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I Have No Family Support

Entry 7
[b]“Home is where people notice your absence”[/b]

I met again briefly with the dog park guy, and as you do with people you only vaguely know, I relied on my collection of generic observations and imparted with him the comment that I hadn’t seen him in a while. Turns out there was a very interesting reason for not seeing him. He informed me that he had bought a sizeable chunk of land about an hour north of Seattle and was devoting whatever time and energy he had to transforming the land into his ultimate passion project. He told me he was slowly building his own community based around organic farming and environmental sustainability. The conversation didn’t last much longer than that, but what he said left me really inspired.

We had talked earlier about the gut microbiome and how we don’t understand how the food we eat really affects us. How the sharp uptick in depression and mental illness could have a lot to do with what microscopic atrocities our bodies consume. It’s a radical concept that I honestly haven’t seen the research on, assuming there even is any given how recent our awareness of microbiome is. But speculative science aside, I found it fantastic how committed he was to founding a community around a set of core values.

I’ve had a lot of free time to think about community and home and family. About what it means to be a part of something bigger than yourself, and how I had relented to never finding the answer first-hand. However, this train of thought left me reflecting a lot on my time in college. Unlike most university studnets, I spent most of those years living in an independently-run housing co-op. Not because of any ideological reasons, but because it was cheaper than dorms or apartments and money was tight.

Despite a lack of oversight, us students managed to run the place without major issues. Everyone had their own duties and responsibilities when it came to keeping the co-op running, and for the most part everyone held themselves accountable. It was basically a microcosm of socialist ideals in how each contributor had a vital role and no one was more important than the other. We cooked, cleaned, and collaborated with each other. We respected quiet hours and study spaces. We had regular meetings to vote upon how we wanted tenant issues resolved, excess funds spent, group activities planned, and house rules to be amended. It was democracy in its purest form. Everyone that wanted to have a say did, and every compromise we reached was more or less mutually beneficial. If I wasn’t so caught up between work, school, and drug dependency, I might have appreciated the environment more than I did.

And then I remembered the girl I had most recently dated. As much as we enjoyed our date, it was clear that we had pretty different lives and different outlooks. I lived alone with my dog; I knew no one in a city I had just moved to; and I spent most of my time working and commuting just to afford the exorbitant costs of renting a one-bedroom in this part of the country. She, on the other hand, was living in a house with her friends; they had a garden and raised their own chickens; they got to hang out all the time; and because of how affordable that living arrangement was, she only had to work part time. And while I thought the idea was really cool on paper, I didn’t really see it working out for me. Lacking the looks or charisma that women mindlessly flock towards, I figured the best dating strategy would be to bank on my self-reliance. Having roommates wouldn’t really work with that.

There were many other curiosity-piquing things about her story for me to ponder in the months since our one and only date, so I never really thought about her living situation again until today. I started connecting the pieces and have since been utterly compelled by the idea of having my own home. I’ve lived in various house-sharing arrangements before, but they were always intended as stop-gaps in my travels. I never bought any furniture, I never planted any roots, I never invested any effort into truly understanding my housemates.

But what if I did? What if I had a group of people committed to making a house a home? What if I could finally have a makeshift family of my own? I started looking at multi-bedroom houses to rent in various cities I could see myself moving to, and a lot of them came out surprisingly cheap. If I had 3 or 4 other people to join me, I could get by working part time. We all could. We could have enough money to enjoy life, enough time to pursue interests, the support we all need under one roof, and the sense of purpose and devotion that comes with contributing to a community.

I imagined myself cooking family dinners for this motley crew of misfits. I imagined going out to buy second-hand furniture, organizing a pantry, chilling in the backyard, having amazing movie nights, impromptu shoulder rubs while we watch the idiot box, rushing to get ready to go out for a night on the town. I imagined my dog getting all the love and affection her stupid little heart desires. I imagined carelessly playing the bongo drums on someone’s butt while we lay around and talk about nothing well into the night. I imagined chairing meetings while we decide what to buy with unspent rent money. Maybe a new speaker system; maybe a piece of equipment for a home gym; maybe we rent some kayaks and enjoy a day on the water.

A part of me wonders if this line of reasoning is just the self-indulgent intellectualizing of much deeper psychological defect. It’s true I don’t have any kind of support of my own. This could all be maladaptive daydreaming giving me the palliative of hope in the absence of a purposeful direction. If only a lifelong journey towards aimlessness could be relieved by such a fantasy. Still, I think back at the people I’ve known that would want to be potential roommates in this dreamscape. How the despair of loneliness that once brought us together could replicate its success and unite us once again in pursuit of this goal. Or perhaps how some other lost souls would discover their sense of belonging in this pocket utopia.

To be honest, I’m not sure how realistic this all is. My date had known her housemates since childhood. The co-op had students too pre-occupied with their schoolwork to question much. The level of faith required for virtual strangers to buy-in to such an unproven concept is pretty daunting. And ol’ broken Lonely McHermitFace here isn’t exactly the best spokesperson to pitch such an idea. Never had friends or family his whole life and to put all his marbles into starting now? Kinda suspicious.

I’m going to see how long this high lasts. I never could avoid existential angst for very long. Still, I do welcome a reprieve from the soul-crushing isolation I’ve been occupying my time with recently. All things considered, to have something positive to think about in the chain of gloom and doom these journal entries have been is notable. Figured I’d share while the sharing was good.
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Specialyouare · 31-35, F
It’s wonderful to see you ponder ideas that will make you own the body and mind that you have to create your own path, your own niche, your own creation from the options we were born into (without our choosing, but there nonetheless).

Think about this. Not one person alive in this world asked to exist. We are all here because our parents had sexual relations therefore NONE of us chose our looks, our brain, our instincts, our bodily functions, the world, or all the world contains in it prior to us even being born into it. So everyone is struggling:
1) To survive, pay bills
2) To belong (even if just at work)
3) To experience more pleasure than pain.

We all like, don’t like, and want. We all sit, stand, or lay down moving slow, moving fast, or not moving at all. As Shakespeare says, this world is a stage of people playing different parts to stay afloat. You have never been alone in this ocean 🌊 of life. You have nearly 8 billion people riding the tide along with you. In all the fear and mystery of what we don’t know. In all the angst and unrest of what we can’t manipulate to our desire. We are all here, together, trying to distract our mind to feel calm, serene, alive, lacking in pain. You have never been alone, think about that.

Own your life. You do belong here. Create your own niche, your own kind, your own brand, your own original... YOU! Unabashed by criticism, validation, appreciation, or acceptance. Leave your mark, your expression, your own craft and artistic form of self-expression in every gesture you make, in every step you take, in every word you write.

You are on the right track to being the conqueror of your own tide the ocean of life presents. And you’re doing this for YOU! For the pleasure you feel in bringing people together perhaps. For the pleasure you feel in making outcasts of today find belonging and pride in being themselves. For the pleasure you feel in keeping your chin up and taking one more step, one step at a time to draw your own picture on the canvas of life, and be proud of each stroke of your hand, and how deeply you understand your feelings, instincts, impulses, thoughts, emotions, in every crevice of your mind!

You got this champ! Imagine how many are currently being inspired by your uplifted spirits. You rise and many on the ground are inspired to rise and stand, and stop crying along with you.

You are strong. You are not alone. You are intelligent beyond expression. Everything about you is brilliant. Now... make each step your legacy.
TinyViolins · 31-35, M
@Specialyouare Well, having ideas is easy. Everything you said is appreciated, and pretty accurate, but it all presents a circular argument.

I need familial support in order to provide familial support because I don't have familial support. Finding people just to be friends with me has been an unsuccessful struggle my whole life, and to pull this off I'd have to try it again with the added stakes that they have to share the same house.

I'm grateful that you're trying to be the galvanizing agent behind this, but it is far, far easier said than done. People are scared enough as it is. They're prompted into self-absorption and fail to commit to even the simplest of communal activities. Convincing anyone to dedicate themselves to something this revolutionary is no small feat
Specialyouare · 31-35, F
[@TinyViolins-
I think something I struggle with is that I personally feel drained by being surrounded by others. Where it seems you crave that. If I could live life going to work, pay my bills, and then spend time to be alone with my thoughts, to understand myself fully, that would be heaven to me. Every time I’m around others and I don’t do or say what they want they get angry or talk shit behind my back or at times even to my face. I’m human myself but around another they just want, want, want; and it’s draining to me to deal with others’ wants at the same time I’m trying to deal with my own. I’m like... damn it’s hard enough to deal and try to put up with my own wants.

Since I talked to you six years ago, I moved out of my parents’ and started working at a preschool and child daycare for 4 years. Let me tell you that was an experience that exposed me to how frustrating it is to try to control a (small human) when you can’t while at the same time putting up the image to potential parents that will sign their kids up that we are good at making submissive robots out of kids who sit, work, and do what they’re told. I couldn’t take it anymore and on this past November 27th I ran away from the job, literally walked out, and became a hotel housekeeper. And I feel more accomplished cleaning up shit because at least I clean something and it doesn’t instantly become dirty again, as it is working with multitude of kids that have no moral compass until it is taught by years and years of repetitive teaching, and some still don’t get it.

I see humans as cruel beasts that destroy other living things for food, shelter, and immediate gratification. Observe human behavior and it’s always us or them getting fed up because someone is not doing or saying what we want, because something is not how we WANT it to be. Trapped in our own selfish entity. If I had the mental strength and patience of a construction worker... man I think these guys are the true gurus of mind control, focus, and humility.

It’s like I’m happy alone but you put people in the mix and I’m like... oh no... now I have to ACT to be found pleasing by them by what I do and say to avoid an argument.

*sigh* You are soooo lucky to be able to be alone. I wish I had that. Like when you were working, making money, and in my point of view... just go home and be alone... no one calling.... no one telling you what to do yet being able to sustain yourself...that would be paradise for me because of how deceptive and deceiving and conditional humans are because of our 5 senses that cringe in pain but delight in what brings them satisfaction.
TinyViolins · 31-35, M
@Specialyouare It was paradise for me at first. I got to enjoy all the privacy I ever wanted. I could cook at any time of the day. I could stay in my room all day and no one would care. I could walk around in all states of undress. It is liberating in a lot of ways.

I'm an introvert like you, so I also need to get away from people in order to recharge. Social situations can be exhausting. I don't want to be at work in the first place, so I put on a performance just to make things run smoothly. I was a manager too, so it was even more pressure to lead by example.

I think where our differences start is that I have seen the good in people. I have spoken to those that were okay being vulnerable around me. I got to hear their pain and they heard mines. I offered them comfort and they repaid me in kind. It might not have lasted long, but there was mutual respect while it lasted. I'd like to think that they truly cared about me, and that the fall off in communication was due to the magnitude of their ongoing issues.

I'd argue people are more capable of healing than they are of destroying, which is why I hope to seek it out again. Empathy can be an amazing thing. To feel and to receive. But you need other people in order to facilitate that.

It's true, there are many, many close-minded people out there. But I think if you choose to open up, many people would start opening up as well and exploring possibilities beyond their perspective
Specialyouare · 31-35, F
I absolutely love the words you are currently writing. To note your lifted spirits. All of us are different. A coworker invited to go with her today to a club on Monday. I didn’t want to go. I never asked about it or texted her during the week... and yay!!! She said nothing and I didn’t go!! 😁👍✨ I notice people like for others to text them. No one likes to text first, but if you text them, then they feel ready to reel you in. For me, I just realize how the second I am not convenient or displeasing to their senses, they pull away. But that’s okay. Adjusting my expectations has helped me tremendously. I love myself more, I enjoy every little effort I make expecting ridicule from others therefore growing more and more numb to criticism but more alive to the appreciation of myself and my efforts.

I am so happy alone, so happy. But we are all different, and I do encourage people to go after what makes them feel fulfilled, as I have just recently begun to do.

I’m so happy that you are happy. You do have an impact in this world, in you, that is worth loving yourself unconditionally through it! 😊✨

TinyViolins · 31-35, M
@Specialyouare I've been alone for nearly 30 years. I'm ready for a change. Most people won't ever know what it's like to be alone for that long
Specialyouare · 31-35, F
I know what being alone is. I like it. But everyone is different and best thing we can do is gravitate towards what makes us happy. Whether that is to be alone or to be around others.