the doog wrote: |
Please do seek some help; if you are bipolar, that definitely needs medicine. |
|
Not necessarily. My last cruise with the Navy the XO sent me to a shrink because I was a little moody. Doc jumped on the bipolar wagon and gave me some pills. I slept 16 hours a day, had no sex drive, gained 25lbs, and was depressed as hell. Quit the pills, changed jobs and was fine. I think in todays society there is pressure to conform to a standard called "normal" and those that don't are given pills and a label.
Truth is I was just bored and needed a change. Yeah, it's not "normal" to change jobs, cities, countries, on a regular basis. The "normal" thing to do is to go to college, start a career, settle down, have 2.5 kids, retire and die. That's not me.
I've had so many jobs, been to so many different countries, it's not normal. Luckily I know it and don't shoot myself in the foot with long term commitments. Longest I've ever comitted to anything was a 2 year hitch in the USCG. After 6 months in I was bored and counting the days until I could move on. I was on the Polar Sea. Sailed to the Artic and Antarctic. Struck EM,made EM2. Cutterman qualified, Aux watch qualified. Wasn't enough to keep me interested.
Liked the sea so I went with the Navy as a civilian sailor. That was fun but got bored with that too. Was a sheriffs deputy for a while in Oklahoma, got bored with that and went to Columbia, Thailand, and Mongolia to teach EFL.
Bombed around in the Boilermakers and Ironworkers to learn welding and travel.
Now I weld aircraft parts and I'm getting bored with that. Going to college, that's keeping my interest because I only have to focus on a subject for a semester at a time. Plus there's so many different classes to take. Chances are good that it will take me forever to get a degree in something because my interests vary so much. Last semester I took a bunch of classes in entomology. Watched a documentary on bugs, sparked my interest, took some classes. Now I know enough to satisfy my curiosity and I've moved on. Taking some aerospace classes now.
Only thing that has captured my attention long term has been modeling, climbing, and WW2 history. Go figure.
I've been on all 7 continents, both poles, fluent in 3 languages, conversant in 5 others, done a lot. Done 5 of the 7 summits. Learned to scuba dive. Took flying lessons for 6 months before I got bored. However my interest is picking up so I may go back to get my private pilots license. I've lived in nice houses in suburbia and been homeless. Had money, and been flat broke. All over the road is how you could describe my life.
I'm not even 30 yet.
Yeah, there's probably something wrong in my head. Surely if I gave a shrink enough time he could fix it. The thought of that terrifies me. Honestly. I've had so many wonderful and awful experiences in my life that I treasure. What if all of a sudden I was "cured" and I focused in school, kept a job longterm, stopped traveling, and just became "normal". I'd hate it.
I'm interested to see what the next 30 years of my life bring. Where will I go? What will I experience? How will I live? I like not having attachments and not feeling trapped. If the opportunity came along for me to (climb K2, sail around the world, trek across Tibet, take your pick) tomorrow I'd pack up and go without thinking twice about it. I like that spontaneity.
The point of this post is that you need to evaluate yor life. Is there really something wrong with you? Or do you not fit the mold of "normal" and feel badly about it? As long as you're not doing anything self destructive (cutting, self medicating, attempting suicide) you're probably ok. Remember there is a difference between being irresponsible and being self destructive. I'm mostly the former. I say mostly because I went to Tanzania during a HAT (Human African Trypansomiasis) epidemic, got sick, was evacuated to Germany, and almost died. Yes I knew before hand but I was too stubborn to cancel my trip. That probably ventured into the gray area between irresponsible and self destructive.
Evaluate your life man. Nobody can make decisions for you. All we can do is relate our own experiences. You have to decide which path you want to walk down.
One thing I do urge you to do is seize life. Do something great at least once in your life. Have at least one moment where you can look back on it and say "f**k yeah, I did that".
My next "big trip" is an overland convoy in an ex-Soviet army truck. Lasts 8 months. Start in Moscow and winds it's way through Kyrzgstan, Uzbeistan, Tajikstan, and on to the far east Russan coast to Magadan. Cost's $15,000. When I come back I won't have a job, money, or a place to live. Yet I don't care. I'm still going to go. For me it's the experience. A "normal" person would probably evaluate the risks, costs, and benefits and decide against it. Should have the money saved up this year.
Make a life list. Things you want to do, experience. Things that are important to you. Then work towards them.