F4LL0UT: Just had a job interview, don't know if it went well. I was rather relaxed - if a little over-excited - at first but then they tested my skills. Well, I have excellent skills for this job and normally would have performed admirably but the stupidest thing ever happened: I had an extremely narrow time limit and out of nowhere I got serious abdominal pains. I don't know whether I got stressed out or something I ate earlier hit me but suddenly I had serious cramps and couldn't focus. *snip*
Holy shit. Oh man, I'm sorry to hear this kind of stuff. I guess I have to congratulate you for having some sort of closure now, apparently. I cannot even begin to imagine what you must have gone through.
Your story of your interview reminds me of when I was trying to get a job in the publishing industry before I got lucky with work experience for a newspaper, followed by 3 job offers on the same day, resulting in a job in a public relations company. Your anxiety/excitement/gut issues are most likely related(PM me for more info if it interests you, I am going on assumption here, so further questions need asking). My advice? Contact them ASAP and tell them how keen you are, and explain what was going on in that moment and then leave no doubt in your own mind that you did the best you could in that moment, as well as the moments that followed.
To respond to your comment to my post: I do not have closure in this moment but am closer to it than I have ever been. Writing here was one step closer to that closure, even if it was not directed at the appropriate recipient. I really needed to vent in that moment, after receiving yet another communication from my mother, entitled "Shithead". I made the mistake of contacting my mother and asking her for contact details grandfather's youngest sister Norma(a spritely 93 year old), after my aunt and uncle failed to respond to my communications 10 days ago. The same aunt who said to me "Blake we saw what life was like when you were a child and we wanted to adopt you."
Holding Norma's hand during my grandfather's recent funeral was the only way I managed to cope.
My grandfather's death and my mother's actions during that period were the last straw for me. I am truly thankful that I was blessed to have the
best farewell I could have envisaged with him.
I haven't had any contact with any relatives on my father's side since I was a child, besides my paternal grandfather who I saw before he died. Tomorrow I am seeing my father for the second time in two weeks, which will be the most contact I have had with him since I was 14. Our first meeting in 7 years(3 or 4 in 19 years) was positive and also very challenging. A man who does not know me and who has not expended any effort to be in contact with me decided that it was appropriate to offer me non-stop life advice on how I can improve my life, rather than showing any interest in who I am or sharing anything about himself (undiagnosed ASD for sure if one wants to get medical). A voice within says "hey dad, you have a
black amex card with no limit, how about a tract of bushland that I can rent from you and create the life I desire, even though I know that is not the answer nor what I truly wish from my father.
I know that he is speaking from a place of caring, as best he can for who he is, and that meeting had me realise a lot about myself and my relationship with both of my parents. I felt a lot of anger in the days following seeing my father, and allowed time to pass to see what the nature of that anger was. My anger stems from the concept of "too little, too late" and "what fucking right do you have to say a word when you haven't been around for decades?" It was the realisation that my father is trying the "quick fix" rational approach to nurturing, which for anyone who has nurtured any other beings, be they human, other animal or plant, would realise that love and nurturing take time and commitment, through the "good" and the "bad".
I also realised that I fell straight into the "trying to please daddy" mode, something that I will overcome tomorrow through direct and loving communication, rather than confrontational and aggressive communication that I am used to. I need to give him a chance, and try to move forward and see what happens. Holding onto so much hurt from the past won't help me with healing in the future, but the past needs to be addressed for me. My last meeting with my father was the first time that I have ever talked to him about my mother.
toxicTom: ^^This.
Anything anyone can do to help?
Ultimately, no. I really appreciated replies, however I realise that this is something that only I can deal with. It comes down to a decision within, one way or another. The timing of everything is coming to a head at my least favourite time of year, the festive season where families come together to show love. I cannot remember the last time that I enjoyed this time of year, with the exception of getting shitfaced with friends. Usually I do that alone.
The form of "help" that I would most appreciate is the same help that has been offered to me throughout my life. toxicTom, you contacted me after I
wrote the following, and the form of help that has meant the most to me and has had the most profound effect, has always come from complete strangers (and nature).
Take a walk in another person's shoes and spend a moment of your time trying to understand them with compassion and empathy rather than judgement. Taking that moment to show another being who is seriously struggling can be live-saving. There is so much focus in our modern world on the symptoms of hurt: drugs, violence, etc and yet so little time devoted to healing the root or cause of these issues.
There is no simple solution. I'll keep on walking and talking(exercise and sharing stories are my best form of healing) but many succumb to what I tried: death, be it slow or quick at one's own hand. Love in its various forms heals that...to some extent. Maybe some day I can let go of all of this hurt. I have tried as best I can with the knowledge and experience I have. There are so many more who are less fortunate than I am. If I hadn't received the love that I have this lifetime, I know for a certainty that I would be dead or in gaol or in a psychiatric ward.