Do
you ever have that feeling that everything is just too much? That you
are being slowly overwhelmed and pushed down – not waving but drowning?
I have that feeling at the moment.
Today
is the ninth anniversary of the last time I saw my father lucid and
able to talk rationally. After that, I saw him twice more when he was
stoned out of his mind on morphine, and increasingly confused and
frustrated by his confusion;
and then he was in a coma; and then, of course, a few days after that
it was all over.
The memory of this does not help matters, when I am feeling under pressure in every direction as it is.
I
miss my father so much sometimes. I miss his conversation, I miss his
quick mind and his acuteness, and his fascination with any and all new
knowledge. I miss just being able to sit and talk to him. I miss his
whiskey collection and
our silly “blind tastings” when he’d bought himself a new malt. I miss having access to his knowledge of computers and his willingness to share it. I miss
his voice, and I miss his sense of humour - weird musical jokes,
dreadful puns and all.
Just
now I also miss his support, which was steady and unquestioning and
unconditional, and came with no suggestion of expecting or needing
anything in return. He was that kind of chap, old-fashioned in the good
way, and utterly sound.
In two weeks it will be the anniversary of his death. I miss you, Dad.
I could have done with that kind of support at the moment. I
still don’t know if I will have anywhere to live come July, and I still don’t know if I’ll have a job come August - and I
do know that the man I
fell for a while back isn’t interested in me. Then there’s the fact that because all this is chaotic and pressured and exhaustingly steessful, at the
end of the day I haven’t got the time or the energy at the moment to do
the things I really want to do (write, draw, go out, see my friends, and
of course
my Big Plan for this year, sort out how to publish something online and
have a go at it, just to see what happens).
So I am now just working
in order to keep on working; I’m no longer working in order to do the
things I love. This is a state of affairs I
dread, and have long fought to avoid.
I
have to go on at work, performing properly and demonstrating my ability
to deliver under pressure, while not knowing whether my role will even
exist in a few weeks time. I have to pack up my belongings at home and
prepare for a move,
when I don’t actually know where I’ll be moving to. I have to smile
and be at ease with my crush and accept it will never even register with
him how much I would have liked to get to know him better.
I
have to keep smiling and saying I’m okay, to all the people who, if I
admit to them that I am close to screaming with despair inside, will
then get upset and worry about me, and need me to be caring and good, and manage their
distress. I haven’t the energy
or the patience to do that at present, so the only practical option is
to conceal the situation from them.
It's tiring.
I
have to suppress the gnawing doubt, which maybe is not a doubt at all
but an unadmitted certainty, that I have wasted my life and am a
creature without purpose or use to anyone. Because if I admit this
doubt – this doubt that may in
fact be a certainty – then I have to face the question – if there’s no
point in me, why am I alive? Am I alive primarily because it will upset
some people if I’m not here anymore?
And that way madness lies, madness and Ed’s sorry end.
I
don’t want to die; I’m not suicidal, at least not in any sense that I ever
have been before. I think I would recognise the state of mind, as it is
hellish in the extreme.
But I am beginning to wonder if my
existence is pointless, and even without any wish to end one’s life that
is still a salutary and a depressing thought.
I know my existence wasn’t meant to be pointless (excuse the rather “fate and destiny” tone here!).
I was born into this life to create. Of that I am certain. I’ve known this since I was a very small child.
I
want to tell stories and make images and write songs and plays, I want make beautiful things and share beautiful tales and adventures. I want
to give joy, to cheer hearts and make people smile, to remind those who
are feeling alone that they are not alone, that no-one is alone.
But
I’m not doing any of this. I’m battling-on with a fraught job and
fraughter home life, and seeing love go by me like a bright boat on the
river. And my own right work, creating and making new stuff that will
give pleasure and joy
to those in need of them, is a thing I drag myself to with tired mind
and body at the end of the day. When it ought to be the centre of my
existence.
Should
I ask for voluntary redundancy here, leave London, bugger off somewhere
else entirely and make a completely new start? It’s almost starting to
look tempting. I have nothing, really, to tie me to London, except
liking my life here;
or at least, liking the way things have been – until work became insecure and I got asked to move, and all the rest of that, and the bright boat sailed by me yet again...