I’m feeling a little troubled lately because my blog has
gone flat, and I’m asking myself why it’s gone flat. Well, it’s like this:
I write the blog in order to have something to write.
Writing has been in my blood since I was a teenager and has had several outlets
down the years. It came to its high
point when I was writing fiction between 2002 and
2011, and when the stories ran out I turned to blogging instead.
Let me make clear the fact that I don’t expect to change the
world with the blog. I don’t see myself as an ‘influencer’ (in fact, I would be
horrified if anybody called me that.) But I do like, for whatever reason, to
present myself through it. I like to throw out to the universe what I am, how I
feel, what my opinions are on matters important to me, how the environment in
which I live functions, and occasionally what little stories I tell myself to make
the inner me more worth the bother of being here. And so the blog has to be a
picture of me in words – all of me (or at least most of me.)
One aspect of me that has always been prominent has been a
tendency to see an undercurrent of humour in most situations. The humour was
usually subtle, mostly based on sarcasm, innuendo, irony, and the surreal, and
so it naturally found its way onto the blog in a significant number of posts.
Not all obviously, because some subjects don’t allow even a minor diversion
into humour, but I often found something funny even in the darker situations.
And that’s what’s missing these days.
So what’s causing it? The health issues I can cope with,
even though some of them are inconvenient at times. The descent into winter
with its short days, long nights, cold accommodation, and general grimness
doesn’t help, but I’ve felt that way about winter for much of my life and the humour
has still managed to pop its head above the ice now and then. Being alone so
much of the time can be a bit galling now and then, but not often. Mostly I
prefer being alone and having my space to myself, and there are so few people I
would consider amenable company that aloneness is my natural state. And my
current near-obsession with mortality is not, in itself, a big issue because
it’s never morbid. It’s part and parcel of my lifelong drive to discover the
true nature of life and existence in general.
And yet the black cloud of unease and apprehension still
hangs over my head for much of the time, often descending to darker depths. I
suppose it could be that the issues mentioned above coalesce into a weight
that’s troublesome to carry around all the time. And there’s one that I didn’t
mention in the paragraph above: so many of the functional things I have around
me are breaking down now, and when you feel you don’t have much longer to go
the temptation is to hope that they will stay with you long enough to see you out,
rather than accepting the trouble and expense of replacing them.
I wanted to close this post with something amusing, but I
couldn’t think of anything.