Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Another round, another round, another round.

I wonder how much room is allowed for one to voice a complaint. If I want to say that I am tired or worn down by important elements of my life, of what value are those to the facts that I have youth and ability. Relatively, though sometimes separately, if I say that I am tired from being awake for twenty out of twenty-four hours each day, and that when I do sleep I am plagued by some of the worst dreams I can remember having, the truth is that I have a chair to sit on and a bed to sleep in. I can open my fridge and I can type on my computers. The place that we live in is a lucky place, and it is our only one. And, further, I have chosen this life. If I want to keep to the topic of academia, I have chosen this school, these classes, these assignments to write and to grade, these applications to send out, this time of night. 4:37 AM. Wait, no, 4:38 AM.

But I walked home through the loveliest blustering snowfall, you know. And so I do not know how bad these things are in truth. Someone next to me in the library wails "FML," bemoaning their shoe that has been scuffed by some heavy swinging door, and is met by their friend sharing anecdotally in the other's grief by lamenting that there is nothing worse but that their dryer shrunk one of their shirts. And they are going to some beach for the holidays.

We should of course feel guilty, I think, for supposing that our whole lives are so taxing to the energies of our soul. There are complaints to make, though, and yes, if there are negative points in a person's life they may feel that they are able to feel negatively about them. So they may do so, but I wonder when that should be challenged. By what means is one enabled to ache over some aspect of their life, and to what level, and why not some other aspect. When one has the kind of breath that is free to deepen as its body tires, I would wish to know where the brimming aches must cease.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Cool blog as for me. It would be great to read more concerning that topic. Thanx for giving that material.
Sexy Lady
English escorts

Anonymous said...

everyone is allowed to complain but not one person can benefit from this process, besides validation from other lamenters as per your example. and those assertions, in my opinion, feed a collective, negatively guided ego possibly stemming from an even bigger collective self-esteem issue.

one who recognizes the choice will always be aware of how lucky they are. I wonder if the one who complained of a scuffed shoe has ever gone a day without shoes?

Scott Herder said...

A collective self-esteem issue. That is a really interesting phrase to think about.. Hmm.

Anonymous said...

hmm is right. well it is my humble opinion that most humans are so far removed from themselves and need things like fancy shoes to fill some void.

then again maybe I am just jealous that I don't understand the value of material possessions that bear no sentimental value.