Had a bad breakdown a few days ago. I am quite sure, after twenty years with a mental illness, there is a seasonal aspect to my illness. I regret having breakdowns and I especially regret taking my breakdowns out on people I love. I had felt it coming on for awhile and then it finally broke a few days ago. I hope this is the last one for a long time. I hate the fact that I can’t just sob and cry my way out of a breakdown rather than lash out and be angry. I don’t know how much of that is just my personal illness, or always being told a man showing emotions is a sign of weakness, etc. But it’s part of the illness and part of the price of admission into adulthood.
In spite of the illness, and the contradictions and nonsense I am fed on a daily basis by society and popular culture, I do my best to not let this crush my spirit or kill my love for my fellow humans. I know I am often harsh and short tempered with my fellow humans, and my countrymen in particular. But, contrary to popular belief, I do not hate humans or my countrymen. It’s the polar opposite actually. I love humanity and I love my country and my countrymen. I see the cool things we have accomplished in the past and are accomplishing on a daily basis. I see the potential for greatness every day. And yes, it does bother me when I see people not living up to that potential greatness. I am tough on people, not because I hate them, but because I believe everyone can excel at least one thing and I can’t stand to see a person waste their potential and time. I am often tough on my family members because I know they are capable of excellence and have often shown it, especially in times of crisis. I’m sorry but I don’t have much respect for mediocre work and apathy.
A significant portion of the time when I’m reading science journals online or articles on sites like Bloomberg, CNN, Wall Street Journal, etc. I have to remind myself that this isn’t the science fiction it was when I grew up in the 1980s and 1990s. I saw the movie Fight Club the other night, and even though the movie was popular when I was in college, I was amazed how people still used land based phone lines, phone booths, primitive looking desktop computers, and even how many people smoked in a movie that came out in the late 1990s. I personally haven’t had a land phone line since 2007 or 2008 I think. I haven’t had a desktop computer in 10 years. And even this year, I was able to email my bank statements and tax information and social security information to my landlady to renew my lease. All I had to do in person was sign a few documents and pass an annual room inspection. And since I now have a cleaning lady who drops in once a week, spruces the place up, and allows me to chat with her while she works, the whole process took about a half hour of my time.
I sometimes overlook the progress my fellow humans, myself, and civilization in general has made when I’m bogged down in the day to day struggle. But when I take a step back and look at it over the course of a few years, it’s quite amazing and gives me hope. I get even more hope and feel in awe when I look back at over what has happened in the life time of our current crop of world leaders and elders in my life. I know I am often too harsh on my elders. I know I need to cut them more slack when I look back and think about all the changes they saw since their childhoods in the 1950s and 1960s. My father can remember his family being one of the first in his hometown to own a black and white television. And his uncles used to come out to my grandfather’s farm just to watch the test patterns in the evenings. Both my parents were typing their high school and even college term papers on electric typewriters. My mother keeps and old style manual typewriter as a decoration in her house and my eight year old nephew is aghast that people used to write on those things.
I also have to remember that, for some of the elders, old Jim Crow laws and criminalization of things like homosexuality, inter racial marriages, and sex outside of marriage were the law of the land in many places until as recently as the 1970s. Sure, it feels like some people are backsliding at times. But the forces at work against such backsliding are far more overwhelming than they would have been even forty years ago.
I can’t even begin to imagine what I will see if I make it to age seventy, if I’m privileged enough to make it that far. That will be in the year 2050. I’ve seen some scientists predict everything from bases on the moon and Mars, driverless cars being almost everywhere, nuclear fusion based electricity, to where we no longer use oil and gasoline for transport, to even people augmented their physical strength and mental powers through computer based implants and prosthetic and Iron Man type suits. I guess I don’t know if I want someone rooting around in my skull planting in chips or injecting me full of blood cell sized machines (at least not right now), but I definitely wouldn’t mind something I could wear that would make me smarter or stronger that I could turn off or take off at a moment’s notice.
Even as much as I love science and tech, I am still adjusting to what is happening and what can be. And only the best minds in science fiction would have even imagined such things that we are working on now when my father was a kid and reading Dick Tracy comic books in the 1950s. I know eventually I will be the old man that has trouble keeping up. I imagine even now my nephews would think it odd I don’t know how to run a 3D printer or a VR headset machine. My twelve year old nephew set up a flight simulator game on VR for my father (a licensed pilot and former Air Force man) recently that my father occasionally uses.
I don’t know what the future holds, certainly not in terms of working. The only advice I give to my nephews and niece is ‘stay flexible.’ No one knows. Maybe people like Mark Cuban will be proven right and that the humanities and arts degrees we have called ‘useless’ and ‘worthless’ degrees for a couple generations will be in as much demand in ten years as STEM and medical degrees are now. Even though I majored in business in college, I am grateful I took some time to read a lot of philosophy and classical literature when I was young and had more energy. And I was able to do it for free via my college’s library. Levitt Library on the York College campus was a second home for me when I was college. If I wasn’t at my dorm room studying, I could easily be found in the library or with a few buddies discussing philosophy, football strategies, history, or even medieval military tactics at the all night truck stop over chicken fried steaks and 99 cent unlimited cups of coffee.
In spite of my recent melt down, I am hopeful again. Zig Ziglar was right when he said that positive attitudes and behavior is like taking baths every day, it requires daily maintenance. No one gets mad when they are extra dirty some days, they just bathe for a little longer. And of course, some days are dirtier and tougher than others.