31 May 2013

... and there, in that moment, standing next to the sink, eating blue cheese and olives with a fork at 11:00pm... I realized that I had somehow become my father. Not through intent, and not in every detail.

But in a shape that was recognizable - by the time of day, location, choice of snack, and attire.

20 May 2013

Parallels

It sort of became clear today at the office that there is quite the parallel going on between my youth and work.  The experience that many children have when they are the children of high-functioning, non-physically-abusive, alcoholic parents.

It's a thing that wasn't clear until I started to come out decades ago as having an alcoholic father. It became clear when I would, in casual and public circumstances bring up as a matter of fact, or as a way to set context for something else I was going to say: "so, having grown up with an alcoholic parent..." or "as the child of an alcoholic...".  The peripheral result was unexpected... a quiet acknowledgement that you could see in the eyes of others, and then would sometimes be cautiously, quietly, and-in-a-way-that-only-those-on-the-inside-recognize, spoken of... "Yeah, me too". 

One of those things that is hard to explain to those that haven't experienced it, is the notion of constant irrational and unpredictable threat.  When you live, as a child/adolescent, with an alcoholic parent, it is sometimes never clear what will happen next.  For me, it was luckily only after the hours of 6pm when this happened (see above: high-functioning). 

The Dinner Table:  What I learned was... it made no sense what came next, or why.  The ranting and raving did not require logical consistency.  That it was impossible to respond *correctly* to a question, because sometimes the question from him was just about picking something to argue over, and the answer didn't matter.  So I learned how to not answer.  To answer the minimum.  

To do what?  to ... not move... 

not a muscle.

not an inch.

This may sound strange to some, but when a rant and raving is going on, and a fight is being looked for, the simple act of leaning back, or forward, or turning to look, or look away, or even... anything... draws attention.  It's base primate something-moving-on-the-horizon type of shit, but it's amazing how true it happens to be.  

So learning to not draw attention becomes a survival skill.  If one engages, one is signing up for something that might last longer than one expected - so engagement in a topic means taking on risk.  

Thus, I developed the ability to not move.  Sit at the table, and stare at the placemat.  Trace patterns with my eyes... "But listen, listen carefully! For thou might be called on at any moment!"  

Yes, one need be vigilant.  One also needs an active response as a form of disguise... like the Kung-Fu master who uses the opponent's energy against them.  When a threat approaches, respond, bend, deflect, bounce back... and if you've done it right, it sends the the threat back off in another direction without work or damage, and (phew!) you are safe.

So how does this come full circle to the office?  Well, we have these company-sponsored lunches each week, that are essentially a version of Corporate Communication.  While the first half-hour is bland kibbitzing and "fine weather we're having!" with co-workers over a free lunch, the second half-hour is the head honcho holding court... talking to a captive audience, and occasionally calling on individuals to hear what they have to say about what they are working on, or calling on them to agree with the premise that has just been floated..  And during this (and other sessions like it), you look around the room and you can see a room full of people, quiet, not sure what to say, and hoping not to be called on.  

You see, the head honcho reminds me of that alcoholic father of mine... who goes on and on, jumping from topic to topic in his head.  You're not quite sure if he wants you to respond or not to respond - it's just too ambiguous.  And if you respond and have an opinion of your own, suddenly that makes it your responsibility.   Or it makes you a target.  Or... hell, you never know what might happen...

So we end up with a room full of people, who I can just imagine their internal voices in a chorus: "don't call on me... don't call on me... don't call on me"  

Because you never know what might happen.

There's no visceral, existential danger... but there's no upside to it either, so why bother?

Don't move.  

Don't speak.

11 May 2013

Sometimes I wonder....

If *this moment* is in the midst of that luxurious amount of time.



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07 May 2013

Put yourself in their shoes...

(Caveat: this all work productivity/career related)
There are times when one (me) loses sight of where one is. And suddenly look up to find myself at a point where I look around and think "what do I do now? What was I supposed to be doing? What am I supposed to be doing next?"  Usually this after an extended period of one topic/task, or in some cases, bouncing frantically from one to the next.

So the thought comes "ok, now what?"

I've come to the resolution that the correct response to this situation is to

--------------------

Bwaaahahaha!  Funny thing, I found this as a draft.  And now I can't remember what the hell I meant to say.

Obviously, I was interrupted, either by something, someone, or myself.  It just seems so... meta... for a post about distraction to have been interrupted by distraction.

It's elephants all the way down...

roughage

Berf.


(go ahead, sound it out)

It's what seems to come to mind.  I've apparently been an on-again, off-again blogger, and life has gone on in the meantime.  I'll not bore you with protestations that "I'll be better, I'll write, I swear"... but I've been sensing lately that I've got mental blockage lately - something is stopping up the works, so best to clear out the pipes, and maybe exercising the narrative muscles will help.  The inevitable have passed in the meantime: time, death and taxes, gravity. The entertaining have visited as well: sex-drugs-rock-and-roll, art, the big wide world.

So much to chronicle, so little attention span.

The most pivotal, momentous, life-shift? I accidentally listened to reggae today during some tedious work stuff, and it didn't annoy me like it usually does.  It was weird.  I'm not really sure what it means.

So anyway, in the interest of blasting them out as markers, for elaboration later, the following topics in no particular order:
  • Death - Uncle, and more recently, Jeff's mom.
  • Genealogy
  • Autoimmune patchiness
  • Fear of Forty
  • Toxic workplaces (and whether I'm just too much of a grumpy curmudgeon)
  • Hair, a broken car, and a messy apartment
  • The merits and detriments of secret blogs, and the utility as diary
  • Craft Beer In Michigan
In the meantime, I continue sorting photos...