You're reminding me of the writer Robert Walser, who also had Days Like That. :)
"In the dark year of 1933, after a reorganisation at Waldau, Walser was committed, against his will, to the clinic at Herisau, where Seelig first visited him in 1936 and encouraged him to resume his interrupted career. ‘I’m not here to write,’ Walser told Seelig firmly. ‘I’m here to be mad.’"
You got through today.
That's what matters most.
@MLClark Indeed. Although it is becoming tiresome. I can't believe that my entire life was meant to be like this. It was not what I was expecting, then again life never really turns out how we expect it to. I was just hoping for a little better for the final chapters.🤷♂️
Some of my favourite stories are about the mess of those final chapters: the weight of so much failure, pain, & exhaustion from starting over and over and over again.
I wish it were easy for humans to shake off the weight of unfair expectations and material limitations from our ridiculous cultures.
But they cling to the better stuff of our natures whether we want them to or not, eh?
Go easy on your meat-sack, eh?
The anger is legitimate.
It's also never the whole of us. 🫂
@MLClark You're the best and I really, really appreciate you my friend.💙☮😊
@MLClark I'm honored that even in my own failings I can help others. There's no greater feeling, for me anyways, to know that I've said or done something that has helped carry the load. No of us are immune.
@Tacitus_Kilgore
As a person who recognizes their own depression as "ego dialled to 11", I hear that. Sometimes the one thing we need to hear most is that there's a world outside the nightmare in our heads, eh?
Doesn't mean the nightmare inside our head sucks any less!
But it helps sometimes to remember that there are things beyond the nightmare, too. 🫂 Glad I can be that nuisance reminder for you sometimes!
Your presence certainly helps in my ego-consumed depressive spells, too.