As most of my friends know, this has been one of those 'worst weeks of my life' weeks.
I'm not going to be too funny in this post, because I'm not sure I have it in me, necessarily. Aha. Sigh.
But! Thoughts must continue this week! And every week! Har har HAR.
Eh heh. Sigh.
It's been a rough week. I've been sending out resumes like crazy since my internship has ended, and I have little to do but wait for a phone call, and with less that I care about currently, I'm just trying to keep busy. I have just sort of over-spent myself these last two weeks. And even though I should be ABSOLUTELY trying to find something just until things can pick up, I'm really so tired. (And for the record, I'm not sleeping again.) It's all I can do not to give into the desire to eat nothing but chips for lunch, breakfast and dinner. =/ Thankfully, I'm eating really well, and I found a way to get a pretty cheap monthly gym membership again, so I think I'll do that. I'm going to focus on my physical health, if nothing else.
I've been to two interviews last week, and spoke with my boss, Kay. I might start another internship, and my boss is willing to let me create a job at the store here, as an option for me, as well. Which is really nice. And might be relatively lucrative. Maybe.
The point of this post is not necessarily about my personal non-successes, but more about how I've been feeling lately. I have been trying to be proactive with everything I do, and give back to people, organizations and events in my life--and the results haven't always been the kind I've wanted. One of the feelings everyone in the world hates, I think, is feeling like everyone wants something from you, but no one has anything to give.
It's at times like this that I think about what the philsopher Aristotle said about human society and relationships. We often form relationships for various reasons--for business, for health, for love, or for no reason at all. Aristotle said that man, by nature, is a political animal. As in, the natural order of life is to start from the highest point of politics, and work downwards. The city is an organic state of human life that exists before the family, and the family is something that exists before the individual. (It makes sense if you think about it. Heh.) Humans get together and form a city state, not because they want wealth, power or dominion over others, but because they want to pursue the good life, together. Man is a social animal, and needs to be with people. It makes sense that groups of people would want to pursue the good life collectively. This means that the whole point of living together with people is to pursue something good, not to avoid something negative.
And, I think when it comes down to it, feeling used is sometimes about perspective more than reality. You have a job, or volunteer with an organization not to prevent bad things, but to pursue good things. If you want, you can see yourself as undervalued, underpaid, and used. But, in truth, your function serves to pursue certain goods that will help other people, even if you don't derive direct benefit from it.
I think we all feel like asking people around us to stop pushing us, stop asking us for more commitment than we've already made, afraid we'll get hurt. But the truth is different. We shouldn't be asking what other people want from us, we should be asking what we want from other people. Because once we know the answer to that question, our lives will make more sense. We should cherish the people around us, and ask them for things we want. Because if we don't ask, we're actually not fulfulling our basic duty and needs. We need to participate in life for it to make sense to us.
And I feel like I'm at a place where I'm ready to participate again.