Thursday, August 7, 2014

What lures me to the blogosphere and other wild tangents about me


This is my very first post to my very first blog.  How exciting!  Surely this calls for Vueve Cliqot!  OK Maybe not.  Whatever shutup.

Brooke Jones
Introverted, reclusive hermit

I am an introverted, reclusive hermit.  No not uni-bomber introverted reclusive hermit.  I think of myself as being on the high-functioning end of the anti-social spectrum.  I figure if I am to quell any uni-bomber comparisons, all I have to do is write a book.  A good book.  A book people enjoy.  Suddenly, my whole lifestyle would make sense to those who shoot their eyebrows at me in a furrow of concern and alarm.  “Oh!”  They would exclaim with a sigh of relief, “she is a writer. Oh!  Now I see.”

It seems easy enough, to write a book.  I have learned it is super easy to start a book. I have started many brilliant works, which inevitably get abandoned under a pile of more brilliant works, cast aside in favor of the idea du jour.  The tricky part for me is the whole finishing end of the business.  So, I’m thinking, maybe a blog might work for me.  Blogs love ideas du jour.  Or, a blog could just be another brilliant work abandoned after a frenzied start.  I suppose we shall see.  Wait a minute, can I claim title to being a “Writer” if all I do is blog?  When do I get to be “Author”? 

OK I’m getting ahead of myself as per usual.  My apprehension with a blog is my inability to be consistent.  Aren’t bloggers supposed to be out there cyber-socializing and advertising their blog to get more readers?  Then what happens when I go dark, leaving my new beloved readers bewildered and perplexed as to my whereabouts?  Will they all leave me if I hang a sign that reads “On Hiatus due to extreme introversion” then take off to roam the earth?  Will they be there when I get back?  OK I guess I should focus on being productive first, before I worry about when my break is.





Yesterday You
In the throws of an
18 month depression
Going dark is a real threat to my ability to function.  As many times as I have been sucked down the drain of depression, one would think I could recognize it coming on.  I never do.  It’s a sneaky little slippery rat bastard.

It’s a dark, shadowy figure looming just beyond my awareness.  It creeps in, seeps in somehow to commandeer my existence. Then one day I find myself laying on the couch in a coma-like daze, wondering when I showered last and basing my guess on exactly how matted my hair is. I will disgustingly admit, since we’re being honest here, that more than once my hair has balled itself into one single massive dreadlock.

I’d just ball it up on my head and go back to sleep, hoping sleep would once again alleviate my self-oppression.  I have no feeling in this state.  I am numb.


The surface is smooth and she is gone. 

I don’t typically have fits of uncontrollable crying or of hating myself or cutting myself or the other types of behavior portrayed in after school specials.  Although, I am one to antagonize and mock myself internally.  It's completely internal, concealed, incognito.  I just go… blank.  Nothingness.  I have no interest in anything, and no motivation, and no concern of it.  I couldn’t care less.  No feelings of love, hate, or any emotion in between.  I stew in apathy.  I don’t even speak, because it’s just too much work.  When I am in this pit, it is only then it occurs to me hey – something is not right here.  You’re depressed.

Most times even after this revelation I wouldn’t cut myself a break, or have any interest in getting out of the depression.  Eh, too much work.  Who cares.  Whatever.  I’ll just lay here in my own filth and channel surf the crappiest reality shows ever.  Fuck it. I’d probably have suicidal tendencies if killing yourself didn't take so much work.  I'm far too lazy for such a production. Instead, I use sleep as my form of relief.  I am not miserably depressed when asleep, so I sleep as much as possible.

Taking pharmaceuticals as prescribed (instead of playing “kitchen chemist” as my doctor calls it) helps minimize the severity of my mood swings.  But I screw those up all the time.  Then I go dark.  Then my sister says Hey-You’ve gone dark.  Then I get myself back on a regimented drug routine. 


Certain people in the medical profession believe me to be one who has bipolar.  I just can’t be sold on the whole physical diagnosis of a chemical imbalance – when no one can measure said chemicals nor does anyone know what “balanced chemicals” look like.  Perhaps it is my own intellectual shortcomings, but I fail to see how they would know which chemicals are needed to balance the imbalance when they don’t even know what balanced or imbalanced chemicals look like.

It insults my intelligence.  It should insult everyone.  I would more readily accept the explanation of “You have bipolar because you’re a nut bag from a long line of crazies” over some claim of physical causes that can’t be measured physically. 

In the 19th century, blood-letting was the go-to treatment for almost all of the ailments suffered.  Of course we know it is silly now, but to them, it was a positively scientific method of medical treatment with proven efficacy.  Eerily similar to the “balanced chemicals” farce.


Self-Portrait
Hyper-focused fit
of creative impulse
I am not saying I am not bipolar.  Well, I said exactly that for over 20 years.  Any doctor that uttered those words to me was the last time they ever saw me.  Clearly they had no idea what they were doing.  I have a vivacious, rambunctious personality, and sometimes I go dark and become a recluse.  So what if I stay up all night sometimes, sometimes for two nights – doctors simply do not understand creative artists.  I must paint.  I must write.  I must create non-stop until inspiration subsides.  What the hell is wrong with that?


I don’t know.  Maybe I didn’t really rock the shit out of Chinese Restaurant Karaoke in Hudson, NH.  But, maybe I did.  I was on fire baby.  I sang loudly, I walked out into the crowd, made eye contact… I totally worked the room.  I did several numbers; incited sing a longs.  I had a fabulous time!  It’s a very happy memory of a good time for me.  Now I am supposed to believe oh no, that wasn’t a good time - that was sick.  That was mental illness.  That was mania.  Ah, no thanks, mon frère.

It’s a tough pill to swallow to be told the best times of your life were actually mental illness. 

Was it a good idea to call my psychiatrist on a Saturday night and excitedly report I could shoot sparks from my fingertips?  Then two days later announce my marriage plans to a guy I met a week prior?  To my doctor and my entire family mind you.  Probably not my best ideas.  But hey, those are stories for other ideas du jour.

Why am I telling you this anyway.  I am not like some, bipolar poster girl.  In fact, I contest the label being applied to me.  It doesn't fit.  I don't wear it.  Just because I may have unusual schedule habits and eccentric priorities... these certainly do not make me mentally ill.

Dig it. 





<br>AUG 7 2014:  Being me and all, my very first post to my very first blog ended up languishing for months among the half-ideas and brilliant delusions stuffed in a folder marked blog. While not chronologically first, it is in fact the first. Yeah, me and George Lucas. How clever to reveal the beginning decades after the middle. Maybe... but my theory is now Mr. Lucas is more ADD than clever.

I did in fact have a frenzied start, I also went on hiatus.  I relocated 1500 miles away, and I'm *almost* finished with a book I wrote, and now I am back, maybe.</br>