Flickering
Bluelighter
Which stands for Wine, Ocean, Music, Bullet, Stars. I went so far as to mention this in a class on the morality of suicide earlier in the week, and heard someone in the back murmur "He's thought about this." Astute. When the low of neurological depression collides with the stresses of a first-world adult life in tertiary education and a factory job, one thing I like to imagine is buying a rowboat, a pistol and a bottle of fine port and setting to waters far enough out that you can't guess which direction the shore is, then listening to a few choice songs and gazing up at the night sky, and squeezing the trigger. There's no melodrama to this fantasy, nothing indeed but the frankest of feelings about how liberating it would be to finally end this self out in a place so isolated that no one can stop me, where it wouldn't hurt one bit and I could finally feel real for those last few hours.
I call it a fantasy because I don't think I'll actually do it, I reckon I'll just go on through every day of the grind instead until death takes me on its own terms, probably decades from now, and under far more horrible circumstances. Call it hope, and/or call it biological programming, but I don't see myself buying that boat or firearms licence anytime soon.
I've endured this state of mind for six to twelve years now, depending on how you look at it. Today, I distinctly recalled the moment six years ago where ordinary dysthymia turned into outright depression, and I sat down on the steps leading down to the football field at my high school and proclaimed out loud that I 'gave up'. Since then I've wished in one form or another that I'd never been born, or that I'd died without warning or pain as a child, when I was still happily oblivious to the way things really are. And as bleak as that sounds, every angle I've covered shows that it's the truth, and that all the rest is mere platitudes, comforts we conjure to placate our existential unease.
I believe that dying is very much like forgetting everything. There's no difference between the death of the self and the birth of a new entity that has never experienced anything before. You could call the self a barrier between one form of experience and the rest of the universe. And I have felt almost a kind of calling, stronger by the year, to shed my own necrotic sense of self.
So one idea I've had, while under the (present) influence of quite a lot of vodka I'll admit, is to take time out of every week to sample a psychedelic drug. LSD, ayahuasca, psilocybin - whatever, they all have the same effect of showing me a different way to view the world, and my life, and from a contemporarily rational point of view, it's entirely possible that they also work by simply unplugging the dopamine inhibition in my brain; they block the illness that makes me think this way. So why not do this indefinitely?
No, seriously, I think I will. There's nothing to stop me. And I'm so thoroughly sick of the misery of my current point of view (which by two entirely reconcilable perspectives could be called sobriety or mental illness) that I think I'd like to try something different. To try being someone different.
I guess what this comes down to is the same old shit: I fucking hate my mind, I want something to save me from this serotonin-deprived torture day-in, day-out, study-work-sleep-think-behave, and I'm far from convinced this state of mind is curable anymore. Why write it at all? Because I'm sick of bottling up how I feel. I'm not sure if this will make sense to anyone, but I don't really care - at least I finally said it, anonymity as always the perfect security.
I call it a fantasy because I don't think I'll actually do it, I reckon I'll just go on through every day of the grind instead until death takes me on its own terms, probably decades from now, and under far more horrible circumstances. Call it hope, and/or call it biological programming, but I don't see myself buying that boat or firearms licence anytime soon.
I've endured this state of mind for six to twelve years now, depending on how you look at it. Today, I distinctly recalled the moment six years ago where ordinary dysthymia turned into outright depression, and I sat down on the steps leading down to the football field at my high school and proclaimed out loud that I 'gave up'. Since then I've wished in one form or another that I'd never been born, or that I'd died without warning or pain as a child, when I was still happily oblivious to the way things really are. And as bleak as that sounds, every angle I've covered shows that it's the truth, and that all the rest is mere platitudes, comforts we conjure to placate our existential unease.
I believe that dying is very much like forgetting everything. There's no difference between the death of the self and the birth of a new entity that has never experienced anything before. You could call the self a barrier between one form of experience and the rest of the universe. And I have felt almost a kind of calling, stronger by the year, to shed my own necrotic sense of self.
So one idea I've had, while under the (present) influence of quite a lot of vodka I'll admit, is to take time out of every week to sample a psychedelic drug. LSD, ayahuasca, psilocybin - whatever, they all have the same effect of showing me a different way to view the world, and my life, and from a contemporarily rational point of view, it's entirely possible that they also work by simply unplugging the dopamine inhibition in my brain; they block the illness that makes me think this way. So why not do this indefinitely?
No, seriously, I think I will. There's nothing to stop me. And I'm so thoroughly sick of the misery of my current point of view (which by two entirely reconcilable perspectives could be called sobriety or mental illness) that I think I'd like to try something different. To try being someone different.
I guess what this comes down to is the same old shit: I fucking hate my mind, I want something to save me from this serotonin-deprived torture day-in, day-out, study-work-sleep-think-behave, and I'm far from convinced this state of mind is curable anymore. Why write it at all? Because I'm sick of bottling up how I feel. I'm not sure if this will make sense to anyone, but I don't really care - at least I finally said it, anonymity as always the perfect security.