Friday, August 20, 2010

How Do You Deal?

The last few days have been horrible, at best. It seems everything I know is collapsing around me like ruins during an earthquake. Everything is changing at the most in-opportune time. I just got a new apartment and I'm living over five hours away from my family. It looks like the one constant in my life has made the decision to leave me for reasons undisclosed. I didn't make any real connections with people during my last two semesters here at WSU and it looks like now I'll be paying for it. I'm on the verge of being completely alone in what is mostly a foreign area for me.

The obvious answer to the question is to make new friends. My problem with that, however, is that everyone here is a child. A fun time consists of getting blackout drunk or high as a kite. The majority appeal is that we're here to party and if you aren't partying, you aren't fun at all. Sure, going to parties is fun. Drinking a little is entertaining. But I don't enjoy it as much as some people do. I don't like not being in full control of myself around people I don't know. Common "wisdom" to my problem is "Drink more, you won't care about the people around you." I've never been the party type. No matter how much I want to believe it, I'm not comfortable with just decent friends and acquaintances. I'd much rather have a few really close friends than countless face appearances. It seems I'm the only one sailing that ship though, and I don't know how to handle it.

I don't know how to be alone. I don't know how to make new friends anymore. I haven't had to do that since fifth grade when I moved to Olympia. And now it seems like I have to do it again. Why? How is this fair at all? Why is the one person I've cared for and sacrificed so much for having doubts about me? All these questions swim through my head. I'm looking for answers more desperate than Marlin for Nemo. Yet, the more I look, prod, poke, and ask, the more elusive the answers become. The most recent advice I was given for my problems was to steel myself and be the constant during all the change. Seems I have to work for what I thought was always going to be there.

I envy those who are waited hand and foot sometimes. The people who have everything in their lives handed to them on a silver platter. Many times, I catch myself thinking about how it must be nice for them. Failing to understand why my life has always been rigorous work even though I have always been a good person. I know karma isn't how the world really works but I wonder why the world works as it does. I am constantly under siege by enemies I cannot eliminate. Constantly punching and kicking a steel door that separates myself from the apparent happy lives of others.

If the worst happens, I won't know how to deal with it. Bog myself down with schoolwork and hopefully a job so that I don't have time to dwell on my losses? I don't think that's a healthy lifestyle. Life is supposed to be balanced between work and play. To focus on just work for me would be to go against how I have been living. Apparently the only constant in life is change. I say forget that. When you find something that is good, you stick with it and work towards making that good even better. Throwing away that good in search of some other good is a waste. I am expected to be the constant, the brick house withstanding howling gusts from the wolf's lungs. However with enough weathering, wear, and tear, even the sturdiest rocks break down into sand.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Random Thoughts at 1:00 AM

When a person has very little to do at night and possesses the inability to fall asleep at a decent time his mind wanders. My mind wanders. It pokes at the fabric of my being, the reasons to why I am where I am, who and why I am, and who I have become. Answers to these questions can seem simple at first, but then I inherently dig deeper, looking for a better, more detailed explanation. The answers to this series of questions are the result of being alone with no internet, tv, or even books to wrap my mind around.

To start off, why am I where I am physically and mentally? I am currently sitting in Providence Court apartment P204, chilling by my corner desk in the “master bedroom,” while swiveling left and right on my new twenty dollar chair from Wal-Mart. Pretty generic answer. What happens when I dig deeper into my thoughts? Why am I here? Well, to start off, I want to be here. College seemed like the next step in my life after I graduated high school. However, I did not make it easy for myself to be here. After the nightmare that was trying to find money to fund my first year, the second is about to start. Is it selfishness or a greater purpose that drives me to be back in Pullman despite how hard it has been? I suppose. On one hand, it is selfish. I am the bane of my parents’ wallets. The reason for the countless tears shed, the voices lost screaming, and frustration. The grounds for lack of sleep and longer hours spent at work. Did I make it any easier by finding a job during the summer to help fund my seemingly pointless spending? No, I have done nothing but take for the last year. On the other hand, I am working toward a degree. In today’s world, you have to have that piece of paper that says you have learned what you know during college. That piece of paper that takes four to five years of your life to attain serves as a basis for you to be judged on whether or not you qualify for that line of work. By being here and working towards my piece of paper with Old-English font and a few signatures, I am shaping my future and, by definition, being selfish. Do the ends justify the means in this situation? That depends on how I put my resources to work. I cannot just sit idly by and waste my time here like others can. I do not have the luxury of having life be served on a silver platter like others do. I am here for the betterment of my life, even if it seems like I’m destroying others in the process.

When you throw a rock into a body of water it sends ripples throughout the entirety of said body of water. Living a life and making connections with other people creates that ripple effect as well. But the connections you make with each person you meet serve as their own stone cast into the water which, in turn, creates more ripples. To understand who I am I have to consider who I have met and what ripples have come back my way. To find the answer to whom I am I must also take into account why I am. So who is Anthony and why is he the way he is? For the longest time I always characterized myself as a people person. But as I reflect on memories past, I see now that I am very much more introverted. I rarely ever strike up conversations with people I know little about or have no common base. I am terrible with small talk. When I am in a group of people that I am not close to, I am just the quiet, polite one. I will flash a smile your way and throw in my two cents occasionally, but in an unfamiliar setting you may never get a chance to really get to know me. I stick to the comfort that is familiarity. I believe that is the reason why I made very little new connections during my first year of college. My inherent fear of rejection and losing is another reason for a layer of brick I like to keep in my fortress. I encourage people to take chances, to leap in the face of danger, but seldom do I ever jump into something without over-analyzing too many times. I do not care if people disagree with how I carry myself though. It is not my problem if you think me calling something “gay” or “retarded” is offensive. When I talk like that it is usually because I am with people I am comfortable with and we understand that there is no deeper belittlement when using those words to describe something. I would not use that banter in front of a professional. If you think that is shallow or fake of me, consider this; language changes depending on your audience and everybody has different dialects depending on who and how you are talking to somebody.

Hmm…I really got off topic. Look for my thoughts on people being too sensitive in a later post. Now, back to the subject.

I am who I am because of whom I surrounded myself with during life. I established a close-knit group of friends during middle school and we still share the luxury of our dood-ship. The ability to fall back on them whenever I needed to kept me sane. There was never a moment too serious for us. No fight lasted longer than a few days and when it was resolved, it was forgotten. The bond I share with those guys is unbreakable and I cannot wait to see where life takes them. I only hope I get to share in some of those adventures later on.

I did a poor job in trying to stay on subject for this, but what are you going to do, I am not turning this in to a professor to be graded.

A New Start

In my efforts to become a more balanced person, I have decided to expand my writing abilities. Every professional anything; whether it be an athlete, teacher, musician, or author, will tell you that the secret to their success is immeasurable amounts of practice. Constant drilling of a task in order for it to become less mundane and more muscle memory is always a necessity to ascend the ranks of anything in life. I do not know where the spark of inspiration to write more came from. People have told me that I do it well and the subject matter of what I base my works on is very heavy stuff. As great as it is to be recognized a little for it, I have decided that only writing on how unfair everything is and whining is not fair for those who read my thoughts. For that reason, I want to see how varied and diverse my works can get.

I do not know what direction this blog is going. Topics can, and probably will, be very scatter-brained and random and be about my adventures through life, a work of fiction, ramblings, or even about video games. To be honest, I don’t really know how it will go. However, I do know that I will put effort into every piece of writing I start. Rarely will you find an unfinished piece posted. Unless I feel it is powerful enough, you will not read it--unless the subject matter calls for an incomplete product, of course. Musings over life and how to become a better person are usually accepted as ongoing works. The beauty of putting things in writing is that you can look back later in life and measure how far you have progressed.

I will try and have a new post once a week. However, I can make no promises as I have just moved to Pullman and the first semester of my second year of college is about to take off. Between balancing school-work, a job, maintaining a relationship, and a social life, I could be hard-pressed for time. With that, I welcome you…again.