firecat: too much coffee man looking discouraged (too much coffee man)
[personal profile] firecat
If you're maybe noticing that you're older than you used to be, and are feeling sad/angry/confused/worried/frustrated that you haven't accomplished as much as you/other people in your present or past/annoyingly critical voices inside your head think you should have, and if you're maybe feeling something like "I'm not a real grownup like everyone else," and if you're maybe also feeling sad/angry/confused/worried/frustrated that your body isn't working the way it used to, and you're maybe thinking, "if that's true then how am I going to DO all those accomplishments that I/other people/voices in my head think I ought or want to do?", and maybe you're also wondering how are you going to dig out from under the accumulation of habit and procrastination and self-doubt to some sense of satisfaction in your life again, then post this same sentence in your journal.

Friends keep saying stuff like that where I can see it, and I've been feeling it for a while now too. One said it really well in a friends-locked post:
It's been hard for the last some-odd months, with my age catching up to me, not to feel that I've been a continual failure in school, work, and my personal life. ...

I've been trying so hard to hide from my friends -- most of them not very close, even if they were before -- the fact that I'm not in their league in any sense of the word. ...

Come to think of it, I don't do yard work because I'm afraid of being looked at/judged by passersby. I don't do artwork because I'm afraid of ill-judgment and meaningless or worthless praise. This has gotten as bad as it ever was in the worst years of my adolescence. Worse, because I don't have the energy or the twenty years ahead of me to think I have plenty of time yet to pull myself out of it.
It was a revelation to read this, especially the part about "as bad as it ever was in the worst years of my adolescence," because that's exactly what bugs me about the similar feelings I have—"WTF? I thought I was DONE with these feelings of self-consciousness. No one told me they would come back, dammit! I thought 'mid-life crisis' just meant you went out and got your virtual red sports car and had done with it."

When a whole bunch of my friends and acquaintances are having similar uncomfortable feelings, and especially when each one is having these feelings privately and feeling shame about it because it seems like no one else has them, I ask myself whether there's some kind of cultural pressure going on, and I ask myself whether maybe we would do better examining these tendencies and pressures together, so we can figure out where we stand, and which of the beliefs and tendencies to embrace, and which to say pbtpbtpbtpbt!!!! to.

I wonder how that could be accomplished.

Do you have those feelings? Could you use a way to talk about those feelings with other folks who struggle with them?
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Date: 25 Jun 2007 07:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] phinnia.livejournal.com
At least three or four times a day, and oh hell yes. To both of your questions.

Date: 25 Jun 2007 07:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zpdiduda.livejournal.com
Oh yeah. Definitely. And I'd be happy to bring a casserole to a support group meeting.

Date: 25 Jun 2007 08:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wordweaverlynn.livejournal.com
Working on a post about this now.

And yeah. Support group. Something.

Date: 25 Jun 2007 08:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kalmn.livejournal.com
i don't know if i am or not. but i do hear a lot from mr. back of the head guy about how come i don't have a kid yet, how come i'm thirty four and don't have a partner, how come my job sucks, how come this how come that.

Date: 25 Jun 2007 08:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] klwalton.livejournal.com
Do you have those feelings? Could you use a way to talk about those feelings with other folks who struggle with them?

Yes and Yes!

Date: 25 Jun 2007 08:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elisem.livejournal.com
Yes indeed I do.

Sure, because it probably couldn't hurt and it might help. (The presence of that clause indicates that I'd be uncomfortable and embarrassed talking about it, but that's been the admission price for a lot of good change in my life, so I won't balk at it.)

Date: 25 Jun 2007 08:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beaq.livejournal.com
yah sure. yah sure.

Date: 25 Jun 2007 09:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] basketcaselady.livejournal.com
Midlife crisis comes again after a heart attack. That's something they don't tell you but it's true.

Date: 25 Jun 2007 09:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cynthia1960.livejournal.com
Ah, this sounds like another aspect of the topic we were mulling about for next year's Wiscon.

Date: 25 Jun 2007 09:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] liveavatar.livejournal.com
Yes, I definitely feel that way. I'm in the middle of feeling like that today, even, all of those things.

I'm working on finding ways to sidestep my internal blockages. (There's a book called Your Own Worst Enemy that speaks to a lot of what's going on with me. Some of this book might be useful to others with the issues you're describing.) But hearing from you that that many other people are laboring under the same pressures and fears I am makes me wonder as well whether this is a cultural pressure.

Date: 25 Jun 2007 09:30 pm (UTC)
ext_8703: Wing, Eye, Heart (Default)
From: [identity profile] elainegrey.livejournal.com
I spent years in therapy at the end of my PhD work working on a lot of those issues -- and was able to quit without the PhD and get on with things. It's a constant battle to reclaim the frame: what is success? What is recreation? Most of the time i do OK, but when i think about job hunting i struggle to figure out how to translate my identification of success to mainstream definitions.

And then there was being on vacation in a city by myself, which i used to do well when i was younger. Somehow i managed to pick up some voices about being in different place ("You should see X when you're in this town"), but there's a different voice, which you refer to, but i think it's really different, the voice that recognizes resource limitations, usually physical (but there's monetary and time, too) or responsibilities (that often are hand in hand with those resource limitations).

I guess the fuzzy part is whether the responsibilities or limitations are real or adopted/imposed. "I shouldn't go to the pool because i'm not attractive enough" is one that is an external one for me, so i always take a swim suit. I never go because i don't really want to (but i know that external voice is there).

Make any sense?

I'm about to return to my intense body-experience focussed therapy, so i'd have to pass on any group addressing of these issues at this time.....

Date: 25 Jun 2007 09:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] leduck.livejournal.com
Those are some interesting questions.

I am 43, and have noticed a set of changes as I age. For the most part, I am pretty happy with what I've achieved: I've achieved my educational goals, I have a meaningful, fulfilling, and productive career, I am married to a partner with whom I have a good and supportive relationship.

But two things-- I feel rather out of balance. I am so busy all the time, I wonder if that gets to be a habit-- if I end up running from something rather than to something. I wonder if I still have the capacity to laze around for a day. I used to be able to do that. I also think that I don't take enough opportunities to take pleasure in things that I would like to enjoy. I've been busy achieving, and I wonder if I shouldn't switch gears a little to enjoy what I've achieved.

Second-- I feel out of phase. Most people my age are parents, and some are grandparents. This is a life and experience I don't share with my contemporaries. I don't regret not having children for a variety of reasons, but it certainly puts me in a different place, espeically around young adults, than most of my friends.

It would be interesting to talk with other people about these things and see how they feel.

Date: 25 Jun 2007 09:38 pm (UTC)
snippy: Lego me holding book (Default)
From: [personal profile] snippy
No. That is, not usually--just when I hang out with fiction authors, I think I have a chip on my shoulder about not being a writer. Even that, not often--not even once a month. It's awful when it happens, though.

I wish you the best on finding a way to talk about those feelings with others.

Date: 25 Jun 2007 10:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] starcat-jewel.livejournal.com
I find myself being resentful and sometimes angry about the ways in which my body is "failing me" -- i.e. no longer being able to do physical things that I handled easily as recently as 5 years ago. (That's most of the reason for the new filter.) As far as hearing what I call the Goddamn Tapes -- the voices in the back of your head that keep telling you how you're not good enough and no matter what you do, you'll never measure up to where you "should" be -- I've done a lot of work on dealing with those, and they don't bother me as much as they used to. I wouldn't mind being in a group that talked about stuff like this, but I don't know how useful my words would be, especially about the tapes; it's not really something you can fix by listening to someone else's advice, because everyone comes to it differently.

Date: 25 Jun 2007 11:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nellorat.livejournal.com
My reaction to this is complex--- Hmmm. I just thought of a good analogy: me vs. those feelings is a lot like me and fat-acceptance. I've grappled with those feelings a lot, and I still have them, sometimes even pretty badly, but in some ways I am able to blow them the Bronx cheer.

I do have lowered expectations now, but I think it's the more practical kind that one poster talks about. OK, I've finally figured out and accepted that I'm not going to be a sought-after pundit whose writings reshape the world. Now, what kind of pundit can I be, and what kinds of writings can I contribute in the next 20, 30 or so years? And what else do I want to do that I can?

But like I said, things can still be hard. I was all grumpy for a few days after reading fiction by Joe Hill (http://nellorat.livejournal.com/286538.html?nc=2), and I know part of it was thinking, here I've been reading and writing about Stephen King since Joe was a kid, and now Joe is a great author, and I may write about him, and where am I? It even took me a doy or two to realize I was grumpy over that.

Mostly, though, I accept that I've made the choices I've made and had the good and bad luck I've had, and this is where I am. A lot of accepting of less time left, but in a good way, clicked in around my fiftieth birthday, which I'm glad I went all-out to celebrate.

Date: 25 Jun 2007 11:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kightp.livejournal.com
Hm. I want to say that I have had those feelings, but that they are largely in the past tense.

From the perspective of my (yipes!) late 50s, I've come to look at that particular sort of midlife angst, at least as it played out in my own life, as a developmental stage; like adolescence, it seemed to be something I had to move through in order to get to the next stage, which doesn't have a handy label. "Self-actualized late-middle age," maybe?

For me, it was about moving from a psycho-emotional place of limitless horizons and possibilities and ambitions toward one with ... different borders. Not worse; just different. In acknowledging limits - physical, certainly, but also that time is finite and I'm closer to the end of mine than its beginning - I've learned to focus, to pare things down to essentials. If it's "too late" for me to do X, well, then that gets X off the table and out of my way so I have room to go deep and passionate with Y, or Z.

I hope this doesn't sound dismissive. It's not meant to say "you'll get over it," but rather that the hard work you're doing now in trying to figure out where you stand and what to embrace and what to say pbtpbtpbtpbt!!!! to ... will pay off.

Date: 25 Jun 2007 11:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mjlayman.livejournal.com
No, not really. I was quite successful before I got sick, and I didn't cause any of the diseases, so I don't feel responsible for them. I think considering how sick I am, I'm pretty successful now, too.

Why do I feel like this compared to some of you? Some ideas:

I've never wanted kids.

I'm happy living alone and being alone and decided years ago that a partner would probably bring more trouble than benefit.

I had a high-level position and a large income when I got sick, so I've had that.

I find beadweaving meditative and I think that calms me in general.

I have cats that love me.

Date: 26 Jun 2007 12:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bastette-joyce.livejournal.com
Do you have those feelings? Could you use a way to talk about those feelings with other folks who struggle with them?

Well, sheesh. I sure have! In fact, I'm sitting here feeling bad that one of my many, many posts about this topic wasn't chosen to elegantly illustrate the phenomenon. I can't even do self-pitying midlife crisis right! :)

I could use a way to talk about these feelings, yes. In fact, I have been doing it, although, with few exceptions, I hear only the wind blowing through my brains in response, which is hard. On bad days I feel rejected, but on rational days, I just figure people don't know what to say about this stuff, or it's hard for them to think about it because it's painful, or whatever - ie, more about them than about me. But it's still hard not to have as much thought-provoking, insight-inducing dialogue as I would like to have about it. Instead, I just end up feeling embarrassed that I once again exposed myself, and only one or two people (sometimes nobody) acknowledged it at all. So, sheepishly, I zip up my pants and creep off, muttering "never mind"...

Are there actually people out there who want to talk about this stuff? Point me to 'em!

As for these bad feelings about myself "coming back" - for me, they've never really gone away. I have had better times in recent years, though, even with an underlying negative self-image. I've been far more social, had much closer friendships, and felt like I was part of a culture (or several). All that stuff has gotten incredibly more difficult and I do feel somewhat stuck, although I recently did have a breakthrough where I decided that I was going to let myself enjoy the things I enjoy without ragging on myself for this or that reason. That has helped my state of mind, although it hasn't changed my social life much. I'm sure all that takes time.

I sometimes feel flooded with shame because I haven't reached this or that milestone at my age. One way I combat this is to keep an image of flowers in my mind. Yes, flowers - because they grow at different speeds and bloom at different times. I'm a late-bloomer, and there's nothing wrong with that. I was taught to feel bad if I got "behind" other kids in any area of life, but the truth is, I was behind other kids socially and emotionally. And I'm still behind other people my age, in certain ways. But so what? Why do we all have to progress in lockstep?

Another think I was thinking about just this morning: I really miss the NAAFA Feminist Caucus fat women's gatherings. Being a part of that culture was incredibly affirming to me on many levels. One was just having a place where I was admired and appreciated. Another was a safe place to be in my body. And another was these great events to look forward to and have fun at! I'm not blaming anyone for not organizing them anymore - I know it's exhausting work, and I'm sure not volunteering. :) But I miss it.

Date: 26 Jun 2007 01:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] femmediva.livejournal.com
Yes! Oh, yes.

Part of me knows I'm not the only one who feels this way, but it is so difficult to talk about. I struggle with this a lot, and sadly have distanced myself from many people over the past few years due to many of these reasons. I would love a supportive space to talk about it with others who are going through the same things.
Thank you so much for posting this.
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