Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

I Believe Life Is a Life Long Lesson

Ever seen the movie, "Rounders"? It's a poker movie with Matt Damon and Ed Norton (among others)...
There is a quote in the movie that I love, it comes from a poker book -
In "Confessions of a Winning Poker Player," Jack King said, "Few players recall big pots they have won, strange as it seems, but every player can remember with remarkable accuracy the outstanding tough beats of his career." It seems true to me, cause walking in here, I can hardly remember how I built my bankroll, but I can't stop thinking of how I lost it."

This really encompasses my perspective on life itself. I KNOW that I have lived a lucky life, and that most people who've taken the chances that I have, have not fared as well. I do not mean financially - I mean they aren't alive anymore, or potentially even worse - they lost many of their mental faculties.

It is a subject that confuses me greatly - why have drugs depleted others so dramatically and yet I have remained largely unharmed? I am not magical, I am not made of different materials, and yet - I have not (at least to my understanding - but are their respective mental losses visible to them?) suffered such disability.
Now, this wouldn't be so confusing if I had always been the guy choosing to "play it safe." If I was always taking a smaller dose, while watching my friends take larger doses of whatever drug; then I would immediately point to that as the reason. However, if anything, the situation was the opposite. I almost always was the CONNECTION for many of my fellow-users and as such, I could afford much higher quantities of the chemicals. I also viewed usage levels as somehow gauging the value of the person. With that in mind, I tried very hard to be a valuable person; I just was confused about what was imbuing a person with value.
So, why am I still "here" while so many of my friends are not? I even think of one, a former best friend, quite frequently. I always considered him TOUGHER than me, and I viewed him as having the perfect life. It fills me with sadness knowing that he did not have the chance to fulfill that entire life's worth of options. He had and has a wonderful family and the world is poorer for losing him so early.
He and I used to discuss other people overdosing and dying. We called the people "bubblegummers" and figured they made some mistake that we never could or would. I hate to say it, but I am not completely convinced that my friend died of an accidental overdose - much of the reasoning behind that feeling is just our past. We were good at riding the line, and it really confuses me that he could make such a mistake.

Anyway, back to the point to round out this writing... I know I've been lucky in my life. The facts that I am drawing breath and not requiring people to care for me, or locked behind bars; are incredible and fantastic facts. I should appreciate them and not take it for granted.
But - I want the reward for quitting and becoming responsible again. I want the American Dream - the life with a wife, kids, a house, a dog; and raising all those things. I feel that big corporations stole this potential of a future from me, and they did it so they could have some gold-plated silverware or something equally worthless. Because of that I feel wronged and it makes me "not want to play" or contribute to the economy.

How can I reconcile these issues and start moving forward in life? I feel that my debt is so large that it's just ruined my life. I mean, if I don't create a business and I work using my degree - it will take a minimum of 20 years to become WORTH NOTHING, instead of having a NEGATIVE WORTH.
How can I motivate myself to do that at 35? It feels like it's too late (or at least too late to live the life I envisioned - and I don't know if I'm willing to live another, at least by choice)

What a world... At least I'm on the right side of the dirt.
This page is a permanent link to the reply below and its nested replies. See all post replies »
dannys925 · 26-30, M
Understand some of what you're saying, even with 20 y/o friends already gone to violence, drugs, or bad judgement.
Dude, it's never too late to start. I'm just starting out and have a house, wife, and two kids, working a job, s putting money aside for the future. You just gotta get out and do it. Get on it, man. The only time you can ever control is the right now, always be doing something with it, you can sit down when another 35 years has gone by.
Tvxhed · 41-45, M
Thanks for the message. I am afraid my personality and life experience has caused me to become very mistrusting of others in regards to building deep and genuine feelings. I can do that quite easily, but the difficulty comes with the loyalty I expect returned in like-kind. Since that never happened in the past, it made me very wary and concerned about putting my heart out there. So I do not - and as a result I do not get the chance to build a relationship in which to then invest my time, efforts, and prosperity. I am concerned, based on my experience with women, that I must find one PRIOR to being anything but fiscally worthless, because if I am not poor when we get together then I will never have faith she is with me for the long haul. It's the loyalty thing - I feel too afraid to believe in it, based on my past.
@dannys925:

It's super difficult but honestly you sound like you likely married and got a girl pregnant just out of high school. What that did for you was eliminate this phase of life - by removing the potential for choices (if you want to still be considered a "good man" which I am certain you do want to be).
I feel like life has me paralyzed by the options or lack of WORTHY options, as I feel I see a step or two into this game of sociology and economics.

Perhaps I'm just a narcissist.
dannys925 · 26-30, M
Lol, I guess I'm a lucky narcissist then, cause she entrapped me, but it's been a sweet ride--twins in the crib, another due in September. I had nothing when she grabbed me, everything I have now are things I worked for, but I recognize I wouldn't have much without her family's connections. Sorry for your situation, and wish you better fortune in the future.
@Tvxhed:
Tvxhed · 41-45, M
@dannys925: I reread my post and I just want to make sure you didn't think I called you a narcissist. I labeled myself as a potential one, but I was not trying to be insulting.
Also if I could have a wife and kids, I would choose that - so I don't look down on getting a girl pregnant after HS.
I just wanted to be sure I hadn't been misinterpreted.

Have a great weekend with the kids!
dannys925 · 26-30, M
No offense was ever taken, man. I'm just poking fun at myself. Yes, we will have a good time, life is good here. Hope you find good fortune as well.