Meet my anxiety. He's the law-talkin' guy.
I am
home today finishing the computer part of my job. I am a little hungry, but not too much. I finished some decaf, and now I am drinking
ice water. I’m getting paid tomorrow, the money is okay, it’s not too hot, I
feel okay, and all my laundry is done.
All that aside, there is a sensation in the bottom of my spine that to
breathe a sigh of relief would spell disaster for everything. I am waiting for the other shoe to drop.
Here’s
the thing: I feel pretty good. It’s true.
We are climbing out of a financial hole caused by a few crappy years,
are kids are in good health and heading in a good direction, and summer is
giving way to fall. I like my job, I’m
in charge, I have a handle on some things.
My wife will soon be making more money and she is in good spirits. My house is in good shape and I am thankful.
But, I am so afraid to feel good
about anything because of that other shoe.
Oh mercy, when will the bad thing happen? When will the disaster happen that not only
puts life into some kind of balance that’s completely constructed in my mind,
but inevitably has to materialize because I had the nerve to feel good about my
life for a few hours?
People with anxiety can’t help but
internalize the events around them.
Accidents and unforeseen tragedies can’t just happen due to the
randomness of the universe. I must have willed
it to happen. I felt like life was okay,
and that somehow was interpreted as thumbing my nose to the infinite wisdom of
the universe or God or Buddha or whomever you feel would care about such
things. The universe, in turn, created a disaster for me just to teach me a
lesson. So, to protect myself, I won’t
feel good about anything. That way, I won’t
risk bad stuff happening. That’s how it
works, right? Life itself is a jack in the box, and every day we turn the
crank, waiting for a stupid clown to pop out and scare the piss out of us. (By the way, what a fucked up toy that was…)
Are you thinking to yourself: Isn’t that a crappy way to live…? You’re right.
It is a crappy way to live. The
other shoe is why so many people can’t feel joy. It is as ingrained in our brains as fight or
flight and peaches are sweet and delicious.
It is a defense mechanism that a lot of us spend our lives dismantling. Living
in the moment, breathing, mindfulness are exercises to deconstruct that other
shoe. Of course, others don’t realize it is a problem. Others build entire thought processes and belief
systems around fear of the inevitable doom around the corner. I don’t want to live like that. I’d rather enjoy all of the days between now
and the possible day everything goes to hell, than stay in fear of that day for
my life.
But I have that feeling,
though. My anxiety just eats it up. You
feel fine, but what about that mole?
Should you get it checked out?
Your car is fixed and is running again, but what if something else
happens this week? Do you have the
money? Is that person mad at me? It
is comical how much my brain looks for potential flaws and pitfalls, even when
the evidence doesn’t support a damn thing.
My anxiety is a low-rent lawyer with no legitimate case. My anxiety is Lionel Hutz.
You know that archaic and trite
phase that is so overused yet is secretly some of the best advice in the world:
Take it one day at a time? My only advice to deal with the other shoe is
a version of that. Every time you feel
that sense of doom lurking, don’t try to destroy it completely. It’s too hard to do on your own. Just put it off one day. “I’ll feel like
this tomorrow. I’m not going to
entertain this thought until tomorrow.” Then,
the next day, repeat the process. It’s as if procrastination can finally work
in our favor. Plus, you may get to feel
the joy you’ve earned in your life.
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