Going off subject for this post. I decided to bring more of my online confessions. Yes, there is a real live middle age man behind the scribblings and musings of A Life of Mental Illness. So here goes:
- I’ve had the same best friend since high school. And my best friend is a woman my age. I didn’t understand the whole ‘males and females’ can’t be friends trope back then. I still don’t. Just because I am a man and she is a woman doesn’t mean we have been or ever will be romantically involved.
- I never understood why just because I am a man that I’m supposed to want sex all the time. I never have, not even as a teenager. And I used to get such a hard time from my school mates because of it. I got it worse from my female classmates than I did even from my teammates on the football team.
- I never enjoyed dating. And it wasn’t just because I was most of the time turned down even for something as simple as a cup of coffee at the college student center. The few times I did date, I always felt like I was under investigation for the pettiest offenses and slip ups. It was nerve wracking and not worth it. Angered me that I couldn’t just be honest with women I found attractive.
- I don’t understand adults who forget what it was like being kids. Even though I’m almost 40 years old and starting to get a few gray hairs in my beard, I still remember vividly what is was like growing up. I don’t romanticize those days nor do I completely condemn them. I had some good times and I went through some serious trials I never want to go through again.
- I don’t understand adults who hurt children. I think it’s cowardly that some adult would do anything to a kid they wouldn’t dare dream of doing to an adult. I have less respect for adults who abuse children than I do just about anything else.
- I don’t understand the mindset of bullies, especially adult bullies. I can’t understand how messed up a person’s moral compass has to be in order to feel like they are powerful for messing with people who can’t fight back. It doesn’t show power in my mind to yell at, berate, manipulate, and abuse people. It shows a complete lack of character and courage as far as I’m concerned.
- I don’t understand people who think that yelling, insulting, threatening, and throwing temper tantrums are the signs of a good leader. They aren’t. The only reason people, myself included, put up with this kind of nonsense is that we have no choice. At least not temporarily. All the while I am agreeable to someone who is a verbally abusive boss or leader, I am silently bidding my time until I have an opportunity to where I no longer have to deal with them. I have quit several jobs just because I got tired of dealing with abusive bosses. And I refuse to go back to any job if I get the sense that a work place tolerates abusive bosses. Thanks to my disability and my pension, I can say ‘screw you’ to bad bosses. I am convinced if enough people could get several months worth of living expenses saved up and just start walking out on abusive and toxic workplaces in large numbers, we’d see these employers attitudes improve pretty fast.
- I never accepted why workplace politics are what they are. Never have and I never will.
- Sometimes I am convinced that the adults act worse than the kids. But it didn’t seem this way when I was growing up. Maybe it’s something that goes in generational cycles.
- I don’t understand how weekly news and sports magazines are still a thing even after almost thirty years of the world wide web.
- I don’t understand why people still write checks. I still have to write checks for my rent. Irritates me to no end. What century is this anyway?
- I don’t understand people who go on and on about the ‘good old days.’ When exactly were these good old days? And if I make it to age seventy I’m sure I’ll hear some fools talking about the 2010s as ‘good old days.’ The good old days never existed. They were just when you still had good health and weren’t held back by constant aches and pains.
- I’m glad I was never popular or cool. I don’t want to be popular. I just want to make people think.
- I don’t begrudge twenty somethings who still live with their parents. Multi generational housing was more normal in previous eras than now. Sometimes I would love to live with my elderly parents or my brother or my aunts. At least we could look after each other easily. And I wouldn’t have to deal with some of the screw balls and loose nuts who come with living in an apartment complex.
- At this point in my life, I’m tired of living in an apartment complex. I would so buy my own house and not deal with land lords and close by neighbors if I could afford it. I just want some privacy and not have people looking over my shoulders all the time anymore. Dormitory living was more fun at age 19 than at age 39.
- I often fear that I don’t get through to people.
- I often fear my friends and family secretly don’t like me. I hope it’s the illness talking.
- I sometimes go days at a time without leaving my apartment. I’m just burned out on the stress of dealing with irritable, angry, and rude people all the time. Socializing with most people is toxic for me anymore. At this point I’d rather deal with a machine than most people. At least machines won’t give me a hard time or tell me how bad of a person I am. People sometimes suck.
- I love to sleep. I’d sleep even more if I didn’t wake up with aches and pains every morning.