Danny gave me this book to read while I was off in the desert this summer and I still haven't finished it. Not that I don't like it, I just have a hard time finding a good time to read. I can't read on the train and I fall asleep when reading at night. I really should try harder because I love to read.
Anyway, I wanted to share some thoughts that came about when I read a particular passage that spoke to me in a prefect way. This passage had to do with nostalgia. Now, I am 30 and I am still way immature for what I thought a 30 year old would be. I work at a coffee shop even though I have a Master's Diploma, all of my friends are under 27 (the average age being 23).
First I will share the passage, it is a bit long but you can skim through it if you want.
"The Tenth Day" (page 129-131)
There is a certain emotion we all have the potential to experience, and it is an emotion that can only be described as 'terrifying nostalgia.' I briefly felt it yesterday afternoon, but it smothered me in totality at 11:30 last night. I was watching a movie on the Sundance Channel called 'Security, Colorado,' which is a city I have never been to and which probably doesn't exist. It was cheap, rudimentary film (slow moving, shot on video, mostly improvised) that was clearly made by people in their very early 20's....The pacing of this movie was shockingly deliberate: In one scene, the woman just sat at her desk and wordlessly updated her resume: later we watched her drive to the post office and mail the resume to prospective employers. Within the reality of "Security, Colorado", this sequence constitutes 'action.' And I'm not sure if this was supposed to be entertaining or insightful, but it was certainly arresting.
Now, here's what is so terrifying about "security, Colorado:" The stark, pedestrian images used by the filmmakers...expressed nothing, symbolically or metaphorically. The only purpose they served was to remind me that a huge chunk of my life is completely over, even though I will probably live another 60 years. There are so many things that will never happen to me again, and I never even noticed when those things stopped occurring. And this doesn't mean that I wish I had my old life back, because I like my new life better; I was just shocked to discover how much of what used to be central to my existence doesn't even matter anymore..........
....When you start thinking about what your life was like 10 years ago-and not in general terms, but in highly specific details- it is disturbing to realize how certain elements of your being are completely dead. They die long before you do. It's astonishing to consider all the things from your past that used to happen all the time but a) never happen anymore, b) never even cross your mind. It's almost like those things didn't happen. Or maybe just happened to someone else.
-Killing Yourself To Live-85% a True Story by Chuck Klosterman excerpts taken from pp. 129-133
For some reason these couple of pages really got me pondering things about my past life, my late teens and early 20s. Thinking of the people I met during these times and weirdness that ensued. And I did ask, why did these bizzar occurrences stop? When I though about it, my trip to Nevada this summer was like a trip back in time. I met random people for no real reason, worked with random people who were quite wild and I got along with real well. However, none of these experiences can match the carelessness and unworriesome times of my late teens and early 20s, where weird situations happened all the time, and a second thought was made of it, it made life fun and interesting and life just seemed to flow.
One thing I have decided is that no matter how much you say you don't care what other people think about you, there comes a time that you start to care (at least this was a case for me), and I think this was my downfall into normality. To me normality is death, it is boring and I get anxious sometimes unreasonably panicky. I am good with people, I like listening to weird stories. I miss my friends from back home. Darby, Ben, Mark, Rusty, Andy, and especially Brad and Matt, John and Cathy, Sam...I miss all you guys, you really are a part of my family and I have kinda brushed you off because I live in another country.
Anyway, I got off track...I am sure most everyone can relate to what I am trying to say.
Why do we give into the normality...the droning life? Day after day, the same thing. I guess we all have to answer to the corporate machine eventually, pay credit card bills, mortgages, student loans...and I think this is the biggest part of the downfall of giving into normalcy.
These were just a few thoughts...you can add your own by reading the passage and posting a comment.
1 comment:
D says...
OK, I tried to respond to your blog, but it said I already had an account, and of course I cannot remember my password and the endless error messages ate up my 3 minute computer attention/frustration span, so I just cut and pasted my comment here for you to read. Sorry, that I can't figure the blog thing out. My inability to have patience with computers is one of my charming features, right?
Wow, I have been feeling exactly what the book passage says a lot lately. I identify completely with what Jessika said in her remarks. I am extremely happy with my life and where I am at, but like many people my decent into "normality" makes me feel sad and lonely sometimes. I guess at some point I started seeing the consequences of certain actions as real. It was like my brain never made the connection that bad stuff could actually happen to me if I did stupid shit. Mostly when I look back I am shocked and amazed that I made it through my adolescence unscathed. I see people making bad choices now and I get mad. Not because of what they are doing to themselves, but the effect their actions have on other people. Also because I believe that every individual is in control of their own destiny, and I don't see how someone can attain true happiness if they continually make bad choices. All of the sudden I am really conservative about things I used to never even think or care about. I have changed. At times I get envious (or nostalgic) when I hear someone's party story or see a girl dressed in some crazy outfit. Mostly, I realized that I can still cut loose when I want to, but I make sure no one drives home drunk, and I don't have to prove to anyone who I am by the way I dress. I have found joy in watching bees pollinate plants and serenity in curling up on a couch next to a fire. Like many young people, I spent a lot of my youth wanting to fit in. I had many friends but was never part of one group. Always a peripheral member linked by one common person. In the case of the people who may read this, that person was Jessika. The best discovery I ever made was that it was OK to be a party of one. That discovery has lead me to some pretty cool adventures. My time for adventures is not over, the nature of those adventures has changed though.
I too miss the folks we used to hang out with in highschool and beyond. It was so nice briefly reconnecting with you all at Jessika's Washington wedding. I hope you are all happy and healthy.
OK, I am done. Usually I only subject Jessika to my long preachy email rants. Sorry to unleash this one on you. D
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