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Bazooka Tooth Dental
- Local time
- Today 12:20 AM
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2011
- Messages
- 116
I have begun to pick up on a trend of mine which has proven to be somewhat paradoxical. I've been searching for happiness for years, as I imagine most do in their 20s. The process really began after high school graduation.
Initially I believed the x-factor was that my way of life had changed. Childhood was basically over, and I was afraid to let go. After coming to terms with that for the most part, my leading theory of what was still wrong became more about mortality. I was essentially having a mid-life crisis at 21 where any pursuit seemed as if it would be a waste of the short amount of time I would be allotted. Nothing short of curing cancer every day would be an adequately constructive use of my ever-diminishing life.
I kept trying to think of things that would improve my situation, and I've had some success. Landing a job has been one of the best things that ever happened to me. On a daily basis I had somewhere to be again, and I was needed there. People depended on me. Later, I began to wonder how to improve my social life. I needed interaction with friends, I reckoned, but there weren't many around anymore.
Have you begun to notice a trend? I'm an introvert, but I appear measure my own happiness by extroverted events and feedback. I enjoy my job because others need me. I want to socialize with friends. I see people dancing and partying on TV shows and whatnot and that's what I feel like I need. The catch, however, is that I have no real interest in doing those things. I just seem to like the concept of what is being symbolized, whatever that is. I don't like to dance, mingle, and party. I'm an introvert. It doesn't really make sense why I'd measure myself by extroversion. So there is the paradox: What I subconsciously appear to desire is something that I consciously want no part of.
At this point, feedback is welcome. Anyone else find they're experiencing the same thing?
Initially I believed the x-factor was that my way of life had changed. Childhood was basically over, and I was afraid to let go. After coming to terms with that for the most part, my leading theory of what was still wrong became more about mortality. I was essentially having a mid-life crisis at 21 where any pursuit seemed as if it would be a waste of the short amount of time I would be allotted. Nothing short of curing cancer every day would be an adequately constructive use of my ever-diminishing life.
I kept trying to think of things that would improve my situation, and I've had some success. Landing a job has been one of the best things that ever happened to me. On a daily basis I had somewhere to be again, and I was needed there. People depended on me. Later, I began to wonder how to improve my social life. I needed interaction with friends, I reckoned, but there weren't many around anymore.
Have you begun to notice a trend? I'm an introvert, but I appear measure my own happiness by extroverted events and feedback. I enjoy my job because others need me. I want to socialize with friends. I see people dancing and partying on TV shows and whatnot and that's what I feel like I need. The catch, however, is that I have no real interest in doing those things. I just seem to like the concept of what is being symbolized, whatever that is. I don't like to dance, mingle, and party. I'm an introvert. It doesn't really make sense why I'd measure myself by extroversion. So there is the paradox: What I subconsciously appear to desire is something that I consciously want no part of.
At this point, feedback is welcome. Anyone else find they're experiencing the same thing?