Hey, Mentalpod people. If that's, y'know, how you self-identify or whatever.
I'm new! Isn't that exciting? A new person! I'm Baillie! You already knew that. I have a weird way of talking on the internet! And you knew that too! I'll stop.
Okay. So I'm 22, Canadian, and boring. I'm a university washout. Officially I'm a writer, but I don't write. I pay the bills by selling books at a soulless megacorp, which, yes, I find conflicting. I'm sort of this weird guy. I've got depression, obviously, because we all do, and body dysmorphia, obviously, because we all do. But more importantly, I have intense social anxiety. Growing up I didn't have friends, like, any friends, I was a loser's loser. Around 16 I found out I could make people laugh by being sad (I, Pagliacci!), and thus began the spiral of self hatred that has turned me into the veritable shut-in I am today! Yay! I started drinking and doing drugs (I fucking love drugs, and miss them every day.) because it was the only way that I could function socially. Oh, and also I was (am) fat!
Jump ahead a few years, I'm stone-sober, which is good, but I can't be around people, which is bad. I've lost something like 100 pounds, which is good, but I can't stop obsessing over my body, which is bad. Also I have a small penis. Like it's not freakishly small and I'm (miraculously) good at sex, but it's small. I'm often bombarded with violent images of me hacking it off, out of envy, because I like to imagine that when someone with a normal or big penis has something bad happen they can always just kinda go, Well that sucked but hey I've got a big cock! So there's that.
Now! Why I'm here. I'm fucking weird. I don't feel like a member of the human race. Not in an On the Spectrum way, but in a sort of Dancing Monkey way, where I'm here, I'm acknowledged, I'm loved even, but as an Act, or a Side Character. I keep a safe distance between myself and other people, even when I'm as open and honest as I am above, by being weird and funny. Even in the serious romantic relationships I've had I never felt like I had a true, honest connection. So I want to work on that. And I want help, because I don't know what to do. I've been in therapy forever, group therapy whatever, on Wellbutrin and klonozopam at the moment, the regular sort of stuff, but it's not really getting to the root of the issue.
So hey, I love you guys and you're all great, I hope you like me, and I hope I can provide something to the community! And in the spirit of being as open and transparent as possible, here's a picture of me! I just took it. And I haven't slept in a few days. Enjoy!
My Name is Baillie, and This is Why I Want to Die
My Name is Baillie, and This is Why I Want to Die
if you hang around too long you'll be a man
pulp
pulp
Re: My Name is Baillie, and This is Why I Want to Die
Ah Baillie welcome. What a treat is was to read your post there.
You are a fine writer, IMHO: while you claim to be "boring", I hung on every word, and found great humor, wit, and subtle truth in what you wrote. Thanks so much.
[Begin rant]
May I skewer the soulless book megacorp I am familiar with?
To my humble eyes, MegaCorp offers three realities:
1. MegaCorp has books on art, food, travel, adventure: many of the finest things in life. Childrens books truly open a whole new world to the next generation. They have a music department, and music is perhaps one of the greatest things in life. The attached cafe is a safe place for people to go on first dates; and love, romantic love to me is the finest of fine things in life.
I mean all of these things sincerely, and praise MegaCorp for providing them.
2. MegaCorp is also a business. While I am unsure why anyone would go to an actual building to buy a book, the experience is made worse through the employees being forced to offer a "membership" (which has a cost). Having worked in retail myself, I am familiar with the pernicious and ineffective theory of upselling (uhg). If I am competent enough to drive to a bookstore, find the book I want, and have money to pay for it, surely had I wanted a membership I would have asked for one.
But, hey, it is their business, right?
3. They pay their workers minimum wage.
And they give away the whole game.
All this flowery talk about the magic and wonder and discovery of books means nothing to me.
[End rant]
As far as the title of your fine post, I hope you do not die. You are a unique and powerful voice.
If I may, I'll offer my thoughts as I read:
It is my humble opinion that 22 is good, but that life also gets better.
Canada is a fine nation.
I washed out (kicked out is more descriptive for me) of college also. In a graduate program, which really took some concerted effort.
You are not alone about mental images of a body part going away. While not exactly the same, I have little emotional attachment to my left leg. I know it is objectively a part of me in reality, but it doesn't feel like part of me.
I found all of your post interesting, Baillie. I wish I could comment more, like an celebrating your sobriety (I am straightedge myself).
I'll have to leave it at this for now. Great to have. Thanks for the interesting post.
You are a fine writer, IMHO: while you claim to be "boring", I hung on every word, and found great humor, wit, and subtle truth in what you wrote. Thanks so much.
[Begin rant]
May I skewer the soulless book megacorp I am familiar with?
To my humble eyes, MegaCorp offers three realities:
1. MegaCorp has books on art, food, travel, adventure: many of the finest things in life. Childrens books truly open a whole new world to the next generation. They have a music department, and music is perhaps one of the greatest things in life. The attached cafe is a safe place for people to go on first dates; and love, romantic love to me is the finest of fine things in life.
I mean all of these things sincerely, and praise MegaCorp for providing them.
2. MegaCorp is also a business. While I am unsure why anyone would go to an actual building to buy a book, the experience is made worse through the employees being forced to offer a "membership" (which has a cost). Having worked in retail myself, I am familiar with the pernicious and ineffective theory of upselling (uhg). If I am competent enough to drive to a bookstore, find the book I want, and have money to pay for it, surely had I wanted a membership I would have asked for one.
But, hey, it is their business, right?
3. They pay their workers minimum wage.
And they give away the whole game.
All this flowery talk about the magic and wonder and discovery of books means nothing to me.
[End rant]
As far as the title of your fine post, I hope you do not die. You are a unique and powerful voice.
If I may, I'll offer my thoughts as I read:
It is my humble opinion that 22 is good, but that life also gets better.
Canada is a fine nation.
I washed out (kicked out is more descriptive for me) of college also. In a graduate program, which really took some concerted effort.
You are not alone about mental images of a body part going away. While not exactly the same, I have little emotional attachment to my left leg. I know it is objectively a part of me in reality, but it doesn't feel like part of me.
I found all of your post interesting, Baillie. I wish I could comment more, like an celebrating your sobriety (I am straightedge myself).
I'll have to leave it at this for now. Great to have. Thanks for the interesting post.
Work is love made visible. -Kahlil Gibran
A person with a "why" can endure any "how". -Viktor Frankl
Which is better: to be born good or to overcome your evil nature through great effort? -Skyrim
A person with a "why" can endure any "how". -Viktor Frankl
Which is better: to be born good or to overcome your evil nature through great effort? -Skyrim
Re: My Name is Baillie, and This is Why I Want to Die
Hi Baillie!
I'm going to second the initial comment by saying I didn't find you boring or weird at all. I connected to all that you said in one way or another as I feel so similarly about myself and have gone through similar things.
Congratulations on finding sobriety and especially as such a wonderful age. As a 31 year old still struggling with addictions myself, I commend you on your bravery and fortitude. I was actually around your age when mine started getting worse and it took a long time to get through the mud at the bottom. Your ability to surface and spill your guts here just proves what strength you have and I have no doubt there are a great many other strengths inside you as well just waiting for the opportunity to come to the fore.
And hey, you're precious! I don't mean that in a demeaning way, I mean you really are a precious thing in this world and don't give up. Glad you are here.
I'm going to second the initial comment by saying I didn't find you boring or weird at all. I connected to all that you said in one way or another as I feel so similarly about myself and have gone through similar things.
Congratulations on finding sobriety and especially as such a wonderful age. As a 31 year old still struggling with addictions myself, I commend you on your bravery and fortitude. I was actually around your age when mine started getting worse and it took a long time to get through the mud at the bottom. Your ability to surface and spill your guts here just proves what strength you have and I have no doubt there are a great many other strengths inside you as well just waiting for the opportunity to come to the fore.
And hey, you're precious! I don't mean that in a demeaning way, I mean you really are a precious thing in this world and don't give up. Glad you are here.
Re: My Name is Baillie, and This is Why I Want to Die
Hey -Baillie ( interesting spelling of an old name...)
First - you are a writing, even if you are not producing because
well, i read your post -you have talent, you put up a catchy attention grabbing title and you have a keenly developed self-deprecating voice in your post that indicates hidden and deeper self that is educated, intelligent, instinctive and very observant.
Do you journal? if not - you should.....
as to why you don't write - I find that interesting to wonder.
you have talent, voice, a lot of background material in your past, a job that doesn't drain your time to write.
So, one of the first things you say is you are a writer who doesn't write...why?
For some, very smart people, an artistic endeavour can be as therapeutic as therapy
and for a writer, that "safe distance between myself and other people, even when I'm as open and honest as I am above, by being weird and funny" can be a plus.
looking forward to reading more of your posts...and I am going to call you out on your own self-description - you don't get to say I am boring in the same post as saying you are weird (more than once, weird is not boring) and funny...
are you worried about being boring?
is boring bad?
less special?
anyways...we all have weirdness in us. welcome
First - you are a writing, even if you are not producing because
well, i read your post -you have talent, you put up a catchy attention grabbing title and you have a keenly developed self-deprecating voice in your post that indicates hidden and deeper self that is educated, intelligent, instinctive and very observant.
Do you journal? if not - you should.....
as to why you don't write - I find that interesting to wonder.
you have talent, voice, a lot of background material in your past, a job that doesn't drain your time to write.
So, one of the first things you say is you are a writer who doesn't write...why?
For some, very smart people, an artistic endeavour can be as therapeutic as therapy
and for a writer, that "safe distance between myself and other people, even when I'm as open and honest as I am above, by being weird and funny" can be a plus.
looking forward to reading more of your posts...and I am going to call you out on your own self-description - you don't get to say I am boring in the same post as saying you are weird (more than once, weird is not boring) and funny...
are you worried about being boring?
is boring bad?
less special?
anyways...we all have weirdness in us. welcome
- Fargin
- Posts: 223
- Joined: December 28th, 2012, 6:01 am
- Gender: Male
- Issues: Avoidant Personality Disorder
- Location: Copenhagen
Re: My Name is Baillie, and This is Why I Want to Die
Welcome,
A picture says a thousand words, your selfie made me laugh and reminded me of my own attempt at showing my own winning personality.
A picture says a thousand words, your selfie made me laugh and reminded me of my own attempt at showing my own winning personality.
Re: My Name is Baillie, and This is Why I Want to Die
First of all, thanks for the kind words, guys, it means a lot
I do however assure you that I am boring. I don't get out and do very much, which is what I meant. I'm a total homebody. Boring might not be the right word- coward, maybe? I don't go out because I've got intense anxiety in social situations, but it's not really a Fear of Rejection sort of anxiety, it's a bit stranger. I don't like going out or being around people because it's a reminder that I'm unable to really connect with people. It triggers a depression, and my fear of this depression is where the anxiety comes from. When I'm depressed, like, really depressed, I hurt people, and I know it. Caring, compassionate people like you guys and other people in my life try and help and just can't, and I know this hurts people, and it kills me. I'd rather be dead than inflict that kind of suffering on people around me.
But okay, maybe boring wasn't the right word choice. I can be properly entertaining when I'm around people, and I often am. I've managed to charm people into having sex with/dating me even though I'm far from attractive, so clearly there's something there. But I don't feel any connection. It's like I'm putting on a show. I feel like the world is my audience, that people like me and want to be around me when I'm on, but once the curtains come down or I flub my lines, I'm forgotten about completely. Do any of you guys know that sort of feeling? Because that's what I feel like I'm doing when I'm posting stuff like this- being a Song and Dance Man. I want to learn how to connect with people on a more real level.
Anyway I am sort of writing these days. I've got an idea for a novel I really want to write but writing a novel takes a lot of hard work. I'm not really sure what it's going to be when/if I'm done with it, but at the moment it's going to be an expression of the complexity of language and how alienating it can be to some people, by telling the dual story of a Sumerian clerk with an eidetic memory who is made obsolete by the invention of cuneiform, and his reincarnation as boy with autism. It's... going to be tricky.
Anyway thanks for welcoming me, guys. Lots of love <3
I do however assure you that I am boring. I don't get out and do very much, which is what I meant. I'm a total homebody. Boring might not be the right word- coward, maybe? I don't go out because I've got intense anxiety in social situations, but it's not really a Fear of Rejection sort of anxiety, it's a bit stranger. I don't like going out or being around people because it's a reminder that I'm unable to really connect with people. It triggers a depression, and my fear of this depression is where the anxiety comes from. When I'm depressed, like, really depressed, I hurt people, and I know it. Caring, compassionate people like you guys and other people in my life try and help and just can't, and I know this hurts people, and it kills me. I'd rather be dead than inflict that kind of suffering on people around me.
But okay, maybe boring wasn't the right word choice. I can be properly entertaining when I'm around people, and I often am. I've managed to charm people into having sex with/dating me even though I'm far from attractive, so clearly there's something there. But I don't feel any connection. It's like I'm putting on a show. I feel like the world is my audience, that people like me and want to be around me when I'm on, but once the curtains come down or I flub my lines, I'm forgotten about completely. Do any of you guys know that sort of feeling? Because that's what I feel like I'm doing when I'm posting stuff like this- being a Song and Dance Man. I want to learn how to connect with people on a more real level.
Haha, I find this interesting. Like, why your left leg? Are you consciously opposed to it? I mean- is it just a sort of indifference to that part of your body, or are you like, "Man, fuck left legs," and constantly aware of it?You are not alone about mental images of a body part going away. While not exactly the same, I have little emotional attachment to my left leg. I know it is objectively a part of me in reality, but it doesn't feel like part of me. - oak
Thanks a lot for the support and kind words, friend! Addictions are a pain in the ass. They flatten your life out. It's infuriating. I know how hard it is to be where you are, and I wish you all my love in battling your demons, man. I don't know you, but just based on the fact that you're up and fighting for sobriety at 31 proves that you're not the kind of person who's going to give up. Wish you all the love <3Congratulations on finding sobriety and especially as such a wonderful age. As a 31 year old still struggling with addictions myself, I commend you on your bravery and fortitude. I was actually around your age when mine started getting worse and it took a long time to get through the mud at the bottom. Your ability to surface and spill your guts here just proves what strength you have and I have no doubt there are a great many other strengths inside you as well just waiting for the opportunity to come to the fore.
And hey, you're precious! I don't mean that in a demeaning way, I mean you really are a precious thing in this world and don't give up. Glad you are here. - Wren
Well, I should clarify. I'm a writer who doesn't write... much. I was in university for a number of years and focused on that, until about four-five months ago when I decided it wasn't for me and dropped out to try and become a writer full time. In that span I've managed to produce, like, three short stories. It isn't a lot. The problem is that I'm very hard on my writing and destroy most of what I produce, and when I can't think of anything that interests me thematically I can go weeks without writing a sentence... I don't have the discipline to write even when I don't want to or can't think of anything to write. That said, in the short span I've been trying to do this seriously, I have had one short story published (well, the volume comes out in December, but I'm going to be in it), and Charles de Lint and Larry Beinhart have both read my stuff and were over the top with their praise. The weird thing is that none of this makes me happy, haha. Like, the first thing I ever submitted got published nationally, but the acceptance letter might as well have been a phone bill for how excited I was, and then two professional authors tell me I should write for a living, and it just makes me blush... I don't know how to take praise, haha.First - you are a writing, even if you are not producing because
well, i read your post -you have talent, you put up a catchy attention grabbing title and you have a keenly developed self-deprecating voice in your post that indicates hidden and deeper self that is educated, intelligent, instinctive and very observant.
Do you journal? if not - you should.....
as to why you don't write - I find that interesting to wonder.
you have talent, voice, a lot of background material in your past, a job that doesn't drain your time to write.
So, one of the first things you say is you are a writer who doesn't write...why? -Cinnamon
Anyway I am sort of writing these days. I've got an idea for a novel I really want to write but writing a novel takes a lot of hard work. I'm not really sure what it's going to be when/if I'm done with it, but at the moment it's going to be an expression of the complexity of language and how alienating it can be to some people, by telling the dual story of a Sumerian clerk with an eidetic memory who is made obsolete by the invention of cuneiform, and his reincarnation as boy with autism. It's... going to be tricky.
Honestly I don't find writing that therapeutic. When I'm writing there's this voice that's like, You're supposed to be good at this why aren't you good at this? Be better at this. You suck.For some, very smart people, an artistic endeavour can be as therapeutic as therapy - Cinnamon
You've got a cute mug, mister. I do the self deprecating around here.
Anyway thanks for welcoming me, guys. Lots of love <3
if you hang around too long you'll be a man
pulp
pulp