Hello

Sunday, June 22nd, 2008

I haven’t been very active on here in the last couple of weeks. I just didn’t feel like blogging, and whatever I wrote felt forced. The lack of comments also bothered me, as I started to feel like I wasn’t connecting with anyone, or that the people who used to come here had lost interest.

At the same time, I’ve had a load of new visitors to the old post that was stumbled, and strangely I felt very uncomfortable with the extra attention. I was also sensitive to the criticism that the post provoked and the feeling that I had to defend myself to people who didn’t give a damn about me. I guess it made me feel vulnerable, and wary of revealing my feelings while all of that was still going on. I guess it wasn’t totally a bad situation, as I’ve picked up a couple of new readers. I’m such a contrary creature, lots of bloggers would kill to have thousands of visitors like that, but perhaps I’m not ready for the masses right now.

So what’s been happening for me? Here’s a quick catchup of the last week or so.

Fri 13 June: Not long after I’d left work at 6pm I saw a guy in his 50s walking down the road. He was shouting obscenities as he walked along, and as he passed me (without actually looking directly at me) he shouted out the N-word. It was the first time that I’ve ever been called that, and though it was a shock I didn’t take it personally as the guy was obviously mental.

Sat 14 June: The house next door to my parent’s home is up for sale, and after seeing the for sale sign I called up the estate agents and got an appointment to view. It was more for curiousity than anything else, as I wouldn’t really want to live next to my parents, wouldn’t want a 3 bedroom house to myself and wouldn’t be able to get a mortgage anyway. The guy who’d lived there died a few months ago of Emphysema, I think he was in his late 50s and seemed like a nice guy. The estate agents had given a price of about £230,000, and said that it needed modernisation, so I wasn’t expecting a palace, but the house was quite dilapidated and looked like nothing had changed in the last 30 years. Though structurally the house was a mirror image of ours, it looked smaller somehow. It would take a lot of work for someone to fix up that house, but it could have a lot of potential for a property developer or a family who didn’t need to move in straight away.

Wednesday 18 June: Had my last session with the counsellor. It was a strange session, and I felt quite ambivalent about the whole thing. One thing I said was that I felt that the eight sessions weren’t really enough, it was like using a plaster to cover a gunshot wound. It wasn’t a total waste of time, and we did discuss some issues that have been affecting me for a long time. One of the things I can keep in mind from the sessions is that sometimes I assume that I know what other people think of me, and sometimes I use those assumptions to push people away.

I also have trust issues, but I feel entitled to them since I always get hurt when I trust people. During one session when I discussed a guy who had betrayed my trust quite recently, she asked me why I was blaming myself when he was the one who’d lied and misled me, and I told her that I was upset with myself for not trusting my instincts, for giving someone the benefit of the doubt when I should have listened to my intuition.

Unless I pay for private therapy I don’t really have many other options. I’ve still got a spare pack of Prozac which I could possibly return to, but I’m not sure that it’s the best option for me. I prefer to feel the way I feel, even if I feel like crap.

Friday 20 June: I went out to get a very late work lunch at 4pm. In the chicken and chips shop this Eastern European man starts talking to me. I looked at him briefly and realised from his reddened face that he was probably drunk. When he whispered something about my breasts I felt sick and ignored him.

After work I took the tube to Oxford Circus and visited Chappells, a music shop, for a particular jazz and blues sax song book. Though the shop has moved from its previous home in New Bond Street to Waldour St, it still felt like visiting a old friend. I was reminded of the old me, the girl who was so taken with her musical dreams.

Later on, a few streets from home, a old geezer tried to sweet-talk me, but I ignored him. Then to top it all off, when I got home and checked my email I saw a bizarre message sent via my contact form: “u are so sexy u no dat. can u send me some of ur pictures naked to my email.” My only response to that lovely message was the delete button.

And in other news: The other day at work I was asked to fax our payroll request to the bank because my colleague had called in sick so that we would all get paid on time. When I saw the sheet I realised that my colleague, Kay, was getting paid nearly £500 more than me after tax, and she only works half a day more than me. Seeing that information has really changed my attitude towards her and my job in general. She often asks me for advice, especially with computing and technical stuff, but since there’s so much difference between our pay (and she’s not my boss) I’m going to concentrate on my work and leave her to get on with hers. It’s becoming more obvious how much this job is just a dead-end for me, though I still haven’t sorted out what to do next.

My boss asked me to help her with a short-term project for the next few weeks in addition to my normal hours. Though the work itself is very tedious and boring, I decided to go ahead with it for the money. The only good thing about it is that I’m working from home. I’ve been finding it really hard to give up my days-off, but I console myself that this arrangement is not forever.

13 Responses to “Hello”

1
Semaj:

Don’t let the comments thing get to you. My blog will go weeks without a comment, remember there are a lot of lurkers out there that read won’t ever comment.

I’ve never had some actually say the N-word directly to me, but I had someone say it in front of me about another black person. He realized it and quickly apologize. (As if that made a difference.)

That Eastern European was an ass, and that was pretty ballsy of him. Perhaps that strange E-mail came from that guy.

  • 2
    PJ:

    Thanks Semaj! Sometimes I visit blogs which receive loads of comments and feel like I’m doing something wrong.

    Bizarre that someone would use the n-word in front of you, almost as if they were so used to you that you weren’t classed as a black person anymore. Did you hear about Charlie Sheen calling Denise Richards that (bizarrely), then apologising and talking about his best friend who happens to be black…

    I don’t think the horny emailer was the horny chicken shop guy, that would be too creepy.

  • 3
    Dr. Monkey:

    8:18 pm on 22-Jun-08

    I may not always comment but I always check and read your blog at least every other day.

  • 4
    china blue:

    9:32 am on 23-Jun-08

    What Dr Monkey said. I’ve not given my own blog much time the last few weeks. Similar feeling, different reasons.

    I think finding out about your colleague’s pay, plus being invited to do that project, could possibly springboard you out of that job - you know it’s not going anywhere, but you have another motive to leave, plus something else for your CV. Like me, you live with your folks - there’ll never be a better time to take a leap. :smile:

    As for the guy/trust issues, I know just how you feel on this one. If you ignore your instincts, then you’re responsible for letting that person into your life against your better judgement; but you can’t blame yourself if that person is a complete and total douchebag - you didn’t make them that way.

  • 5
    PJ:

    10:39 am on 23-Jun-08

    Dr M: thanks darling.

    CB: The only good thing about living with my parents is that I don’t have real commitments. As for guys, sometimes there’s a bit of me that hopes that the guy will prove himself to be different, despite my doubts.

  • 6
    tim maguire:

    4:59 pm on 23-Jun-08

    I can’t believe you deleted my email! Sincerity used to count for something young lady! (Just kidding, I spell much better than that guy.)

    I tend to trust people until they give me a reason not to. That means I get burned now and then, but I long ago decided I’d rather suffer the occasional betrayal then drop my faith.

  • 7
    writer reading:

    9:41 pm on 23-Jun-08

    I just found your blog and can totally relate to the ambivalence of feeling discouraged when there are no comments but feeling terrified when there are too many. I deleted an entire blog in the last year because just as it was becoming more personal, it also got much, much popular and I began to feel extremely vulnerable that I had disclosed too much and needed to go into hiding for awhile. This time around I am being more cautious about personal revelations and my readership has stayed more modest but more familiar. There’s a real trade-off.

  • 8
    PJ:

    12:56 am on 25-Jun-08

    Hi Writer Reading, thanks for your insightful comment. I love your blog and plan to become part of its modest readership.

  • 9
    PJ:

    1:00 am on 25-Jun-08

    Tim: I used to have a similar attitude to people, but as I seem to attract wolves in lambs’ clothing I have developed a suspicious nature over time. Glad you’re not the bad speller.

  • 10
    SamuraiFrog:

    4:52 pm on 26-Jun-08

    Hello, P. I know exactly where you’re coming from with the lack of comments and such. I really hate blogging because of it sometimes, actually. Only 7% of my readers are returning (of course, it doesn’t count feeds), and not a ton of people leave comments like they used to. It can be discouraging; you feel like people used to be interested in you and have now gotten tired of you.

    Like you, I’ve started getting a bunch of comments on an old post. The #1 search term on my blog is “Helen Mirren naked,” and people keep commenting on a post that has a bunch of naked Helen Mirren pictures. My favorite goes something like “I’m sorry, but this is kind of a pathetic post.” Well, gee, as long as you’re sorry, thanks…

    I’m sorry I’ve been such a bad weight loss buddy, by the way. I got so busy in April and May with working steadily and then getting sick at the beginning of June. I’ve been neglecting everyone, and I feel like kind of a dick.

  • 11
    PJ:

    6:36 pm on 27-Jun-08

    Hi Mr Frog, blogging isn’t easy sometimes. I’ve also been a bad buddy, let’s start from scratch. And my earlier promise still stands. :wink:

  • 12
    Liane Spicer:

    6:54 pm on 27-Jun-08

    I try not to bother too much about the stats and comments. Sometimes there are more comments than at other times, and I shrug and let it go. What I try to do is avoid getting into competitive mode when I see other blogs which get way more comments, since these bloggers visit tons of blogs and leave comments, which I don’t have the time to do. So I just visit the ones I like, on a schedule that is not as frequent as I’d like but which takes into account that I have other things to do beside blog.

    I’d say don’t invest too much in the stats. Some days I have dozens of visitors - even hundreds on rare occasions (whoever they may be and however they might have arrived at my blog) and not a single comment. And I for one will always drop by here and see how you’re doing.

    Other than that, I think the discovery of your colleague’s salary advantage is serving a good purpose, which is to help motivate you to separate yourself emotionally from your job, and then the decision to leave physically will happen. Good luck!

  • 13
    PJ:

    1:34 pm on 29-Jun-08

    Hi Liane, thanks for your thoughts.

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