feel, process, work.

i have been struggling immensely with loneliness, with feeling alone in life, which which isn’t the same as feeling alone. this doesn’t mean that i have an absence of people in life — i have many good friends — but what i have wanted so badly for pretty much the entirety of my adult life has been someone to do life with.

the one thing i have consistently envied people is their people. like, i envy people their partners, their families, their people, the ones who are there to carry the daily humdrum of life, go to doctors’ appointments together, kill bugs for; i envy people who have someone to call on their way home and say, hey, i’m at the market, do we need anything? can i pick up dinner? i envy people who have a shoulder to cry on, someone to run errands with, and, on a more sentimental note, hope for and plan a future together. the older i get, the more i think that life is about the banalities, not the extraordinary, and i envy people the boring day-to-day, the lack of need to generate their own noise because there is someone there creating noise just by existing in the same space, the same life.

after my event in DC, i was so tired from stress and not getting enough sleep that i just wanted to go home, but i lay on that bed in a hotel room that felt weirdly damp and wondered why when there was no one waiting for me at home, just silence. what was there to go home to?

there are a few topics i don’t like to talk about with certain people.

i don’t talk about living with suicidal depression with people who don’t live with it, and i don’t like to talk about the pains of chronic singleness with partnered people. i find both experiences to be kind of like talking to white people about racism, ultimately frustrating, counterproductive, and alienating, regardless of how well-intentioned people may be, so i try to keep things to myself as much as i can, until my own feelings bubble over and become unmanageable, which does happen every so often.

for the most part, usually, i’m okay with life as is, able to keep chugging through with work.

dating is a complicated space for me. without really getting into it, i’ve never dated for two major reasons, the more significant one being the body shaming that started when i was a freshman in high school, that broke me down and left me in pieces as a human being, isolating from the world out of a paralyzing fear of judgement and rejection. it’s been a years-long process to break down the toxic messaging i internalized deeply through that decade of being shamed for my body, told that my worth and value were tied to my weight, and made to believe that no one would want to date me, be my friend, or, even, work with me until i could make myself skinny. attach to that that no one has told me that they liked me or were attracted to me, so my personal experience continues generally to prove this idea that i am unlikable and undesirable, so why bother? why care? why put in the effort of making myself painfully vulnerable and waste time and energy on dating?

and then there’s the second reason i don’t talk about publicly. i very rarely talk about it privately, too; i think i’ve only talked about this with maybe one or two friends.

and, so, life is lonely, but i have learned to live my life alone. over the last twenty years, i have learned to dine alone, go to movies alone, travel alone. there is freedom to this kind of life in that i am only beholden to myself and have immense flexibility in the decisions i make — i can very much sit in law school and try to move to korea once i have my JD to work for a company that does business in the U.S. without having to convince a partner to come with me. i can travel in the meandering way that i prefer without a schedule, eating what i want when i want and switching up plans last-minute as i so desire. before i started school and was working remotely, i could go to los angeles last-minute when my parents had health issues, to take them to appointments, cook them meals, and generally be around to assist as needed. there is tremendous freedom that i do appreciate about my solo life.

sure, sometimes, the pain of chronic solitude does become too much to bear, but, in general, i have figured out how to be alone. i lean on friends when i can, while being aware of the limits of friendship and trying not to be Too Much or a burden. i keep myself open to meeting someone, though i don’t actively waste time on dating apps or emotions on the effort of something that will come paired with tremendous pain and loss. i carry the awareness that being in a relationship isn’t going to be some magical fix without challenges and issues of its own, that it is important and valuable to be able to be happy and content with my own company, and i do make the daily effort to practice that contentment. 

some days are obviously easier than others,  and i do go through seasons as i have this summer when i acutely feel the pain of being alone in life. for the most part, though, i know that i am not alone-alone, that i have good people in my life, that my loneliness might be a constant companion but doesn’t define me. it is okay to feel how i do, and, yes, there are moments when i do let myself wallow and be miserable and sad, but i can have my moment, process the feelings, and keep going on with my life because, sure, i might not have a partner, but i do have a full life, though we could argue that it’s mostly full because of how much i work. where creative outlets like photography fit in the blurry space between work and hobby in my brain is up for debate.

(these were shot on my plastic camera with fujifilm 200.)

some word vomit for the first of august.

every so often, i feel the need to get off social media (specifically instagram) bc i think there’s something weird about (1) my compulsion to share my life with strangers and (2) strangers being here, viewing my life — like, why? why do i feel the need to share that i went to the dentist and my cleaning only took twenty minutes, that i am trying korean flour instead of my usual king arthur for sourdough, that i am depressed and lonely and miserable in my body bc of my medication? why do you need to know that i’m going to law school, that i miss my dog, that i am very stressed about money bc a payment i thought would come in two months ago still has not? why do i want to show you what the clouds looked like tonight, which books i bought at kinokuniya, how the lighting in my dentist’s bathroom exposed all the spots on my face? why do i tell you, and why do you care?

does social media ease my loneliness, or does it make it worse?

i used to be really insecure about my photography, and i still flinch inside when i call it “my photography.” i never learned how to take photos, and i only have my iphone, and i also never learned how to edit photos properly, tinkering around on photoshop and lightroom but never really figuring anything out. i use lightroom on my phone to adjust lighting and brighten things, maybe fiddle with the color balance if that’s off, and then i have one vsco filter i use for everything. the vsco filter makes me feel like a cheater.

maybe i am a cheater, but i’ve come around more to wondering why it matters. i’m not trying to be a professional photographer. i’m not trying to shoot events for people or content for brands, and i’m not trying to sell prints or anything. i am, however, trying to sell a cookbook, one that i intend to shoot myself, and that took years for me to work up to — i don’t know anything about lighting or how to stage food in a studio setting, but the deeper truth is that i don’t want to do any of that. i think we have enough perfectly styled cookbooks out there, and that’s great. i am in awe of what these cookbook teams turn out, but it doesn’t mean that that style or look or vision is something i need to aspire to or want for myself, especially when that isn’t an accurate visual representation of my cooking or my personal self.

occasionally, i get peevish about instagram and social media because it feels so one-sided and i wonder why i have this constant impulse to make myself knowable in as true of a way i can on a curated platform. i do recognize that a lot of it stems from loneliness — i’ve had few friends i’ve been able to lean on fully, which is not a judgment of them as it is a reflection of me and my fear of being hurt, and, in general, i got into the habit very young of using my online space, from xanga to livejournal to tumblr to my blog to instagram, to talk. it didn’t matter if someone was on the other side reading what i was saying; it (wherever “it” was at any given time) was at least a space where i could talk to an imaginary someone, the key being imaginary because i’ve also long kept the belief that no one actually reads what i write. even these words that i’m tapping out on my phone to post on this blog — i don’t believe anyone will hear me, but it gives me comfort at least to say something somewhere when i don’t have a physical someone to turn to.

is that sad? maybe, but maybe it also doesn’t matter. well into my thirties, i used to look around and marvel at how full people’s lives seemed. they have their partners, their families, their careers, and there i was, flailing, trying to “be a writer,” and going home to my empty, quiet apartment. even now, i haven’t fully shaken that, though i guess i’m already trying to do something about the career part by going to law school. i guess i am a writer because i have a book coming out next year. the silence, though — the silence just seems to be my lifelong companion.

my mom tells me that friends are great, but friends have their own families, and families will always take priority. i don’t think she’s necessarily right about that, but i also don’t think she’s very wrong. a partner, a child, maybe should take priority, but it leaves me often feeling a chump, someone who is always making herself available because she’s desperate for people to like her and will, thus, cling too much to the people in her life and turn them away. maybe that’s why i’ve become less and less comfortable being vulnerable directly with people — i don’t want to be a burden. i don’t want people’s pity over my sadness, especially when i know they’re also busy and have their own lives and burdens.

i don’t know, though — i used to think my loneliness marked me, but i think more people are lonelier than i thought they were, but some people don’t have the ability to say it loud. maybe that’s why i do, because at least i have the words and i have the lack of care for what strangers on the internet might think.

so, yeah, maybe that’s why i come online to share that i went to pavé today and ate my favorite jambon beurre, that i have a pavlovian response to the word “burrito,” that all i want to read right now is translated literature from korea and japan because they are both free from whiteness (even as americanness culturally has been built into them since the post-war) (i do want to write more about this later). i had to pull out my hair dryer because the price stickers kinokuniya uses are too sticky and would not pull off cleanly. i miss my dog (i always miss my dog), and it’s too hot and humid, and i feel sluggish and slow and stupid. summer is the worst season for me because the weather makes me hyper-aware that i exist in a body, and that’s made worse this year because of the medication i’m on, so i’ve been sliding down this depressive episode i can’t seem to pull myself up from. i deactivated my instagram yesterday, and i assume i’ll go back next week before i go down to virginia for a booksellers conference, and it feels nice to be unplugged for now, though i miss scrolling my explore page everyday for yoongi content. i miss yoongi.