Roads, leprechauns, and ledges

Author: natalie  //  Category: It's all about me

Warning: It’s weird. It’s a little dark, and I know it. I told you my little mind trips have been taking me to some surprising places. A padded room may be next.

Last week I announced the probable location of Baytown’s newest red-light camera: the intersection of Natalie Street and Whatley Drive. Upon further review, my map needs a little rearranging.  Those roads should be running parallel and in the same direction. My subconscious obviously saw them as being cross-ways–an accurate representation as summer winds down.

Pondering that revelation, I determined a red-light camera wasn’t exactly what I needed to get back on track. Because there are shadows floating in and out of my peripheral vision, blinders would probably be a better choice–less expensive, too.

For whatever unknown reason–and I’m hoping it’s not some sort of mid-life-crisis thing–I’m terribly distracted and antsy lately. Not my usual modus operandi. To make matters worse, I found that psychologists liken mid-life to adolescence. Whoa! The fact that I have two true adolescents and one getting closer by the minute living in the same house proves The Big Guy has an incredible sense of humor. Maybe I’ll feel like laughing when all the angst subsides.

I get in a frenzy of knowing what needs to be done and when, but end up chasing little diversions and forgetting what it was I set out to do in the first place. I guess that’s better than pursuing imaginary leprechauns, but I worry because I read in a New York Magazine article by Sam Anderson that distracted was once a synonym for insane. Top ‘o the mornin’ to ya! Want to help me find the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow?

It also turns out that there are gradations and categories of distraction, as well as a fair amount of arguing among experts. Go figure.

There’s the good, receptive/reflective distraction; the bad, deceptive distraction; and the ugly result of procrastination. I’m a jack-of-all-the-distractive trades with seeming mastery of the negatives.

The receptive variety recharges mental batteries producing empty space for creativity and forward progress.  It is achieved by quiet (haven’t heard enough of that since school let out) tasks such as taking a solitary walk, or lying back and allowing the mind to clear—good, healthy detours. (Clear mind? I’ll need moving boxes . . . lots and lots of moving boxes. Is it really a “solitary” walk if there are several voices in my head carrying on conversations with me? Just wondering.)

Then there’s deceptive distraction –e-mail, Facebook (I’m far too introverted for it, but I try to be sociable), online discussion forums, phone calls—tangents that supposedly work against productivity. Those aren’t problematic for me, I don’t think (denial?), and I’d argue they actually help me perform the solitary job that is writing—gets the creative juices flowing, so to speak.

What has me staring into darkness during the wee hours, and preoccupied during the day is far bigger.  If I could put my finger on it, I’d squash it before it robbed me of another second. But it’s elusive, and not ready to be caught.

So, maybe I’ll get those blinders and hope they keep me on the straight and narrow until whatever this is passes. My dilemma, besides looking ridiculous: Some days, heck, weeks, put me out on a proverbial ledge, and I don’t want to talk myself down. I’d rather dive and feel the freedom of flight, if only for a brief moment. How tragic would it be, to miss seeing who was standing next to me? 

© 2009 Natalie Whatley

 

No confusion here

Author: natalie  //  Category: Issues, National

Ever have one of those weeks when everything seems all out of sort? One where you have a lot on your proverbial mental plate and you can’t get focused on even the most mindless of tasks? (Cough…Like writing a newspaper column.)  That’s exactly where I was this past week, and I’m finding it difficult to give that location a name.

The only word that comes to mind is discombobulated.  (My children fuss at me frequently for using big words in my column. They read and want to know just what in the heck I’m talking about. I hand them a dictionary. They roll their eyes. I smile because it is my pleasure to annoy them . . . turnabout is fair play.)

I decided to consult Webster’s before using the term to be sure it was indeed a real word and an accurate portrayal of my state of my mind. I have this quirky little habit of making up words; then I use them frequently enough that they become real to me. Thus the reason I was unsure of discombobulate’s status.  

A couple of my trusty dictionaries didn’t have a listing. Upon consulting additional bound paper reference sources, I finally found an entry. Much to my dismay, it appeared I was discombobulated over the meaning of discombobulate. And you thought you had problems.

Discombobulate: to confuse or disconcert; upset or frustrate, has been noted as a fine example of the speech of the Wild Frontier. The word came to use some time in the 1830’s. There is no particular individual credited with inventing the word, but those who study these types of things (etymologists) say it must have been someone who enlarged his (etymologists chose the masculine pronoun) vocabulary by grossly disfiguring the innocent elements of the English language. I guarantee this “man” occupies at least a twig on my family tree.  I know this will fly in the face of conventional wisdom, but this is also proof George W. Bush does not have the market cornered on bungling our language.

I thought discombobulated meant that I was feeling out of sorts and disconnected. It’s not going to sound nearly as intelligent to tell you I was feeling a bit scatter-brained this week. In the end, I located an online dictionary entry that showed discombobulated to mean exactly what I originally thought –disconnected and unbalanced. There was no mention of confusion or frustration, but I’ll certainly add those to my discombobulated repertoire.

I started this little disjointed journey feeling a bit like my head was detached from the rest of me. After wasting precious minutes of your life reading this, you’re all probably ready to search me out and make that feeling a reality.

The truth behind my unsettled thoughts is that my own personal world is changing almost more rapidly than I can stand, and the swirl of what I view as my outer world is scaring the daylights out of me.  I’m torn. I desire success for our new President because the continuation of the greatness of the United States of America depends on it. But I can’t wrap my mind around policies set on taking this country away from the ideals of our founding fathers.  On that, I’m completely combobulated.

© 2009 Natalie Whatley