Month: April 2018

  • Lack of Sleep

    With having a kid, I am amazed at home much sleep I don’t need to keep functioning.

    Functioning well, that is another story.

    We have started the overnight potty training, and it is slow going. We have been getting up three to four times a night, to either deal with a wet bed, or taking the kid to the potty. It’s like when she was a new born, and we never got into a deep sleep. We only hovered around sleep, straddling conscious and unconscious.

    The wife and I handle lack of sleep differently. She just slows down, but still stays sharp. I keep running at full steam, but become stupid. Might be why we work well as a couple.

    Also, lack of sleep has started my mind wandering all over the place. Thinking of old events that are meaningless now, but like a flashback, I get the rush regret/remorse/or guilt from these memories. What I truly find frustrating is that if I have a flashback, then why can’t I ever have a pleasant memory? I keep going backs to the most awful experiences of my life. Not my first real kiss, but my first real breakup. I don’t get the rush of the first time I danced with a girl at my 8th grade school dance… I get the awkwardness of being rejected at 9th grade dance by the girl I had a crush on.

    As I get older, I find life interesting in the way one event will randomly bring up another event.

  • The News and My Kid

    As some of you may know, there was that horrible gas attack in Syria this weekend. The news of it is awful, and just heart crushing to see pain inflected on people. And as we watched the news this past Sunday, and my daughter wandered into the living room, she saw the images of children screaming and being treated for the attack. In her three-year-old way, she wanted to know why the babies were crying?

    This isn’t the first time she has seen something on the news and wanted to know what it was. This won’t be the last.

    I know the story of Mr. Roger’s saying the is disasters, tell children to look for the people who are helping, and trying to make it better.

    But I know I live in a world where nothing is fair. That there are children born in war zones, and through no fault of their own, are being targeted by governments.

    My child is lucky to born in America.

    There will be a time when she will learn of the harshness of other people.

    How do I keep her positive, and optimistic?

    How do I help her become pragmatic and idealistic at the same time?

    I think this conversation turns on itself, as I have to look in the mirror and ask, am I optimistic? Am I positive about myself and the world around me? Do I live up to the Ideal?

  • Dealing With Things

    I have been saying to myself for some time that I have not fully recovered from my amazingly stupid stressful year and a half of working in 2016/17. I had been putting it in my journals, and even in a few small writing pieces I had done, I saw the influence of it. This morning I said it to my wife. Not that I was hiding it from her. I had spoken in length to her of how stressful it was when it was happening, and I had told her that I’m not 100% happy in my job currently. But this morning, as the words were rolling out of my mouth, I knew that I had never shared this part with her. That I have been running from problem to problem at work, and never processed that awful 2016/17-time frame.

    It’s an undealt with problem, sitting in me, that I need to come to terms with.

    The events have shaken my confidence in myself, and has created a new circle of self-doubt and neuroticism, which I didn’t think was possible to eclipse the self-doubt and neuroticism that I already had. The difference now was that I was willing to try things and make a fool of myself. Right now, I feel all of these blocks in me. I can also admit that I created them, and if I don’t deal with them, then I will only stifle my creativity.

    Talking to my wife is a big step. Trying new things, especially creatively is the other. I feel that I am now becoming ready to deal with what has happened.

  • Improvements

    I didn’t plan this, but I was up at 5:45am this morning. It hurt a little, but I am still trying to move forward on these life changes.

    Now, I just have to get out the door and run. That might be two weeks away. The weather looks rather cold and rainy for a while.

    I did sit in the living room and flip through social media on my phone for 30 minutes, but, BUT, I got my butt in the shower, and had time to journal this morning. I haven’t done that in over a year, if not more. It’s a small step.

    As I was writing, I was working though ideas of a book, and the style that I want to write it in, and I knew that I need to read up on my Faulkner. I have several of his books… but they are in storage.

    Before the kid was born, we had to rearrange the apartment, and make room for baby. The office was being turned into the nursery… and books had to go to storage. I thought that by this point, three years in with a kid, that I would have been able to start bringing some of my books back into the place… Not yet… and I can admit that was naïve of me.

    Either I can make the trip to the storage unit, and search of the box that has my Faulkner in it, or I could just run down to the local bookstore, and buy the Collected Stories. Well… I do need it now.

    Small steps…

  • Bedtime/Workout

    I don’t do well with bedtimes. In fact, I really don’t like going to bed. What I do, or what I would do if I didn’t have a job, would be stay up as late as possible.

    Last night worked out differently for me, and I have to admit that I went to bed when I felt tired and slept.

    It’s about not having enough hours in the day, and getting older, and having to do things and wanting to do things.

    I need to start working out again, and my preferred mode is to run. I guess that I can admit that I am a runner.

    The wife and I have been saying to each other for some time that we have to get back to working out. That the kid can’t have two lazy, out of shape parents.

    If I start to go to bed earlier, and get up earlier, then I would have the time in the day to work out.

    I am a lazy man.

    To make changes in my life is one of the harder things to do.

    The biggest change I forced myself to make was quitting smoking.

    This is sort of along the same lines.

    Change means things will be different, and that is the fear of the sedimentary old man; I like things the way they are – even if the room is on fire, it’s fine.

    The fear of becoming old, and useless.

    Retain what has moved to the past…

    Or at least try to lose the pot belly…