me sad that a good day, these days, is a day I’m completely distracted, even overwhelmed, by mindless work.  Essentially, good days are the days I best dissociate.

Damn.  I miss the girl who wanted to feel each day.  I miss the girl who saw such sad beauty and meaning in everything.

On the other hand, my mind was quiet enough to allow me to do my work.  The thought thrills me!  Maybe the Clonazepam is working.  Maybe the 30 mg of Lexapro isn’t too high for such a tiny girl.  Maybe things won’t hurt so much from now on.

I hope.  I hope.  I’m so afraid it won’t—stop.

02
Sep

The tiredness crawls its way into my head like a good high’s warm wave. But this water turns icy when I tell my body it has to keep going, stay awake.

All I want to do is sleep, but I can’t. I’ve got to keep typing, keep my eyes open—day in, day out. Day in, day out.

The day is in now. The tide is high. I’m drowning. Someone save me. I don’t know how to swim. The minutes are rip currents taking me deeper into the day. I don’t want to go. I want to stay on the beach, where nothing changes, including the time. Why can’t I stay on the beach? There are others there, building sandcastles and giggling. I can dream like them; I can’t swim. I never learned how. My mother was overprotective. My sister was too aggressive with her attempts. The fear of deep water has been in me for too long. I can’t fight the waves. I never learned how! I can’t participate in the change going on all around me. I’m going deeper. I’m drowning.

Deep breath. Gasping. I can’t stop respiration. Salt water in my lungs. The fire in my throat and my chest. My ears are popping. My eyes—I can’t see. I don’t want to. There’s darkness. Darkness. Deeper. I’m sinking. Save me. Save me.