204
by kokorodoko
Looking over the earlier post, it's clear that there is a circular thought process here with a few main themes.
A major thing which causes me to get stuck all the time is the dread I feel when trying to imagine any future scenario (that is, any point toward which I might decide to try to move myself). There is none, out of all the possibilities I can imagine, in which I am satisfied with my situation, or in which I have any better prospects, or in which I am even capable of sustaining myself, materially and psychologically.
However, this is specifically just imagining. The actual situation I'm in is never as catastrophic, from what I can see. The greater part of the horror I experience in any situation is the future I imagine to be waiting. I know that I am apt to catastrophize - this person probably hates me now because of something I did, I will probably lose my job because of some mistake I made, these are all the things which might go wrong in this thing I'm planning. I've watched myself go through cycles like these a couple of times now, where the dreaded outcome didn't correspond to the actual situation, which is how I know this kind of anticipation is an actual pathology in myself, independent of the concrete situation.
This kind of imagining, therefore, does not provide information. It's some special kind of fear-complex, probably triggered by this or that thing. So separating those two is a start at least.
I've had a similar thought to this before, but then I always thought "but if I can't imagine the future, how am I supposed to make plans?". That itself becomes a cycle though. I'll have to do something different.
The last theme is political. My awareness of the state of the world and its future prospects melds with my personal anxieties. It's not unlikely that there is a selection bias here though, a kind of reverse Pinker-effect. Also, and I think this is common, especially for people habituated to a shallow Marxism, there is a tendency to imagine, on the one hand, the world situation as a comprehensible, linear whole, where everything on the individual plane is ultimately downstream from an outer limit or encompassing structure, on which attention must always be directed; on the other hand, the specifics of your individual situation as scaling upwards and outwards. None of which I think are good descriptions.
There are, demonstrably, a multitude of very different individual situations occurring simultaneously, and a corresponding multitude of mind-states accompanying these situations. There is therefore no reliable way of of claiming any one of these situations to be representative above the others - "it might seem to you in your limited perspective that your life is pretty ok, but in the real world...". I don't want to be a relativist of course, but there has to be some way of acknowledging the reality that you can be in a moment which completely shuts out, makes insignificant, all that is going on around it, even while knowing that all that other stuff is in fact going on. We do this all the time in everyday life.
I don't have the thing where I feel guilt for the rest of the world, in the sense of "who am I to enjoy myself when all of this is happening", but I do have thoughts of "how could it ever be possible for me to be happy or to find myself in a situation I'm satisfied with, given that all of this is happening". But I guess they amount to a similar thing - since I know that so many suffer I deny myself the ability to not suffer, and since I know that disaster already visits so many, I live in anticipation of that same disaster visiting me. But there has to be some way of caring for yourself and caring for the world, not feeling like the weight of the world has to cancel out any happiness of your own.
And again, there is a difference in what the concrete reality is and what my mind makes of the awareness of this reality. What sorts of outcomes I am instinctively apt to consider more likely, what kinds of possibilities or opportunities I see or fail to see.
Anyway, these are some things.
born to give