Survival. To people in a world without technology, it means something quite different than to people of generations X and Y.
To survive one had to be a hunter or a gatherer. All of human labor used to be directly related to basic needs: food, water, and shelter.
But, in a society that has focused its energies on minimizing labor, maximizing entertainment, and enhancing comfort, an entirely new extension of reality has been created. Some would even say that since the Industrial Revolution, humanity as been removed from reality (reality in this sense meaning nature). In this version of reality, everyone is always comfortable, always entertained, always happily sedated (or happily caffeinated, take your pick). Many of the jobs available to our generation today are jobs that are dedicated not to basic human needs, but amusement and emotional highs. We’ve got fast food, its addicting taste giving us a feeling of euphoria, drinks to lower our inhibitions and helps us relax, cell phones and computers to keep us laughing or crying as we please: and lastly we have coffee to help get us through the jobs that enable others live the Dream.
Though these jobs exist to uphold the type of culture described above, people do them without thinking. But what can we do when many of these jobs are where our next paycheck comes from: the paycheck that pays our bills and leaves us a little extra money to spend on medicating our apathy?
It’s no mystery that people of the generation of which I am a part often appear to be lazy compared to previous generations. Something in us dreads going to any job that we know deep within our hearts is meaningless. What are we doing really when we feed donuts to children so obese that they have trouble moving around? What are we doing really when we sell television to our beloved Inactive Society? Beer to the addicted? Or brand name clothing to the image obsessed? People in my generation, especially those that think about these sorts of things, tend to get caught up in moral dilemmas or fall into the static state of not caring.
I don’t consider myself a capitalist or a socialist, nor a communist or an anarchist. I consider myself an idealist. Everyone is so concerned with keeping themselves occupied. The key word here is themselves; individuals laboring for individuals. No one seems to care much about the well being of the person sitting next to them, just about their stations in life. Why not let there be more communities where we help each other eat and live and get to know the souls of one another? Isn’t that what love is supposed to be about? I sometimes think that the problem is that no one ever dares to dream about the way things should be because they’re too concerned with the way things are; too cynical to ever believe that things could be different.
I propose that we do what we can within our limitations: with the decision to love dictating all of our choices. So, next time we work ourselves to the bone so we can have things we don’t need and produce things that others don’t need, let us think about, in everything we do, what it means to love our neighbor. To live a rich life, I believe that everyone should take care of both themselves and their community.
I'm trying to organize the thoughts that constantly circulate in my head. Here are my interpretations on those thoughts and my reflections on faith, beauty, feminism and love.
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
Quitting Smoking
Some time ago, I asked my fiancé to set a date for me to quit smoking. He eagerly said, "Christmas!" but that wasn't about to happen and I told him as much. His next proposition was Pascha (Eastern Orthodox Easter). By then we would have been chrismated into the Church and so it seemed only fitting. I agreed, thankful that I had nearly eight months before I had to worry about quitting.
I've been a smoker since I was fourteen. Imaginably, kicking the habit is a near impossible task. To be honest, before I'd started dating Corey, I had it in my head that I would quit some time before I got married - no one wants to try and start a family on bad health. But what I hadn't anticipated was how difficult wanting to quit would be. If I wanted to quit, I would have quit a long time ago. I wanted to smoke. Smoking was a thing I did almost by principle. For me it is the ultimate rebellion against authority (and by authority I just mean everyone who told me not to smoke). I used to view self esteem as a choice - I shouldn't have it just because people say I should have it . . .what makes me so special? What makes anyone special? I can damage my lungs if I want - how much is my corpse worth among thousands of those living who will all die at some point anyway? (kidding!)
Consumption. Always consumption. I probably gained 15+ pounds when I quit. . .the first time. I remember praying a prayer that went something like this: “God, even if you have to make me sick to give me a reality check, do that. Because I really don’t want to quit smoking.” So, I got really sick. I couldn’t breathe. I didn’t have any energy. I couldn’t move without losing oxygen. Mostly, I sat around writing and watching TV (shows I was into at that point: Bones and Doctor Who. Bones=disappointing. Doctor Who=never really disappointing.) Meanwhile, I ate a lot, slept a lot, and got angry more often. Smoking was a good way for me to deal with anger. We all do something when we get emotional: pray, smoke, eat, sleep, write, exercise, read, drink, yell at someone, etc. Of course, some of these are more healthy than others. But the unhealthy things are the easiest to do. When I stopped smoking and was sick and emotional and demanding, I ate. I ate a lot. I was a picky eater as a kid, but as an adult I discovered the joys of food. Sour cream wasn’t a thing for me until recently. Why did I ever think it was gross? It’s probably one of the tastiest things ever. And green peppers. And the chicken bacon ranch pizza green pepper sour cream combination. Working at Dunkin Donuts at the time didn’t help much either. Why wasn’t I introduced to maple icing earlier in my life? And Boston Cream? I love custard. It’s way better than regular pudding. I probably ate 20 Boston Creams in the duration of my employment there. (At the time I was reading Bossy Pants, a memoir by Tina Fey, who recommends that everyone should enjoy being a little overweight for little bit of time in their life. You should read it.)
Despite my new food vice and the wonderful feelings of euphoria and lethargy that came with it, I kept thinking about how delicious a cigarette would be after a good binge. I was also gaining a ridiculous amount of weight that I refused to acknowledge until trying on a bra in the fitting room at Kohls. In the fluorescent light, I realized just how big my belly and thighs had gotten. (I should explain: I was trying on a bra to wear under my WEDDING dress. The bride must always lose weight before the WEDDING, no matter how skinny you are. Am I right?) Somewhere between Christmas and late January, I started smoking again, in hopes that I would actually be able to drop the weight and keep it down. It didn’t work. But I pretended it did. It was easy because from the front, I didn’t look all that bad.
But others brought it to my attention. Some people didn’t even deny that I looked fat when I asked (the true friends). It was a gradual process, this decision to lose weight. . . Quitting smoking. That’s what I’m writing about.
When Pascha started to draw near, I started to understand just how scared I was to actually quit smoking. How could I be expected to quit after I’ve been doing it for so long? It’s like I would become a totally different person. Maybe I would be a yelling, eating machine-monster. Maybe smoking was what calmed my personality down enough to make me loveable. The sad truth is, no matter what I believed about self esteem or how condescending it seemed when people told me have it, there was a good deal of self hatred in me, and it was increasingly uncomfortable.
It was not that I thought smoking and eating – the things I was putting into my body - was filling a void. It was numbing my awareness of the void. People can suffer any amount of things as long as they don’t have to think about how they’re suffering.
I persuaded Corey to let me switch to the e cigarette on Pascha. That way, I’d still have something. I’m currently using the e cigarette. The product leaves me satisfied. I have the highest dose of nicotine, so it’s the closest to smoking I could possibly get. Granted, it doesn’t feel anything like smoking. It feels like small, portable hookah that wakes you up in the morning. Sometimes, because I don’t have to go outside to inhale it, I forget about smoking altogether. (But that’s only sometimes).
I’d like to imagine that in the next couple of years I won’t be smoking at all, that I will have slowly lowered my milligrams of nicotine until there are none left for me to crave.
Once, I asked someone why we are supposed to love ourselves, what makes people worth loving. His reply was “because they breathe.” Ambiguous as it was, the answer satisfied me. And I came to the conclusion that it is hard to get through this life when you loathe yourself.
Having self esteem is not easy. You have to reprogram your brain, work diligently at developing new patterns of thinking. Things are almost more sober as you face the things you’ve avoided while self medicating. It requires taking yourself seriously, not making yourself one big joke.
Still, I find myself stepping outside with my e cigarette and pretending to flick my ashes off the balcony. It’s a ritual associated with cancer, bad teeth, breathing problems; but it’s a ritual that is dear to me. In simpler times people thought it was trendy and calming. I associate it with the relief one feels at the end of the day when getting into bed, and the hope that the new tomorrow will be different.
Here’s to the progress of healthier living. Here’s to the progress of quitting smoking.
I've been a smoker since I was fourteen. Imaginably, kicking the habit is a near impossible task. To be honest, before I'd started dating Corey, I had it in my head that I would quit some time before I got married - no one wants to try and start a family on bad health. But what I hadn't anticipated was how difficult wanting to quit would be. If I wanted to quit, I would have quit a long time ago. I wanted to smoke. Smoking was a thing I did almost by principle. For me it is the ultimate rebellion against authority (and by authority I just mean everyone who told me not to smoke). I used to view self esteem as a choice - I shouldn't have it just because people say I should have it . . .what makes me so special? What makes anyone special? I can damage my lungs if I want - how much is my corpse worth among thousands of those living who will all die at some point anyway? (kidding!)
Consumption. Always consumption. I probably gained 15+ pounds when I quit. . .the first time. I remember praying a prayer that went something like this: “God, even if you have to make me sick to give me a reality check, do that. Because I really don’t want to quit smoking.” So, I got really sick. I couldn’t breathe. I didn’t have any energy. I couldn’t move without losing oxygen. Mostly, I sat around writing and watching TV (shows I was into at that point: Bones and Doctor Who. Bones=disappointing. Doctor Who=never really disappointing.) Meanwhile, I ate a lot, slept a lot, and got angry more often. Smoking was a good way for me to deal with anger. We all do something when we get emotional: pray, smoke, eat, sleep, write, exercise, read, drink, yell at someone, etc. Of course, some of these are more healthy than others. But the unhealthy things are the easiest to do. When I stopped smoking and was sick and emotional and demanding, I ate. I ate a lot. I was a picky eater as a kid, but as an adult I discovered the joys of food. Sour cream wasn’t a thing for me until recently. Why did I ever think it was gross? It’s probably one of the tastiest things ever. And green peppers. And the chicken bacon ranch pizza green pepper sour cream combination. Working at Dunkin Donuts at the time didn’t help much either. Why wasn’t I introduced to maple icing earlier in my life? And Boston Cream? I love custard. It’s way better than regular pudding. I probably ate 20 Boston Creams in the duration of my employment there. (At the time I was reading Bossy Pants, a memoir by Tina Fey, who recommends that everyone should enjoy being a little overweight for little bit of time in their life. You should read it.)
Despite my new food vice and the wonderful feelings of euphoria and lethargy that came with it, I kept thinking about how delicious a cigarette would be after a good binge. I was also gaining a ridiculous amount of weight that I refused to acknowledge until trying on a bra in the fitting room at Kohls. In the fluorescent light, I realized just how big my belly and thighs had gotten. (I should explain: I was trying on a bra to wear under my WEDDING dress. The bride must always lose weight before the WEDDING, no matter how skinny you are. Am I right?) Somewhere between Christmas and late January, I started smoking again, in hopes that I would actually be able to drop the weight and keep it down. It didn’t work. But I pretended it did. It was easy because from the front, I didn’t look all that bad.
But others brought it to my attention. Some people didn’t even deny that I looked fat when I asked (the true friends). It was a gradual process, this decision to lose weight. . . Quitting smoking. That’s what I’m writing about.
When Pascha started to draw near, I started to understand just how scared I was to actually quit smoking. How could I be expected to quit after I’ve been doing it for so long? It’s like I would become a totally different person. Maybe I would be a yelling, eating machine-monster. Maybe smoking was what calmed my personality down enough to make me loveable. The sad truth is, no matter what I believed about self esteem or how condescending it seemed when people told me have it, there was a good deal of self hatred in me, and it was increasingly uncomfortable.
It was not that I thought smoking and eating – the things I was putting into my body - was filling a void. It was numbing my awareness of the void. People can suffer any amount of things as long as they don’t have to think about how they’re suffering.
I persuaded Corey to let me switch to the e cigarette on Pascha. That way, I’d still have something. I’m currently using the e cigarette. The product leaves me satisfied. I have the highest dose of nicotine, so it’s the closest to smoking I could possibly get. Granted, it doesn’t feel anything like smoking. It feels like small, portable hookah that wakes you up in the morning. Sometimes, because I don’t have to go outside to inhale it, I forget about smoking altogether. (But that’s only sometimes).
I’d like to imagine that in the next couple of years I won’t be smoking at all, that I will have slowly lowered my milligrams of nicotine until there are none left for me to crave.
Once, I asked someone why we are supposed to love ourselves, what makes people worth loving. His reply was “because they breathe.” Ambiguous as it was, the answer satisfied me. And I came to the conclusion that it is hard to get through this life when you loathe yourself.
Having self esteem is not easy. You have to reprogram your brain, work diligently at developing new patterns of thinking. Things are almost more sober as you face the things you’ve avoided while self medicating. It requires taking yourself seriously, not making yourself one big joke.
Still, I find myself stepping outside with my e cigarette and pretending to flick my ashes off the balcony. It’s a ritual associated with cancer, bad teeth, breathing problems; but it’s a ritual that is dear to me. In simpler times people thought it was trendy and calming. I associate it with the relief one feels at the end of the day when getting into bed, and the hope that the new tomorrow will be different.
Here’s to the progress of healthier living. Here’s to the progress of quitting smoking.
Labels:
ecig,
exercise,
quitting smoking,
smoking
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