Tag-Archive for » craziness «

I could be offered death right now, and I would take it.  If it was silent and painless, I would take it.  It’d have a lot more peace than I’ve ever gotten in life.  There’s no point to this piece of shit hovel we call consciousness.  I could kill myself, and how would that affect me?  It wouldn’t.  It would affect the people who remain alive.  But why should I care about those people?  Their feelings aren’t nearly as important as my feelings are.  Or are they?  I’m still here, and I know I don’t want to be.  Clearly, I’m putting other people’s feelings before my own.  Because there’s nothing here for me—a simpleton’s job, a difficult relationship, and my family.

No, nothing to stay for.

I’m not even a good writer.  It’s the one thing I want to be good at doing, and I can’t seem to get it right.  I simply want to die—effortlessly, like life should be.  I don’t deserve this breathing I feel compelled to do.  I can’t endure this anxiety.  I’m exhausted with the meds.  I want to close my eyes, then not wake up.  A forever sleep sounds heavenly.

Instead, this nothingness is a vice, an addiction, a warden.  There’s nothing left outside of me that matters, so I withdraw from the world in every way, at every opportunity I can.  I wonder if there’s a name for the emotional equivalent of the fetal position, and where can I find that information out.

That’s what I wonder only seconds before I realize I use learning as a sedative, the way others use food or sex.  I can’t yet fathom what I’m so afraid will happen if I rejoin the world.

As usual, I don’t know the answer.  Simply, my little voice says, Little Lucy is always afraid; she needs no evident reason to be. After all, I’m crazy and strange.  Can’t I see it in the eyes of coworkers and acquaintances?  I’m a freak.

Or so the paranoia I’ve been fighting these past two decades momentarily led me to conclude.

At once, my focus and retention rate cause me shame.  There’s nothing cohesive enough about my thoughts to create something cohesive to read or to speak.  Among my million other fears, I’m afraid depression is robbing me of my ability to express myself effectively.  I feel dumber and crazier.  I fear I’m slipping.

I think, who will tolerate me then?

And if I write it all down so I can see how insane my thoughts can be, will I be protected from their effects?

I’m being ridiculous.

01
Oct

Even when I’m happy, I’m anxious and scared. I’ve been getting these dizzy spells lately that nearly take me over. It’s like a panic attack without the drama, so silent, so subtle. No one around me sees the sudden hesitation in my step. The next step is so even. Like magic, like I never stuttered or stumbled. I’m an expert at concealing, or maybe people just don’t want to observe deeply.

A coworker, engaged in conversation with another woman, described her sister as depressed: binge eating, which they called the “heartbreak diet,” and never leaving their apartment. Her fiancé had asked for a week to himself after they had returned from their couples’ vacation. I thought then, what if I tell them that isn’t depression, that I know personally what depression really is? I know I wouldn’t get the position I want, and everyone would interpret my every action with my depression in mind. They would speak carefully. Every mistake would be because I’m sick. And they would whisper warnings to the new people. That’s Luz. She’s a little off. They do it to others. I won’t be an exception. No one is exempt from their criticism, even the division head. In an industry run by women, you would think it wouldn’t be so, but we’re our own worst enemies.

Sam had a massive depressive collapse this week. Sang came over last night with beer, in hopes of soothing Sam. He did—immensely. They ground each other, these men. I want so badly to have that with a woman.

I hope Butterfly can be something like that. She’s young, but she’s sharper than most women. She’ll be a superwoman one day. That’s the type of woman I need: fragile but strong, sweet but assertive, needy yet capable. It’s a hard combination to find, but when she and I talk, things feel even like that. I feel able to be even like that. With Nyte and with Clara, I was always the strong one and the one to lean on. It’s a relief to just be company. Suddenly, I find myself once more enjoying helping my partner when she asks me to do so. It’s not a burden, it’s not a precarious matter adding pressure to our relationship, and it’s certainly not a duty. I get to show her my respect and adoration, and I get to feel those things in return. What a pleasure! What an opportunity! I look forward to learning this girl.

Now that Sam is feeling better, I feel the beginning of my own collapse. Too little sleep, no therapy, no marijuana, no meds, and no money have made Luz a sick girl. While this means that I’m doing great at work—the obsessive thoughts have an endless amount of information to organize—it also means, I go home exhausted from eight hours of consistent work, and I’ve started secretly dry heaving uncontrollably again. I’m hoping neither ruins my appetite. I really like that I’m eating again. I was so happy I was feeling up again. I want to hold onto it so badly. I want to— It makes me feel desperate, to feel it slip. There’s a madness stalking my thoughts. He’s scaring me.

Maybe I’ll start meditating again. Maybe I’ll find a good book. Anyone have something they recommend?