Rant - Who The Hell Am I

Monday, March 06, 2006

I don't know who I am anymore. I don't say that lightly.

I thought most people were grounded in their core values by the time they were my age, which is 32 come April 3rd. Not that all core values are productive, but at least they exist. Maybe I'm disillusioned and most people are not grounded in core values, but if that's true the world is scarier than I formerly believed.

I think it's impossible to not have some values. I have many. However, I've lost my core values, and I'm fighting a real battle to deal with that. Many of the core values I've had in my life, meaning beliefs I've held from birth until recently, haven't meant anything to me for maybe two years. I'd give some detailed examples, but I don't want to scare some of the people who I know read this blog.

I don't think I can just get new ones. We are talking about the fabric of your individuality, not a new pair of jeans. My core values defined me for 30 years, they made me into the person I am. I still like and dislike things based on the residuals of those values, and it will be very difficult to shake those if I choose to. That's what core values are all about: slowly molding your personality the way a waterfall molds rock.

I gravely miss that power. I more accurately miss believing in those larger-than-life values, and using them to help me make decisions and overcome obstacles in my life. I miss blind faith. I miss conviction.

This has lead me to wonder if I'm normal, as determined by a random selection of people at a party. I don't think I am. I know most people think the same thing on some level, but I'm not talking about individuality. You know when you go through your mental list of people you know ... family, friends, work mates ... and you categorize into the people you like and the ones you aren't exactly partial to? In more detail the categories can range from quiet types to womanizers to deep and intelligent people, but all are usually just normal people trying to get some enjoyment or productivity from their day.

Then sometimes there's a real three-dollar bill, an eccentric. Someone who people don't know if they like or not, and that's if they flat out don't like the person to begin with because the person is too unfamiliar. Talking with the person is uncomfortable. Being alone with them is fear inducing. Well, I think I'm that eccentric.

I don't feel I fit in anymore. I've somewhat alienated myself even from my long time friends, and family. I didn't intend any such transformation, but it's there. No matter who I'm with or what setting I'm in, I have the nagging feeling of 'I don't belong here.' When other people laugh, I have to fake it. When other people talk I have to feign interest. Then I have to suspect they know I'm faking it. That makes the entire interaction shallow. That's arrogant, and my fault, I'm aware, but I just can't turn it into something else. Every social situation now is painfully difficult for me.

I'm told I over analyze everything, so what do I think? I think I feel alienated because I don't believe what other people believe. I used to, and I truly, truly miss it, but it doesn't happen anymore. What other people say to me is rarely interesting -- I try, but I drift. What they find funny I find mundane, thus the fake laugh. I think what they believe in is hollow, but trying to portray my stance is like trying to explain Christianity to an atheist.

So that's me. This isn't a pity trip, just a blog to help me get through the self admission phase. To all the normal people out there: I envy your conviction, and I silently apologize for making you feel uncomfortable.

TPC

11 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

If you truly believe yourself to be different (eccentric),T, you've been given something special...Don't question it, just do what you've always done...find creative ways to take advantage of it, to express it and to influence others.

Be who you are. And be content.

Keep questioning yourself and life and others. Keep walking around with an air of confusion and genius about yourself. Go ahead and just be Terry. Be satisfied. In this we find the most important element of who YOU are.

It's difficult dealing with the awkwardness of trying to identify with everyday life and people is it?
Suck it up princess.

H.

4:42 PM  
Blogger ciN said...

There is some truth to what she's saying, though I don't think either of us would agree with the notion of not questioning it. Question everything, it'll help you later.

But I like what she said about finding creative ways to take advantage of your situation.

The meat of my comment is this: You think you belong to some shunned minority because you havn't figured out your morals, your views, and your opinions. The only minority of people you belong to is that small group who realize exactly how little they have figured out. Everyone else is too full of... well... conviction.

Thinking differently isn't a blessing. It's not a curse either. It's just... either the tileset of a master plan, or the inevitable dispersion of chaotic randomness; whatever you believe. :)

Because of that, everyone in some way or another has a social vice. So -where h's comment comes in- find creative ways around it. Van Gogh did, and he had some serious shit goin' on.

For my grand conclusion, I'd suggest you start your questioning on the subject of not fitting in with others. If I was having that trouble I think the first thing I'd ask myself is "Do I want to fit in?"

Doctor Phil has left the building.

2:13 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

There isn't an answer to the question, holmes. We reinvent ourselves every time we start talking again.

-mgb

3:23 AM  
Blogger ciN said...

I disagee.
I find fluctuations in people's overall characteristics rarely change.
To reinvent myself every conversation would be either A) changing my core beliefs, which doesn't happen often in a life time, or B) acting differntly based on mood. I have done that, treat people badly when I'm rotted, etc. But I don't think that counts towards reinventing myself, it's a temporary thing.

2:34 AM  
Blogger ciN said...

Oh, I hate spamming message boards but one more thing. You totally need to make it so this opens in a new window. It's way more "EEEfficient."

2:37 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

We are not “eccentric” for feeling lost or uncertain about fitting in somewhere in this crazy world, we are simply growing and maturing…entering a new phase in our lives.

Instead of feeling guilty for not conforming to the mold that society has shaped for us, embrace life and all the new discoveries. Each new discovery makes us who we are. Enjoy the ride! Dare to be different.

Life is full of questionable moments, good and bad decisions, new beliefs and sometimes leaving old beliefs behind. The mastermind behind that wonderful aspect of life was a genius. If we all lived by the same beliefs and core values, there would be no individualism. How boring would that be?

"I hope I never get so used to the world that it no longer seems wonderful"

12:52 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

This is all part of life you are in your transisinal phase not that you will make new friends but you will find yourself searching for the right friends. Think about your parents friends and ask them about it they will tell you that the friends they have now are the ones they made in 30's or 40's. It's all apart of life and getting older. Not that your friends now aren't good or interesting and some of them will come "with" you in your transistion. Some will not it's OK. Keep questioning it what makes you - you when you stop your dead.

6:04 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

*snicker*

2:04 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

We reinvent ourselves because the subtext of any particular interaction depends on the entire history between each of us and each other person to whom we speak, in addition to our mood and the mood of the other person(s). Such adaptation is a necessary means of coping as social creatures. If you don't reinvent yourself to a degree at all times, you're being lazy, and possibly sociopathic :)

Core beliefs aren't absolutes. Any of them are subject to change. You don't know what you don't know. That's what it is to be human.

-mgb

7:46 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Who am I?"---you know who used to ask himself that very same question????


...Spiderman.

Coincidence???
I think not!


H

9:44 AM  
Blogger ciN said...

I like her spider man idea. Can we hear more about that?

2:16 PM  

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