It's only Tuesday? You've got to be fucking kidding me.
Let's clear one thing up, because apparently all those years of being vague enough so that people don't have an "in" have taken their toll. If I don't put something in italics, quotes, or cite an author, I wrote it. Case in point, previous entry. I wrote all of it but the song (in italics). I looked back and saw how it could be confusing. So yeah, if you hated it. I'm the one to blame. If you liked it, I'm the one to blame. Subject lines are often an exception if I think most of you know where the line came from.
I feel blind.
I feel like I'm losing. I feel like I've already lost. But is it in my head? Am I reading into things. This is me, being slightly vague again.
No one is self-sufficient.
Most of us have to make connections, let others in to mess around with your insides. It's a shame, because most people will just end up fucking you over in one way or another...intentional or not.
I try not to need people.
Want them around, miss them, love them even, but don't need them. The minute you start needing someone the pressure builds and they often crack and run away. Everyone you need will leave. You'll push them away. And then you'll be left with this stupid flailing feeling of abandonment.
That's all well and good, but sometimes "needing someone" can sneak up on you and sucker-punch you in the gut. Then you double over with a resigned, "Fuck."
I don't know how much of this true, how much of it I believe. But I do know there is danger in need. Do you like to be needed? Seriously, I want answers on this. Romantically, or whatever. Does it scare you to know that someone needs you? You now have a "responsibility", yeah? Girls will romanticize this need and deal with it I think, but guys, is it scary as all fuck? Does it make you cringe? One of the people in my writing workshop last year wrote and read a story based on this. The guy in the story had a girl, a long-term thing, on another coast. She had moved recently to start a better job. He was supposed to follow a few months later. In those few months, he met and fucked about 3 or 4 of his exes, supposedly not pre-meditated. Though I cringed at the thought, I was the only one to defend this character (mostly because the women in the story (aside from the one long-term one) were disgusting, needy, slobbering dumbasses). It struck me as a truth. The guy ended up suddenly coming to the conclusion that the girl waiting for him miles away was the one he wanted. She was the only one who didn't need anything from him. The only one who loved him, wanted him, but didn't need him.
Of course, in real life, had she found out about what he'd done, he wouldn't have been able to go to her. But the theory...there's a kernel of truth there, yeah? Or am I just daft?
Bleh.
Brains are highly overrated.
Let's clear one thing up, because apparently all those years of being vague enough so that people don't have an "in" have taken their toll. If I don't put something in italics, quotes, or cite an author, I wrote it. Case in point, previous entry. I wrote all of it but the song (in italics). I looked back and saw how it could be confusing. So yeah, if you hated it. I'm the one to blame. If you liked it, I'm the one to blame. Subject lines are often an exception if I think most of you know where the line came from.
I feel blind.
I feel like I'm losing. I feel like I've already lost. But is it in my head? Am I reading into things. This is me, being slightly vague again.
No one is self-sufficient.
Most of us have to make connections, let others in to mess around with your insides. It's a shame, because most people will just end up fucking you over in one way or another...intentional or not.
I try not to need people.
Want them around, miss them, love them even, but don't need them. The minute you start needing someone the pressure builds and they often crack and run away. Everyone you need will leave. You'll push them away. And then you'll be left with this stupid flailing feeling of abandonment.
That's all well and good, but sometimes "needing someone" can sneak up on you and sucker-punch you in the gut. Then you double over with a resigned, "Fuck."
I don't know how much of this true, how much of it I believe. But I do know there is danger in need. Do you like to be needed? Seriously, I want answers on this. Romantically, or whatever. Does it scare you to know that someone needs you? You now have a "responsibility", yeah? Girls will romanticize this need and deal with it I think, but guys, is it scary as all fuck? Does it make you cringe? One of the people in my writing workshop last year wrote and read a story based on this. The guy in the story had a girl, a long-term thing, on another coast. She had moved recently to start a better job. He was supposed to follow a few months later. In those few months, he met and fucked about 3 or 4 of his exes, supposedly not pre-meditated. Though I cringed at the thought, I was the only one to defend this character (mostly because the women in the story (aside from the one long-term one) were disgusting, needy, slobbering dumbasses). It struck me as a truth. The guy ended up suddenly coming to the conclusion that the girl waiting for him miles away was the one he wanted. She was the only one who didn't need anything from him. The only one who loved him, wanted him, but didn't need him.
Of course, in real life, had she found out about what he'd done, he wouldn't have been able to go to her. But the theory...there's a kernel of truth there, yeah? Or am I just daft?
Bleh.
Brains are highly overrated.
Re: Do I like to be needed?
Date: 2002-11-14 01:22 pm (UTC)It's a hard line to walk, knowing when to reach out and when to just help yourself. Romantically, I suppose it's good to be needed. I mean, not to the point where you start saying "I'll kill myself if you leave!" or that shite, but just that you're a step up from being cared for and loved, that you play a more important part in someone's life. In friendships, yeah, that's difficult. My roommate is very needy, but not outwardly so.
Thank you for your honesty. :