Tuesday, December 9, 2008

The Sense of Failure

I want to take a moment to feel, just to realize the verity of what has happened today. But, I can’t. I cannot simply be in this second for this particular glimpse in time, for every tick of now’s hand drones gently, “Tic, tic, tic, tic…” reminds me that this near quiet present has been my genesis. My own self’s creative genius of failure. I can’t stop crying. My cheeks have become prunes and my eyes feel like anchors desperately clawing for sand. Yet in the very pit of my being, delicate warmth is lingering.

Looking back over the last fours months, I see all the different steps I should have taken…and did not. They say that hindsight is 20/20 but at every critical juncture and with every ounce of my being I knew the wiser choice. Yet, still, I chose unwisely. Foolishly I conned myself, “Later, later…always a later.” It was the yearning to believe my own deceit that this next “tic” is able to bellow out its next dispassionate nonsense…’Tic.”

There will be those that critically judge my decisions and I could choose to do so as well but what good would come of it? Surely I did not continually make fully aware bad decisions because it felt great to do so or for experiencing my present’s consequence. I chose what I did in attempts to fulfill a need that was demanding inflexibly louder. It is my sincere conclusion that people truly are doing the best they can do at any given moment. That is not to say that they can’t be/do better than what their present illustrates. However, how does one do the ‘better’ they are perfectly capable of when the tools for doing said better things are unavailable? For me, the only way of describing the sheer and quite raw agonizing conundrum of knowing my capability and not rising to the occasion is by asking you to imagine seeing a life jacket in a sealed inch-thick Plexiglas box while drowning. It’s right there but something else is seemingly in your way. Though invisible to you, it’s like hitting a brick wall trying to grasp for it.

Life is so beautifully crafted in irony. As soon as I finally discovered the means to bring healthy attention to calm long ignored needs just so that I can concentrate solely on nursing school…I fail out. This causes a whole new host of other major life issues to attend. The vastness is unfathomable, even to me. So why do I feel utterly at peace? Why am I grateful that time keeps ticking one uncaring chime after the next? My answer seems odd but the drive to be a nurse, to truly be of help and service to others and to hopefully do my part in changing the world in my very small and seemingly insignificant corner of it, forced me into facing up to a long held illogical belief. When one’s behavior is little understood, presumably a plethora of fears arise. In all my full fledge bloody psychological fights with my brain, it has been my consistent experience that truth, once ventured upon, is always glorious in her unveiling.

Looking back at my proverbial “failures” in my brief life I’ve noticed a definite pattern. Failure doesn’t dictate your actual capability, your present ability, or even knowledge. In high school I was told I could never be better than a C student because I had/have a learning disability, A.D.D, and statistical test scores were there to back up teacher claims. So much so they seemed never willing to take a look personally at my capabilities. Besides, I did always think these kinds of things made me a little less capable. My mother saw this as an outright absurdity. She’s my mother though! Mother’s don’t typically think their child near retarded. I did not outwardly appear to listen to her nor cognitively gave credence to disbelief at the time. At the time the entirety of my environment clearly communicated, even if nonverbally, “You’re not smart.” And so, after 2 years and every ounce of energy I could muster, I finally completed ninth grade English to never pass tenth because I eventually just dropped out. During that time I won an Editor’s Choice Award for a poem I wrote. Never-the-less, for many years afterward I truly believed I was dumb and discounted the award as a fluke, perhaps even a sham.

Many years later I would finally get up the courage to put myself out there for another ‘inevitable’ failure. I got back into college and found myself with a 4.0 and an English teacher who saw something in my writing. I started finding out I could contribute to the world. I could be better than a C student. Even though it took me to my toddler age of 3 to finally talk and after being told countless times that tests like the T-caps and large red pen marks across my English papers proved me to be a person of “severely below average” capabilities and/or intelligence. Some tests would confidently determine my ‘place-in-the-world’ without taking into account the actual individual, me. It seems to have let me fall through what many call, “The cracks.” Though I find there happens to be millions of these cracks that people like me just seem to slip into…constantly. It makes doing anything we’re perfectly capable of doing very difficult. Without the benefit of a family that saw and/or sees the true worth in me, I have no idea who or what I’d be.

I am not ‘stupid,’ ‘unworthy,’ ‘unlovable,’ or ‘bad’. I suppose many of us struggle with some pretty nasty, well, shit inside of our heads. Conquering my own life’s seemingly inescapable low points have given me the audacity to believe in the human race. So when I contemplate over today’s ultimate failure, I could choose to isolate it or focus on my growth. If I listen to the inevitable gossip that surely awaits, I wouldn’t see the truth in me.

I find it somewhat amusing that nursing has taught me to care for a patient holistically. As a student I feel that testing measures, though a seemingly objective measure has again proved to not prove my actual current ability. Though, I could have taken some steps to mandate legal aid in my endeavor, I did not. In the end I have no one to blame, in a sense, about not getting help I needed. Lesson learned.

In the end, I’ve found great joy in life and a sincere love of people and their own personal experiences. When I pathetically wallow in my own self-pity I lose sight of what makes us all human and what makes life worth living in this abysmal and complex journey. It’s because I’ve overcome such unrecoverable self-destructive behaviors that the foundation in my faith in the true ability of the human race is quite superbly immeasurable and yet…so absolutely ordinarily vulnerable and susceptible.

I’m painfully vulnerable but I also feel. Oh, to feel is a double edge sword that has caused a history of people to produce some of the most impossible of tasks, like jumping on a subway rail to save a child or the will to stand up to unsightly odds to found a country, like America. The brain and all its mysterious neurons produce emotions so quick that one would also abuse their spouse while being comparatively loving toward their children. The consciousness of the mind bewilders logic and yet these are the limits we are all bound. I know my brain is a constant game, while fun at times, can really mess me up if not watchful. How can I be any different than the abusive spouse. I'm only a different choice of defense mechanism propelling toward ever encompassing confusion of logic. Yet the place all this comes from is all from the same place. Put simply, a need screaming to be met and a person desperately trying to feed it so they can get on with life. It all has been dully noted. I have a pink post-it note with bright blue writing above my computer, as I write now so I won't forget to remind myself how to get back from the detour to the lost and found bin.

Susie E.

7 comments:

Mark_W said...

Susie,

Gosh. Much of the following may not make sense or be remotely helpful, but mindful of the bells being rung in my head by “tic, tic, tic, tic...” I shall press on...

They say that hindsight is 20/20, but at every critical juncture and with every ounce of my being I knew the wiser choice.

By Jove (to pick a random deity) if anyone were to ever ask me to sum up my own life in less than 25 words I couldn’t do it more accurately than that; and yet, although (as I once said over on Quetz’s blog, and more or less because of this) I regret almost everything I’ve ever done, I still wouldn’t change any of it...

“Later, later…always a later.”

Aargh, this is quite spooky, now! :-)

There will be those that critically judge my decisions and I could choose to do so as well but what good would come of it?

Spot on. Recognizing mistakes (if they in fact were) and trying not to repeat them isn’t the same thing as trying (futilely) to backpedal rather than move forward...

Also:

people truly are doing the best they can do at any given moment That is not to say that they can’t be/do better than what their present illustrates.

and:

the sheer and quite raw agonizing conundrum of knowing my capability and not rising to the occasion

so accurately sums up my own failings and why I am now divorced, as opposed to otherwise, that I fear I’m going to have to resort to the word “spooky” again...

So why do I feel utterly at peace?

I’m glad you do, since I eventually did too, and frankly it’s much better than otherwise, isn't it...

Failure doesn’t dictate your actual capability, your present ability, or even knowledge.

This is so true. I once had a reasonably fierce argument in the pub once about IQ tests. (Useless, I averred, as a measure of “intelligence” whatever that may be, since they didn’t measure anything like this (not least as it couldn’t be defined); only one’s ability to do IQ tests, which is a quite different, and more or less pointless, thing...)

At the time the entirety of my environment clearly communicated, even if nonverbally, “You’re not smart.”

That’s really sad. Apart from the ample evidence on your blog here that this is simply not true, this goes back to the ideas of what education and support is that have come up recently on Philip and Quetz’s blogs...

I am not ‘stupid,’ ‘unworthy,’ ‘unlovable,’ or ‘bad’.

Obviously, I only ‘know’ you in a nebulous, interwebby, blogular fashion, but I would not only agree with you here but say you are clearly and marvelously the opposite of all these things...

In the end, I’ve found great joy in life and a sincere love of people and their own personal experiences. When I pathetically wallow in my own self-pity I lose sight of what makes us all human and what makes life worth living in this abysmal and complex journey.

Spot on, again....(Am I allowed another “Spooky”?)

[Random aside: Though it’s about to become temporarily irrelevant as I’m about to start my traditional atheist version of Lent and pack in alcohol for a few months, I have a post-it note on my computer too, which reminds me that when a computer says “Opening Port” that’s not an instruction to start drinking :-)]

Mark_W

Susie Q said...

Mark,

Thanks so much for your kind words. It is helpful and, may I add, also comforting.

so accurately sums up my own failings and why I am now divorced, as opposed to otherwise, that I fear I’m going to have to resort to the word “spooky” again...

Ah, divorce. I am familiar to that one as well...How long have you been divorced? I know what you mean though. It really doesn't matter what was best, it's painful as hell...until one day it is not.

I’m glad you do, since I eventually did too, and frankly it’s much better than otherwise, isn't it...


Perhaps reality is one of those things that take awhile to slowly sink in. The pain comes from the inability to accept it and the relief comes once you do. Oddly enough, we run straight into the arms of fantasy in attempts to avoid its prickly sting to only find gut-wrenching pain in the very same embrace...conundrum indeed.

I once had a reasonably fierce argument in the pub once about IQ tests. (Useless, I averred, as a measure of “intelligence” whatever that may be, since they didn’t measure anything like this (not least as it couldn’t be defined); only one’s ability to do IQ tests, which is a quite different, and more or less pointless, thing...)

YES! The only reason why I failed was because I didn't have enough time to answer all the questions on the exam...20 questions to be exact. A major problem for A.D.D.ers is time. There were 95 questions on the test...My exam grade was a 69. Given 30 more minutes I would have beat the test. It's frustrating, to say the very least.

Obviously, I only ‘know’ you in a nebulous, interwebby, blogular fashion, but I would not only agree with you here but say you are clearly and marvelously the opposite of all these things...

...sniff, sniff... thank you

[Random aside: Though it’s about to become temporarily irrelevant as I’m about to start my traditional atheist version of Lent and pack in alcohol for a few months, I have a post-it note on my computer too, which reminds me that when a computer says “Opening Port” that’s not an instruction to start drinking :-)]

LMAO... you should come down and 'open your port' down in London sometime this month and give it a a good swig...especially December 17 given the fact I have to wonder around London alone for several hours! You really need to out and see the city, yes? ;)

Susie E.

Lee said...

Hi Susie,

Well, erm... don't know what to say.

We have ups, and we have downs... funny really, on a roller coaster the downs are are the best bit, so when someone says 'the roller coaster of life' what the hell do they mean?

Sorry - I digress. All I wanted to say was this.

“Exams… bag of shite”

Those last 3 words have got me through many a problem time.

I once wanted to be a teacher, didn’t work out… so, “Teaching… bag of shite”

Wish I could toast a toast with you in London – once upon a time I could have done, but now I no longer live in the area… it’s a long walk from Melbourne I can tell ya.

Mark, I like your version of Lent – the Christian gives something up, the atheist focuses on the finer things in life :-)

Well, it is what Christmas is all about really… eat, drink and be merry.

Lee

Jonathan said...

"I am not ‘stupid,’ ‘unworthy,’ ‘unlovable,’ or ‘bad’. I suppose many of us struggle with some pretty nasty, well, shit inside of our heads. Conquering my own life’s seemingly inescapable low points have given me the audacity to believe in the human race. So when I contemplate over today’s ultimate failure, I could choose to isolate it or focus on my growth."

True. We all have our negative burdens to bear. It's whether you let your burdens crush you or carry on walking that determines who you are.

A powerful post.

Mark_W said...

Susie,

How long have you been divorced?

A few months in the absolute legal sense, although it’s been the better part of two years since I was actually ‘married’ in any meaningful way...

The only reason why I failed was because I didn't have enough time

That happened to me in a pre-interview test for a job once – there were all these “what comes next in this sequence” and mental arithmetic questions, which while not monstrously difficult, had to be worked out in about 30 seconds each to get them all done. I only managed about half of them, though I’m fairly sure I got them all right, and didn’t get asked for interview. “Tssch,” I sulked, “Do you want someone to do this job well, or just at a million miles an hour...?”

You should come down and 'open your port' down in London sometime this month

It is indeed a long time since I’ve done the city thing (oddly enough I was recently trying to work out when I’d last been in London, and was alarmed to realise that it was during the last century) and putting this omission right by quaffing a flagon of ale or having a hearty swig of port next week does sound like the best thing; though alas (although I have a shorter “walk” than from Melbourne) I fear parent and work and Christmas things have me pretty well tied up for the rest of the year now...Another time! ;-)

Lee,

When someone says 'the roller coaster of life' what the hell do they mean?

That’s true. My favourite has always been, “a sight for sore eyes.” Why on earth would you want to look at something that’s going to make your eyes sore, for goodness sake? (Or if they already are sore, then surely you want to be applying eye-drops or something, not staring at stuff...Harrumph!)

I like your version of Lent

I know what you mean, but in this case I did actually mean “pack in” in the sense of “refrain from” (though it’ll doubtless not be completely totally), rather than “pack myself full of”. I don’t usually do this in the festive season, to be honest, but it’s my daughter’s turn to be with me for Christmas this year, so I would have hardly been indulging at all anyway...

Quetz,

It's whether you let your burdens crush you or carry on walking that determines who you are.

True. It’s never easy, but then again, what that’s truly worthwhile is?

Mark_W

Susie Q said...

Mark_W

LOL, if I get mugged will you feel incredibly guilty? Muhahaha. Well, Jonathan and I will be in London a bunch, I'm sure. If you feel like getting a wild hair let me know.

Lee, you are most certainly welcome as well.

As a matter of fact, the crew of you are welcome. I deem it so ;)

Susie

Mark_W said...

LOL, if I get mugged will you feel incredibly guilty? Muhahaha.

Aargh, don't say that! :-)

If you feel like getting a wild hair let me know

Cheers - and any sort of hair would be more than I have usually! ;)

Mark_W