Tuesday, August 13, 2013

A Crisis in Confidence

I'm no longer a scientist.

Oh, I try to be, sometimes, in conversation. I have pretentions toward rationality, and order, and organized thinking.

But let's face it -- I haven't tried to *do* science in years. And that's holding me back whenever I trot out my dilapidated resume, with past glories receding further beyond ken and relevance. I used to joke, "I look great... on paper." I don't joke any more.

Whatever I do -- and who knows? it might be vaguely scientific/engineering related -- I have to retrain. I have to organize my life better. I have to study even when I hate what I'm learning. I suppose this is what "adults" do.

Do adults also live with perpetual senses of inadequacy and anxiety? You know, the sort that isn't easily medicated away? Some of this might be partially treated social anxiety. But some of it is just existential angst, the product of someone who has been comfortable or discomforted enough that he has devoted significant time to thinking about life and significantly less time actually living.

I'm 30 now. That's the boulder now; that's the deadweight. I suppose it replaces other, even more destructive ones. But I'm conscious that I missed some chances -- chances to take intelligent risks, fail, and learn something good from failure. I'm afraid now, not because I've failed -- though I have. But because a part of me feels like I need a success so badly that I can't afford another fuck up.

This Korea trip has exhausted me. I had to deal with a lot of crap, crap that honestly hurt opportunities I had to get to know people better, to enjoy being somewhere new and different, away from the old, bad world that swallowed my child-self quick. (If you think that an allusion to a post-apocalyptic poem is a bit extreme, you might be right, but then again, we also probably haven't spoken much about substantive personal matters.)

Dad will be dead soon -- perhaps this year, perhaps this month. I've been preparing for him to die for as long as I can remember; he's been near-death at least 10 times in the last 15 years. But this one might be real. And so this might be the first time I'm really coming to terms with the fact that I'll be losing an excuse for my own failings. I'm not losing a father -- not in the sense that I like to characterize fathers. But I'll be losing a friend, a sometimes-dependent, sometimes-selfish, sometimes-loving entity that has been the Julius Caesar of my life -- absent, but often playing a larger role in the action and denounement than any of the living characters on the stage.

I've gotten lazy, and soft. I've *been* lazy and soft for as long as I can think. That comes from a belief that I'm more fragile than perhaps I am. Besides, one of the advantages of not having a higher sense of self-worth should be a more cavalier attitude toward personal danger and failure, right? So perhaps the right choice is not to try to restore my self-worth; it is to destroy it completley. Time to go sublimate into some cause or faith or group.

Geez, this is self-indulgent tripe. But writing is better than not writing. I'll delete this soon, probably, but I'll leave it up at least as a testament to the collective anxiety and frustration that many people I know are feeling at this time.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm married to someone who had way too good a time in his 20's. He was a fun-loving barista when we met, both of us at- 30. He had a useless bachelor's degree -- it took about 7 more years for him to get it together, finish a 2 year associate's degree, and find a job he loved. Marriage, kid, house and minivan followed.

I looked better by then "on paper" -- finished school, had a professional job at 30, but I was 34 when I actually remember walking across the grounds of the institution where I worked and thinking, wow, okay, I feel like I've arrived. Which is to say, I like myself, I'm not perfect, but I don't really care. This must be it, this must be what it feels like to be an adult. About the same time I could call other adults and not sweat on the phone while waiting for them to answer, just because they had more degrees than I did.

Don't let your picture of what life "should have been" like in your 20's bum you out. One day you'll be able to say "kid" about someone who is 30, I promise you. They'll look cute in all their mixed up worry about not having yet arrived.

Ignore the supposedly successful academicians. Plenty of people just get started doing what they want to do in their 30's and 40's.
And what someone else is on paper tells you nothing about their life satisfaction. I know you know all this, but people in their 50's can't help but lecture people in their 30's, you see -- we feel like we've lived so much longer, and you're just getting started. Which should sound both insulting and -- like really good news. -Taryn

Ryan Yamada said...

Taryn,

Thanks. I'm lucky to have an on-call pastor. :)