Lambda
Redshirt
So I've had an interesting couple of days, and it feels like, or maybe I feel like I should share what's been going on. Note that when I say interesting, I really mean confusing and enlightening and weird and awesome and just... yeah. And I have a problem I'll get to at the end I could use a few opinions on.
1. Background first, I suppose. Bit lengthy. Relatively distant past, first. I've measured as an INTP for the last few years, and that's as long as I've been taking tests. Not a very strong one, though. Percentage wise, it's something like 77-67-55-65 I-N-T-P. The fairly weak T is of particular interest to me as I write this, and I've realized that maybe I was more of a feeler than a thinker when I was younger. Hell, I might have been more of an extrovert, too. But maybe circumstances and environmental factors caused me to shift to an introverted, rational personality.
Specifically, the way male friends behaved once the hormones started kicking in alienated me. I mean, I was never fond of anyone who cracked a joke at another's expense, or felt they had to act macho in the locker room. But eventually it was like they all did that, and the occasional nice guy was really just taking advantage of you. That was my experience, anyway, and I suppose I retreated into a shell to avoid dealing with everyone. And that shell has gotten thicker and I've become less sociable in the intervening years.
So that started around age 11 or 12, and now I'm 19. And a bit of a wreck. Definitely a loner, lacking social skills or grace, very few friends, no close ones. No real hobbies, no desire to pursue my interests. Barely got the marks to get into Engineering, dropped out after failing first semester. Doing Open Studies now (2 courses a semester with restrictions on what I can take), thinking of entering Computer Science if I can boost my GPA. Not really trying hard, though. It's like I'm sprinting at the beginning of the semester, and halfway through I get bored and my mind starts wandering. And that's where the real trouble starts.
I've got a pretty good memory. In a sense. Events and faces. Usually no good with names or details unless they're important. So of course I remember my friends from over the years, my classmates, my enemies. I did IB in high school, and by Grade 12 there were only 9 or 10 of us, so they were fairly close by then. I wasn't really part of the IB circle, though, but I knew them, and they knew me, and we interacted enough to get along.
I also remember the people I felt attracted to, and my social awkwardness around them. Which I'd really rather forget. In fact, given the option, I would gladly erase all my memories up to this point, leaving only basic language skills and whatnot. I want to escape my past, which I always have, really. I switched school systems after elementary (“Protestant” secular system to “Catholic” somewhat-religious system) and back again for high school, mainly because everyone was too familiar. I didn't want to interact with these people anymore. Even after high school I tried to go as far away as possible for university. But that didn't work out, and now I'm stuck in the same place as most of the people I knew are.
So I see their faces everyday, and from casual conversation I get the sense that at least some of them mostly forget the specific details of my behaviour when we last saw each other. But I remember all of it, in glorious high definition.
So for the first few weeks of a university semester I can focus on class, and feel pumped, but then the monotony sets in, and I start thinking about anything else I can think of. And invariably I come back to these people, whose faces I see everyday, except now it's like we're all strangers. People I got along well with hardly glance at me and continue on their way. But I remember this life where we were comrades, if not friends. And I realize some of them never really liked me. Elitism, I suppose. And part of me wants to forget it all, and another part wishes it could have been more, that we could have been best of friends and done whatever good friends do with each other.
All this could be summed up with “long term social stress, resulting in chronic depression and approaching nihilism”. But anyway. Long term background.
2. Moving on. Middle background. I like books. Movies. TV, anime, anything with a good story. I tend to shotgun things. Read all 7 Harry Potter books in one sitting, or watch a whole season of a show, or a trilogy of movies. I use my imagination to enter the world, imagine myself as a new character, interact with the other characters. Etc, etc. It feels nice to be in another world, separate from the real one. Especially when conflicts are resolved. Characters develop, battles are fought. Good triumphs over evil, or characters come to terms with some aspect of their lives.
It's much more fulfilling than watching real life go by. Nothing significant ever changes for the better. It either changes for the worse or just changes. Most of the little details just change. But basically nothing ever seems to get better. So I tend to immerse myself in stories.
3. And... well. Immediate background. A couple days ago I was watching an anime called Angel Beats! (and I have no idea if a period should go after that exclamation mark. Oh well, this solves it nicely.). Basically, the setting is an afterlife, a sort of Purgatory where people come to terms with their regrets before moving on (and usually reincarnating). But the main characters all suffered a perceived injustice during their lives, and so want to confront God over the unfairness of it all. And of course, they hold on to their regrets and can't move on to the next stage. Anyway, it got me thinking a little bit about the afterlife and God and, well, that sort of stuff.
4. Story, then. I'm a rational person. And at the end of the day I suppose I'm an atheist. I don't see how or why there could be an afterlife, or a God with the capacity to interfere with the workings of our universe. Pop the question “Is there life after death?” and my first instinct is to say “No”. And after a minute of consideration I still feel that this is the best answer.
But a couple of days ago I had an emotional breakdown. Which happens, sometimes. Once every few months. Makes me wonder if I need a psychologist afterwards, but once I've calmed down I'm usually numb enough to rationally reason my way out of that idea (and I hear INTPs and psychologists don't usually mix). This one was weird, though, because I started feeling suicidal.
Now, the last time I seriously contemplated suicide was when I was 13 years old, and I rejected it on the basis of not knowing with absolute certainty what came after death. Heaven or hell, I could handle. Purgatory, no sweat. Reincarnation, awesome. But non-existence? I couldn't do that. Better to exist than not, no matter what. Since then, every time my mind gets anywhere near the idea of suicide, the same argument turns me away. So I don't usually feel suicidal for more than a moment. Every few months.
But here I was actually contemplating it. And when I asked myself what came after death, my mind responded. Not with “Nothing”, but with “Something”. Surely there was something afterwards. There had to be! The idea that the entire universe and our existence and feelings and emotions and will to live and everything was just a fluke? Bull****. It had to be! A cosmic joke! Something, anything, it had to be there! Otherwise what was the point of everything that ever happened, that ever existed, ever?
I felt comforted by the idea, but uncertain of it's validity. Never mind that I was entertaining the idea in the first place, where before I would have rejected it outright! I pulled out my computer, looked up Buddhism and Hinduism and reincarnation and evidence for an afterlife, or at least the continuation of existence in some form after death. I wanted, so very badly, to believe such a thing, with absolute certainty.
This was at around 1 in the morning and I had class that day. Eventually I got to sleep, but when it came time to wake up, I felt perturbed. I felt I had to calm down or I wouldn’t make it though the day, so I dug out my St. John's Wort (which I hadn't felt the need to take in months) and popped a pill. 200mg if anyone's interested.
Anyway, I took the bus to class, went to class, took the bus home. But starting a bit after I left for class, and ending a bit after I got back, I felt... not mellow, so much as content. Not numbly content and devoid of feeling, like normal, but... almost happy. I ditched class (only one class and it's stupidly slow) (the other class is the next day, if you're keeping up) and thought about suicide. Not considering it though, it was like I had already decided. I felt I wanted to commit suicide. I really, really wanted to. And if there was a possibility of something afterwards, something different from this life, even rebirth as another person with no memory of this life, then I wanted that. Nothing else mattered.
I dug out my computer again and looked at methods of suicide, drug concoctions, etc. The tallest rooftops in the region aren't really accessible, so that was out. Eventually I realized there was still a lingering doubt in my mind about whether or not there was something after death. I wanted certainty, and no human-researched evidence would be enough to convince me.
I read an article on Erowid titled “Where is God in the Entheogenic Movement?” It talked about how the rejection of the Church led to the rejection of God, and how science became the new religion. And now we have entheogens, psychedelic plants and substances that give us spiritual experiences. And many users eventually meet God, or at least think they do. And now we have people who've experienced some form of God, but it's taboo to discuss such a being in intellectual circles, so we don't hear about it as much as we perhaps should. And we don't give as much though to the concept of God as we should, because we still think of the Church, and the World Wars and whatnot.
I wanted to communicate with God, or see another world, or learn about the universe. I wanted knowledge an atheist would never accept. If I couldn't even have that, then at the very least I wanted inner peace. A resolution with the perceived demons in my head. A clean mind and soul before I left, to ease my passage into whatever comes after. I've always had an interest in psychedelics and entheogens, so I looked those up. Salvia, ayahuasca.
I resolved to purchase some Salvia divinorum, and a pipe, and smoke some. That was today. I haven't done all that yet, but I intended to. But... remember when I said the happy contentedness ended a bit after I got home? Before that moment I was resolute in my desires. I knew I was going to get some Salvia, I knew I wanted to die, I was pretty sure there was an afterlife. Which was unprecedented for me, but I didn't stop to think about that.
So I got home, I was resolute... and then thoughts started creeping into my mind. Rational ones. “Is there really an afterlife? How can there be? What reason could there possibly be for such a thing?” I tried to push those thoughts away. I held on to my confidence, but they kept coming. “How can there be a God? There is no reason, and no proof.” Etc, etc.
So... now I'm back where I was before all of this. Rational, logical, emotionally numb. Depressed. I look at my thought process today and my instinct tells me it was stupid, the ideas, the concepts, they were idiotic. And I want to trust my instincts, like I always have, but... I remember what it felt like. To be certain, and content with the idea of an afterlife. I felt alive then, more than I have in years. I want my instincts to be wrong. I, my conscious self, want to be right. I want that feeling back. I don't want to be rational anymore, I don't want to feel so cold and gloomy. I want to feel alive again.
5. I think what I had was a burst of F overpowering my T. Apparently emotional trauma will do that. Reading the descriptions for INFP, I realize that I was like that at some points in my life, and that part of me never really left. It's always been there, just... hiding, I guess. Under the surface. Shielded by the shell of rationality. I knew for a long time it was doing more harm than good, but I became dependent on it and never had the willpower to remove it.
I want to shed my protective shell. I want to forget rationality. I want to feel things. I want to experience emotion again. I want to be confident in my beliefs with no rational basis.
I want my feelings back.
And I want to calmly, contentedly, die, and move on, and live again. Maybe next time I won't be plagued by the demons I've had all my life. Maybe I'll meet some nice people, and grow up with them, and learn what it is to have a good friend in my life. And maybe I'll gain the willpower to do what I really, truly want, and not turn to nihilism again.
I want that. But I'm not sure how I got there to begin with, and I'm not sure if I can get there again.
And now my mother thinks I need a psychologist. Where before I told her how I felt and how I wanted to see a psychologist and she ignored my requests, now I try to explain all this to her, without even mentioning psychologists, and suddenly “I think it's time we bite the bullet”. Now I need to figure out what the hell I actually intend to do.
Your thoughts and opinions are appreciated.
1. Background first, I suppose. Bit lengthy. Relatively distant past, first. I've measured as an INTP for the last few years, and that's as long as I've been taking tests. Not a very strong one, though. Percentage wise, it's something like 77-67-55-65 I-N-T-P. The fairly weak T is of particular interest to me as I write this, and I've realized that maybe I was more of a feeler than a thinker when I was younger. Hell, I might have been more of an extrovert, too. But maybe circumstances and environmental factors caused me to shift to an introverted, rational personality.
Specifically, the way male friends behaved once the hormones started kicking in alienated me. I mean, I was never fond of anyone who cracked a joke at another's expense, or felt they had to act macho in the locker room. But eventually it was like they all did that, and the occasional nice guy was really just taking advantage of you. That was my experience, anyway, and I suppose I retreated into a shell to avoid dealing with everyone. And that shell has gotten thicker and I've become less sociable in the intervening years.
So that started around age 11 or 12, and now I'm 19. And a bit of a wreck. Definitely a loner, lacking social skills or grace, very few friends, no close ones. No real hobbies, no desire to pursue my interests. Barely got the marks to get into Engineering, dropped out after failing first semester. Doing Open Studies now (2 courses a semester with restrictions on what I can take), thinking of entering Computer Science if I can boost my GPA. Not really trying hard, though. It's like I'm sprinting at the beginning of the semester, and halfway through I get bored and my mind starts wandering. And that's where the real trouble starts.
I've got a pretty good memory. In a sense. Events and faces. Usually no good with names or details unless they're important. So of course I remember my friends from over the years, my classmates, my enemies. I did IB in high school, and by Grade 12 there were only 9 or 10 of us, so they were fairly close by then. I wasn't really part of the IB circle, though, but I knew them, and they knew me, and we interacted enough to get along.
I also remember the people I felt attracted to, and my social awkwardness around them. Which I'd really rather forget. In fact, given the option, I would gladly erase all my memories up to this point, leaving only basic language skills and whatnot. I want to escape my past, which I always have, really. I switched school systems after elementary (“Protestant” secular system to “Catholic” somewhat-religious system) and back again for high school, mainly because everyone was too familiar. I didn't want to interact with these people anymore. Even after high school I tried to go as far away as possible for university. But that didn't work out, and now I'm stuck in the same place as most of the people I knew are.
So I see their faces everyday, and from casual conversation I get the sense that at least some of them mostly forget the specific details of my behaviour when we last saw each other. But I remember all of it, in glorious high definition.
So for the first few weeks of a university semester I can focus on class, and feel pumped, but then the monotony sets in, and I start thinking about anything else I can think of. And invariably I come back to these people, whose faces I see everyday, except now it's like we're all strangers. People I got along well with hardly glance at me and continue on their way. But I remember this life where we were comrades, if not friends. And I realize some of them never really liked me. Elitism, I suppose. And part of me wants to forget it all, and another part wishes it could have been more, that we could have been best of friends and done whatever good friends do with each other.
All this could be summed up with “long term social stress, resulting in chronic depression and approaching nihilism”. But anyway. Long term background.
2. Moving on. Middle background. I like books. Movies. TV, anime, anything with a good story. I tend to shotgun things. Read all 7 Harry Potter books in one sitting, or watch a whole season of a show, or a trilogy of movies. I use my imagination to enter the world, imagine myself as a new character, interact with the other characters. Etc, etc. It feels nice to be in another world, separate from the real one. Especially when conflicts are resolved. Characters develop, battles are fought. Good triumphs over evil, or characters come to terms with some aspect of their lives.
It's much more fulfilling than watching real life go by. Nothing significant ever changes for the better. It either changes for the worse or just changes. Most of the little details just change. But basically nothing ever seems to get better. So I tend to immerse myself in stories.
3. And... well. Immediate background. A couple days ago I was watching an anime called Angel Beats! (and I have no idea if a period should go after that exclamation mark. Oh well, this solves it nicely.). Basically, the setting is an afterlife, a sort of Purgatory where people come to terms with their regrets before moving on (and usually reincarnating). But the main characters all suffered a perceived injustice during their lives, and so want to confront God over the unfairness of it all. And of course, they hold on to their regrets and can't move on to the next stage. Anyway, it got me thinking a little bit about the afterlife and God and, well, that sort of stuff.
4. Story, then. I'm a rational person. And at the end of the day I suppose I'm an atheist. I don't see how or why there could be an afterlife, or a God with the capacity to interfere with the workings of our universe. Pop the question “Is there life after death?” and my first instinct is to say “No”. And after a minute of consideration I still feel that this is the best answer.
But a couple of days ago I had an emotional breakdown. Which happens, sometimes. Once every few months. Makes me wonder if I need a psychologist afterwards, but once I've calmed down I'm usually numb enough to rationally reason my way out of that idea (and I hear INTPs and psychologists don't usually mix). This one was weird, though, because I started feeling suicidal.
Now, the last time I seriously contemplated suicide was when I was 13 years old, and I rejected it on the basis of not knowing with absolute certainty what came after death. Heaven or hell, I could handle. Purgatory, no sweat. Reincarnation, awesome. But non-existence? I couldn't do that. Better to exist than not, no matter what. Since then, every time my mind gets anywhere near the idea of suicide, the same argument turns me away. So I don't usually feel suicidal for more than a moment. Every few months.
But here I was actually contemplating it. And when I asked myself what came after death, my mind responded. Not with “Nothing”, but with “Something”. Surely there was something afterwards. There had to be! The idea that the entire universe and our existence and feelings and emotions and will to live and everything was just a fluke? Bull****. It had to be! A cosmic joke! Something, anything, it had to be there! Otherwise what was the point of everything that ever happened, that ever existed, ever?
I felt comforted by the idea, but uncertain of it's validity. Never mind that I was entertaining the idea in the first place, where before I would have rejected it outright! I pulled out my computer, looked up Buddhism and Hinduism and reincarnation and evidence for an afterlife, or at least the continuation of existence in some form after death. I wanted, so very badly, to believe such a thing, with absolute certainty.
This was at around 1 in the morning and I had class that day. Eventually I got to sleep, but when it came time to wake up, I felt perturbed. I felt I had to calm down or I wouldn’t make it though the day, so I dug out my St. John's Wort (which I hadn't felt the need to take in months) and popped a pill. 200mg if anyone's interested.
Anyway, I took the bus to class, went to class, took the bus home. But starting a bit after I left for class, and ending a bit after I got back, I felt... not mellow, so much as content. Not numbly content and devoid of feeling, like normal, but... almost happy. I ditched class (only one class and it's stupidly slow) (the other class is the next day, if you're keeping up) and thought about suicide. Not considering it though, it was like I had already decided. I felt I wanted to commit suicide. I really, really wanted to. And if there was a possibility of something afterwards, something different from this life, even rebirth as another person with no memory of this life, then I wanted that. Nothing else mattered.
I dug out my computer again and looked at methods of suicide, drug concoctions, etc. The tallest rooftops in the region aren't really accessible, so that was out. Eventually I realized there was still a lingering doubt in my mind about whether or not there was something after death. I wanted certainty, and no human-researched evidence would be enough to convince me.
I read an article on Erowid titled “Where is God in the Entheogenic Movement?” It talked about how the rejection of the Church led to the rejection of God, and how science became the new religion. And now we have entheogens, psychedelic plants and substances that give us spiritual experiences. And many users eventually meet God, or at least think they do. And now we have people who've experienced some form of God, but it's taboo to discuss such a being in intellectual circles, so we don't hear about it as much as we perhaps should. And we don't give as much though to the concept of God as we should, because we still think of the Church, and the World Wars and whatnot.
I wanted to communicate with God, or see another world, or learn about the universe. I wanted knowledge an atheist would never accept. If I couldn't even have that, then at the very least I wanted inner peace. A resolution with the perceived demons in my head. A clean mind and soul before I left, to ease my passage into whatever comes after. I've always had an interest in psychedelics and entheogens, so I looked those up. Salvia, ayahuasca.
I resolved to purchase some Salvia divinorum, and a pipe, and smoke some. That was today. I haven't done all that yet, but I intended to. But... remember when I said the happy contentedness ended a bit after I got home? Before that moment I was resolute in my desires. I knew I was going to get some Salvia, I knew I wanted to die, I was pretty sure there was an afterlife. Which was unprecedented for me, but I didn't stop to think about that.
So I got home, I was resolute... and then thoughts started creeping into my mind. Rational ones. “Is there really an afterlife? How can there be? What reason could there possibly be for such a thing?” I tried to push those thoughts away. I held on to my confidence, but they kept coming. “How can there be a God? There is no reason, and no proof.” Etc, etc.
So... now I'm back where I was before all of this. Rational, logical, emotionally numb. Depressed. I look at my thought process today and my instinct tells me it was stupid, the ideas, the concepts, they were idiotic. And I want to trust my instincts, like I always have, but... I remember what it felt like. To be certain, and content with the idea of an afterlife. I felt alive then, more than I have in years. I want my instincts to be wrong. I, my conscious self, want to be right. I want that feeling back. I don't want to be rational anymore, I don't want to feel so cold and gloomy. I want to feel alive again.
5. I think what I had was a burst of F overpowering my T. Apparently emotional trauma will do that. Reading the descriptions for INFP, I realize that I was like that at some points in my life, and that part of me never really left. It's always been there, just... hiding, I guess. Under the surface. Shielded by the shell of rationality. I knew for a long time it was doing more harm than good, but I became dependent on it and never had the willpower to remove it.
I want to shed my protective shell. I want to forget rationality. I want to feel things. I want to experience emotion again. I want to be confident in my beliefs with no rational basis.
I want my feelings back.
And I want to calmly, contentedly, die, and move on, and live again. Maybe next time I won't be plagued by the demons I've had all my life. Maybe I'll meet some nice people, and grow up with them, and learn what it is to have a good friend in my life. And maybe I'll gain the willpower to do what I really, truly want, and not turn to nihilism again.
I want that. But I'm not sure how I got there to begin with, and I'm not sure if I can get there again.
And now my mother thinks I need a psychologist. Where before I told her how I felt and how I wanted to see a psychologist and she ignored my requests, now I try to explain all this to her, without even mentioning psychologists, and suddenly “I think it's time we bite the bullet”. Now I need to figure out what the hell I actually intend to do.
Your thoughts and opinions are appreciated.