The crazy things that go through my head

Some of them, at least.

I feel like a lazy slug. And if I feel lazy, it must be true.

Right?

Hell if I know anymore.

I feel lazy when I blog- I should be doing something "productive." Yes, I do realize in some small part of my little brain that this is productive in its own right, but I'm emoting for Bob's Sake!*

I feel lazy when I surf the internet. This is a touchy topic for me. I need to do a lot of internet research for both the class I'm going to be teaching in the fall (though I hit pay dirt when I found a Public Health Law directory. w00t!), and for my eating disorder work, but I tend to get a little off task. Click click click click...and all of a sudden I'm watching stupid cat videos and snorting Diet Coke out my nose.

I feel lazy when I play with my cat- isn't there something better to be doing? I'm pretty sure Aria thinks so. She hates being woken up from a nap, but if I didn't wake the little dear up, I'd never have any interaction with her at all!

Hell, I feel lazy for sleeping! I'd be content with my insomnia if only one or two nights with minimal sleep didn't make me psycho and suicidal. I hate myself sometimes for needing my 8-9 hours of sleep per night. One of my professors functioned on four- or so rumor has it. I totally believe it. The man was the Energizer Bunny on meth.

I think it all stems from this feeling of horrific inadequacy. I know, I know, we all feel inadequate in some areas, no matter what. But it's this feeling that, somehow, in some way, I'm not good enough. I don't think this caused my eating disorder. I do remember thinking that if I ate healthier, I would feel better about myself. Even now, being weight restored, it's hard for me to let go of my "thinness" trump card.

So my writing gets critisized. So what? I'm thin.

So my co-worker is a psychotic bitch. So what? I'm thin.

So I'm locked up and miserable. So what? I'm thin.

Then, however, I reached a point where this wasn't quite doing the trick. If thin was all of this good shit, then why was I still lonely and miserable?

It made me think.

I'm still thinking, and I'm still missing it.

When I was deep in the anorexia or the OCD, I was always busy, always occupied. I was cleaning, washing, adding, subtracting, exercising, baking, obsessing. Now I have this void, into which everything seems to fall. I'm just not used to free time. I don't know what to do with it. I always thought it was something bad because it meant that I was neglecting something else. I couldn't sit still because it brought so much anxiety, these horrific, rippling waves. At least if I was busy, I was doing SOMETHING, and therefore it would all be okay.

Now, unemployed and living at home, I have time on my hands. Lots and lots of time. Granted, I do have a lot of work to prepare for my class and to maintain my jewelry business. I'm going to be upgrading my dad's website for work.**

But still, there are those times, those quiet times, when I invariably look inside.

I don't like that. I see the girl who has this seven year void in her life, a girl who has no one to call and have coffee with, or go to the movies. And it hurts. I'd rather forget this part of my life. I don't mind the forgetting. I do mind the remembering.

But it is what it is. Some of my scars will never go away. I can't escape that. Still I run and do things and keep busy so that all of the other stuff just doesn't matter so much.

*I had a friend in college who objected to me saying "For Christ's Sake!" I didn't want to be normal and everything and say "For Pete's Sake" because it reminded me of a stuffy relative of mine. So now I say, "Oh, for Bob's Sake."
**Since our newspaper at college was so understaffed, I not only wrote and edited my own section (really, just a page), but I did the layout. So I know a thing or two about graphic design. Although I think some of the finer points might be lost on people looking for boxes and bubble wrap. Maybe I could just send them to the website where you can run your mouse arrow over virtual bubble wrap and hear it pop. Great stress reliever.

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7 comments:

mary said...

First I heard I might be a terrible parent for allowing some junk food (your last post) and now you are talking about laziness as if it's a bad thing! Gone too far Carrie!
I have been doing nothing for many years. It's the hardest work there is FYI.
Maybe you want to VOLUNTEER to read to the kiddies at the library or find other ways fill your time. Don't worry about making friends right now. Be your own friend and learn to like it.

Tom said...

Feelings of inadequacy are so very slippery and sticky at the same time. If you manage to pry them off of one area, they slip right out of your grasp and rapidly slap themselves on to something else. Keep prying at them, though. Persistent falsehoods are still falsehoods.

Besides, how can stupid cat videos be wrong? Some days I just don't want to be right ;)

Where you see a girl with a 7 year void in her life, I see a woman who clawed her way back out of a pit she was 7 years deep in. Thats not an easy thing to do. I understand that you want to forget about the pain of that time, but don't lose sight of the victory you achieved, and how awesome that is.

You could email me, thats close to calling. I bet you can do the same with a bunch of the other people here who support you and care about you.

Faith said...

Carrie - you can definitely email me. Also, something that helped me on this front was scheduling laziness. I would start by scheduling an hour of laziness - just to play solitaire or nap. Then I do something productive. By the way, I still struggle with this.

mary said...

Hope you found time to get some of your 'hidden' work done today! /*

aufderheide said...

Discovered your blog through Sandy Scwarz and find it very insightful. Letting go of perfectionism and unrealistic expectations of how much you can do in a day is a part of recovery (I know).

RioIriri said...

You should get an aquarium :) They're addictive.

Carrie Arnold said...

Hmmm...

Maybe 'doing nothing' isn't the same as 'accomplishing nothing.' Because you can do lots of things and be empty personally (this doesn't describe me at all. Not one bit! Hee hee)

I actually find that playing the random pinball game on my laptop to be quite mindful. I have to watch that damn silver ball ping around and it gives me a few minutes' break. It's how I wrote my thesis.

Thank you all for your generous email offers. They are much appreciated.

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About Me

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I'm a science writer, a jewelry design artist, a bookworm, a complete geek, and mom to a wonderful kitty. I am also recovering from a decade-plus battle with anorexia nervosa. I believe that complete recovery is possible, and that the first step along that path is full nutrition.

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Have any questions or comments about this blog? Feel free to email me at carrie@edbites.com



nour·ish: (v); to sustain with food or nutriment; supply with what is necessary for life, health, and growth; to cherish, foster, keep alive; to strengthen, build up, or promote



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