Yes, that's today. The penultimate. Well, really, just one penultimate in a series of them, dotted with little flowers and smiley faces, or frowny faces and rainclouds. Why so much pressure on a handful of days? Days like today, and the more ultimate variety, make me intensely jealous of my friends who (magically, it seems to me) manage not to freak out about any of these things. Of course, this is nothing compared to the last penultimate adventure, but I'm experiencing in waves of intensity. Right now I'd give it a 4. This feels a bit like nausea, without the intense pukey-thing. This is more like a desire to expel all my organs, to become empty and thus, I suppose, so much less complicated. After all, if there IS something wrong with such and such project or my master of some idea or another, I would certain be able to identify and deal with it better were it only on the other side of my skin. Is this so much to ask?
Boring, really, this kind of anxiety. Particularly considering that it's neverending...will never stop...never go away. Even leaving the academy wouldn't solve my problem as there would simply follow a slew of other, non-academic penultimate days. And I'd be likely to find them less...significant. After all, the only thing worse than freaking out (penultimately) about something that terrifies you with its significance, would be freaking out (also penultimately) about something that you knew to be truly void of significance, yet somehow important in that existential crisis kind of way. So I'll take my lumps and try not to be too noisy about it.
Wednesday, November 29, 2006
Monday, November 27, 2006
The VOID
Okay, so everything isn't ever really as bad as it seems. I trip along beneath a partly sunny (as opposed to partly cloudy, an important distinction) skies, skipping over sidewalks and treelawns (though I wish, more frequently, meadows filled with buttercups and daffodils). Occasionally, I fall into an oubliette. The falling is never quite what I remember, but the trip back to the surface usually happens with very little effort, indeed. Something cliche about time healing all wounds...hope springing eternal, and so on.
In my extremely grungy office, doing my very efficient best to make good use of the day, and the otherwise long, tedious hours I have to spend on campus. Of course, I spent a couple of years defending the campus from the ubiquitous complaints of its being sterile and unfriendly...not to mention ugly. I don't know that my own objections are driven so much by aesthetics as they are quite simply the desire for comfortable chairs and good lighting. Okay, maybe that is aesthetic.
Anyway, this week is also spiraling toward Thursday. The day when either I will leave campus feeling elated and inspired, like I've been blown into the heavens on a puff of academic excellence, or I'll have to call C to bring her goo gone and a big spatula to scrape me off the cold tile of the ninth floor. I'm hoping to dream of big, floppy signatures scrawling themselves over everything I write, like my pen is beginning to take on for itself the mask of believable authority. I'll write something and it will be unquestionably approved. The alternative is rather more ghastly. But why think about what will really happen, which will undoubtedly be something between these two, when the extremes are so much more believable? Or so much more dramatic or something. I'm really just hoping to hear a few nice things, with minimal requests for revision, but many suggestions and directions for future writing, and approval...ultimately...always the approval. How sad.
In my extremely grungy office, doing my very efficient best to make good use of the day, and the otherwise long, tedious hours I have to spend on campus. Of course, I spent a couple of years defending the campus from the ubiquitous complaints of its being sterile and unfriendly...not to mention ugly. I don't know that my own objections are driven so much by aesthetics as they are quite simply the desire for comfortable chairs and good lighting. Okay, maybe that is aesthetic.
Anyway, this week is also spiraling toward Thursday. The day when either I will leave campus feeling elated and inspired, like I've been blown into the heavens on a puff of academic excellence, or I'll have to call C to bring her goo gone and a big spatula to scrape me off the cold tile of the ninth floor. I'm hoping to dream of big, floppy signatures scrawling themselves over everything I write, like my pen is beginning to take on for itself the mask of believable authority. I'll write something and it will be unquestionably approved. The alternative is rather more ghastly. But why think about what will really happen, which will undoubtedly be something between these two, when the extremes are so much more believable? Or so much more dramatic or something. I'm really just hoping to hear a few nice things, with minimal requests for revision, but many suggestions and directions for future writing, and approval...ultimately...always the approval. How sad.
Sunday, November 26, 2006
Puddle of Slime
Black slime, that is. Something viscous and abject. The coming week is looming, to be sure. I'm dreading spending another day in the vapid wasteland of North Campus. Somewhere, just peeping around one of the twists and turns of my cerebral cortex, is a ray of sunshine. I just haven't made it there yet. Today was average, quite. Eight hours of work followed by nine miles on the treadmill.
Jane Tompkins admits to worrying about the state of her soul in an essay I've spent several class periods, across several states and just as many universities, trying to explain to bewildered freshman. I don't worry about the state of my soul so much as my measurable quality as a person. Being a blackhole is contagious. You end up sucking in the people around you and smearing a glaze of negativity on everyone you come into contact with. Today I was in the car, having a minor battle of wills with C, when I was struck with one of these moments of doubting, not the metaphysical state of my soul, but my uselessness/usefulness. Black slime. Then came the tortured doubts about my prospectus thinly veiled under a banal lack of concern for all things academic, fantasizing stupidly about dropping out of grad school. Not meaning any of it, really. There's always the crouching, snarling, beast of Montana--my own shadow beast--warning me away from such action.
Maybe in a nice pink future, we'll spoon our brand new Nissans, worry about taking out a second mortgage, whether to rent a house at the beach with two or three rooms, thirty or fifty yards from the crashing waves of North Carolina.
Jane Tompkins admits to worrying about the state of her soul in an essay I've spent several class periods, across several states and just as many universities, trying to explain to bewildered freshman. I don't worry about the state of my soul so much as my measurable quality as a person. Being a blackhole is contagious. You end up sucking in the people around you and smearing a glaze of negativity on everyone you come into contact with. Today I was in the car, having a minor battle of wills with C, when I was struck with one of these moments of doubting, not the metaphysical state of my soul, but my uselessness/usefulness. Black slime. Then came the tortured doubts about my prospectus thinly veiled under a banal lack of concern for all things academic, fantasizing stupidly about dropping out of grad school. Not meaning any of it, really. There's always the crouching, snarling, beast of Montana--my own shadow beast--warning me away from such action.
Maybe in a nice pink future, we'll spoon our brand new Nissans, worry about taking out a second mortgage, whether to rent a house at the beach with two or three rooms, thirty or fifty yards from the crashing waves of North Carolina.
Saturday, November 25, 2006
Half Over?
So the grotesquery of Thanksgiving is over for one more year, finishing, as usual, in the annual, celebratory storming of the shopping malls. According to the news on CNN yesterday (as I was pounding out those treadmill miles), some people start lining up at midnight to get the "early bird" specials. This is probably the only time of year when younger people thus get their wings. It's true, too, what they say about Black Friday. The whole thing is such a mystery to me. I worked in an electronics/music store one year, and we opened two hours early at 6 AM, but people really were lined up in the parking lot. I had to walk by their huddled, frenzied forms to get into the store to open my department. Then when we actually did open, they ran. It was remarkable. I've never seen anything like it before or since. We're talking people who don't even usually break a slow amble running. To the best of my knowledge, we weren't offering any special sales. Apparently, though, yesterday is no longer the biggest shopping day of the year. That title has been transferred to the last weekened before Christmas. I guess people are more reluctant to be early birds.
Anyway, though, VERY glad it's over. Christmas is going to be absolutely wretched, and I'm already trying to come up with some coping strategies. Staying busy is key, of course, but how does a well-intentioned holiday curmudgeon pull that off when bloody nothing is open? You have to plan ahead, I suppose. Get food, shop for movies, go to the library, etc. Hopefully I'll be exceptionally good this year and even get some work done on that most overdetermined of all holidays. I need a little bit of the anarchist spirit. Maybe I could dress up and run all over town turning over trash cans or something like that. We'll have to see what the weather's like.
Anyway, though, VERY glad it's over. Christmas is going to be absolutely wretched, and I'm already trying to come up with some coping strategies. Staying busy is key, of course, but how does a well-intentioned holiday curmudgeon pull that off when bloody nothing is open? You have to plan ahead, I suppose. Get food, shop for movies, go to the library, etc. Hopefully I'll be exceptionally good this year and even get some work done on that most overdetermined of all holidays. I need a little bit of the anarchist spirit. Maybe I could dress up and run all over town turning over trash cans or something like that. We'll have to see what the weather's like.
Thursday, November 23, 2006
a-meta
Today is Thanksgiving, and I spent the majority of my day slinging natural foods to very nice people who were mostly, I believe, very thankful that our store was open at all. A rather cheery and lucrative (love that time-and-a-half) way to spend the holiday. The rest of the late afternoon and evening I spent riveted to my tv, catching up on movies I've been very much wanting to see, but haven't for one reason or another. The research is always pressing. My students have invariable written something or another I need to evaluate. I'd rather spend time with my girlfriend, and so on. So today was chick film night. By which I most definitely do not mean the Boys on the Side kind of movie, but rather the ass-kicking variety. Infinitely preferable.
And, indeed, the movies took the edge off. I hated the night a little bit less than I would have otherwise, I think. the worst part of the day, hands down, was walking home from work. The streets were mostly deserted. Everyone off to celebrate this most dubious of holidays at some relative's house, my supervisor talking about whether or not she should spend the evening with her boyfriend's parents, my girlfriend away with her family because she can't yet see her way out of it. The entire street that I live on was dark. The usually cramped parking not a problem at all, to say the least. Freaking nobody around...at all. It made me think: Do I live on a street filled with people whose lives are of no lasting familial significance? If everyone goes somewhere else, does that say something about the reality or the permanence of our lives here?
Sickened, truly. I'm trying to pluck up my courage to brave this once again for Christmas Eve at the glorious aftermath. C will once again be gone. Streets deserted. I can see myself walking home melodramatically from the co-op, my canvas bag filled with bruised produce slung over one shoulder, face masked in fleece against a bitter wind. Somehow. A tumble weed. And then long hours of movies. Bad lighting. Leftovers. Trying desperately to tire myself out enough to fall asleep without eyes staring blindly at the ceiling for hours.
I think the worst thing, truly, is that I can't quite work out whether or not skipping the holidays like I think I am makes me a coward. In some proto-rational way, I feel like protesting the artificiality of the day. But this feels cliche because, of course, we all know this, right? So what? So the holidays are a performance, even waxing on the grotesque while still remaining well within the limits of acceptability. Family or something ineffable anyway transcends the meanness of the vacant consumerism. People chuckling over the gobble gobble jokes and all the rest of it. Queer people's non-recognizable lives cast further into shadow. My own effectually finally obfuscated by my critial failure to appear at critical junctures. Like...the holidays...Thanksgiving...Christmas.... .... .... .... And yet. The sense of protest, the imperative to protest, remains. There's something honest about it, beneath all the dramatics and affect.
And, indeed, the movies took the edge off. I hated the night a little bit less than I would have otherwise, I think. the worst part of the day, hands down, was walking home from work. The streets were mostly deserted. Everyone off to celebrate this most dubious of holidays at some relative's house, my supervisor talking about whether or not she should spend the evening with her boyfriend's parents, my girlfriend away with her family because she can't yet see her way out of it. The entire street that I live on was dark. The usually cramped parking not a problem at all, to say the least. Freaking nobody around...at all. It made me think: Do I live on a street filled with people whose lives are of no lasting familial significance? If everyone goes somewhere else, does that say something about the reality or the permanence of our lives here?
Sickened, truly. I'm trying to pluck up my courage to brave this once again for Christmas Eve at the glorious aftermath. C will once again be gone. Streets deserted. I can see myself walking home melodramatically from the co-op, my canvas bag filled with bruised produce slung over one shoulder, face masked in fleece against a bitter wind. Somehow. A tumble weed. And then long hours of movies. Bad lighting. Leftovers. Trying desperately to tire myself out enough to fall asleep without eyes staring blindly at the ceiling for hours.
I think the worst thing, truly, is that I can't quite work out whether or not skipping the holidays like I think I am makes me a coward. In some proto-rational way, I feel like protesting the artificiality of the day. But this feels cliche because, of course, we all know this, right? So what? So the holidays are a performance, even waxing on the grotesque while still remaining well within the limits of acceptability. Family or something ineffable anyway transcends the meanness of the vacant consumerism. People chuckling over the gobble gobble jokes and all the rest of it. Queer people's non-recognizable lives cast further into shadow. My own effectually finally obfuscated by my critial failure to appear at critical junctures. Like...the holidays...Thanksgiving...Christmas.... .... .... .... And yet. The sense of protest, the imperative to protest, remains. There's something honest about it, beneath all the dramatics and affect.
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