This is a hard one.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/31/opinion/31jacoby.html?hp
Few things scare us more than being trapped with no hope of getting out.
Choosing to be a psychologist is the natural result of a tendency to make my mind go places that are typically too frightening. Trying to take the `sting' out of our darkest fears. We use the term `functional denial' to describe the process of `just not thinking about' things we can't change but are likely to be unpleasant.
I often wonder about why I spend so much time in solitary cycling. Am I pursuing something? Or am I fleeing something? It is both. But what a difference!
I love to challenge myself to do something beyond hard. So that I can then take private or public credit for exceptional accomplishment. I feel good about myself and gain a temporary sense of hope.
But I also need frequent confirmation that I'm successfully escaping calamity or failure. Fleeing powerlessness and, in my case, the sense of `shame' that accompanies just being `still.' The everpresent `ghost' in the shadows.
On a professional level I `can relate' to that fear and suffering in others. It helps me to help others. Sort of selfish, isn't it.
On a personal level I'm really critical of myself and others. I tend to not be `good company' for an extended period of time.
I'm not afraid of oblivion. Which is what I perceive as being dead.
I'm terrified of being trapped in a painful body while being clear headed and conscious of the inevitable worsening until death. And anything or anybody causing me to be exposed to my decline ... I struggle with.
Very contradictory. Hard to think about for long. And maybe the long hours of `zoning' while cycling keep me adequately distracted. An addiction? A dependency?
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