Friday, October 29, 2021
Let Loose
Monday, September 20, 2021
Septembrambling
Tadi malam gangguan internet parah banget. Bujug dah. Udah wi-finya mati, jaringan operator HP juga ngga ada sinyal sama sekali. Jadi ada tuh beberapa jam w kagak bisa ngontak orang sama sekali, atau browsing internet. Mau streaming Linkin Park kaga jadi. Mau dengerin CD fisiknya kga punya CD player lagi, udah pensiun...
Tapi ada hikmahnya juga ye. W jadi mau gamau ngelanjutin tuh ilham buat nulis, walaupun sekelumit kisah gak penting tentang kucing-kucing w. Well, penting sebenernya tauk. Kalo ga ada mereka mungkin w udah mati kebosanan gak ada inet. Eh, tapi berhubung di rumah juga, banyak hal-hal lain yg bisa dikerjain. Buku mah bejibun, bisa dibaca ulang atau nyobain mulai seri Gajah Mada nya bapak yang tebel sejilidnya bisa buat bantal tidur. Tapi akhirnya w nyelesain ntu blog post en tidur setelah baca Shinchan volume 8 edisi lama yang terjemahannya ampun dah keknya lost in translation karena banyak wordplay bahasa Jepang yang ga translates well.
Selain itu, keknya udah lama bgt deh w gak terdiam tanpa terdistraksi berbagai macam aral lintangan dari dunia net. Bahasa kerennya mungkin contemplation gitu, yah..? Selaluuu aja ada yang bikin w terdistraksi gitu.
Niatnya mau istirahat rebahan sebentar sambil lihat ada berita apa di timeline twitter... Ehh taunya udah hampir sejam ngescroll thread twitter yang lagi viral en bikin emosi netizen indonesia pada hari itu. Ntu paper 12 halaman yg mestinya bisa dibaca dalam 15 menit kalah saing dah tuh. Dan ini selalu kejadian, dan w selalu menyesalin ini tapi teteuup aja terjadi. Oleh dikarenanya w mencanangkan operasi 'log-out twitter' dimana w... yaa, logout twitter en gak buka-buka ntu social media baik dari hape maupun laptop. Sebenernya udah berlangsung 5 hari tapi kemudian w pengen sambat akhirnya buka sebentar buat misuhin Spotify for PC yang ampas abis kga loading-loading.
Ngomong-ngomong soal Spotify, ni app sebenernya juga jadi sumber distraksi lho buat w. Biasanya w akan berniat buka Spotify sebentar buat nyari lagu yang cocok jadi temen belajar. Trus akhirnya scroll-scroll playlist yg w bikin, playlist orang lain bikin, trial and error nyobain playlist A dan B entah karena A bikin ngantuk tapi B terlalu gahar... Trus pada akhirnya w akan bikin playlist baru tapi nyadar 'lah kan w dah pernah bikin playlist yg mirip-mirip ini yah?', w coba gabungin lagu-lagu di playlist baru dan lama itu ehh kok flownya kurang cocok? Akhirnya ada kali beberapa jam malah ngerapiin playlist-playlist di library w, bingung sendiri karena playlist bernuansa rock yg w bikin terlalu overlap sama playlist bernuansa indie rock tapi kalo digabungin yg nuansanya super indie kayak Vampire Weekend KURANG NYAMBUNG sama lagu-lagu nuansa blues rock ala Royal Blood. BMTH masuk di playlist metal w tapi beberapa juga heavy rock, tapi yg agak electro dan featuring Grimes kurang mashook di rock tapi terlalu gahar buat playlist electropop w????
Yahh... gitu deh, jadinya. Kangen juga masa-masa segalanya lebih simple dimana kita cuma perlu beli album dan kontrol kita atas tuh lagu cuma persoalan album apa yg mau dimainin hari ini. Dulu juga w suka beli CD album kompilasi dan menemukan banyak band-band yang sampe sekarang jadi basis selera musik w. Yaa, at least jadi pernah denger namanya dan tau kendatipun engga demen sama lagunya, misalnya Placebo, Nirvana, atau Keane (bujug ketauan deh angkatan w wkwk).
Sekarang mah tinggal buka Discover Weekly nya Spotify kita bisa nemuin banyakkkk rekomendasi lagu yg bisa jadi bisa tidak jadi our next favorite song, apalagi diupdatenya tiap minggu. Sayangnya karena ni fitur hanyalah satu dari sekian banyak fitur yang disediakan, novelty-nya jadi kurang berasa buat w. Kinda take it for granted karena pada akhirnya w bakal nyari-nyari sendiri dari playlist orang lain yg kiranya seleranya mirip sama w, atau nemu apa yg lagi hits dan gabungin itu ke playlist w. Pada akhirnya w terjebak dalam feedback loop dimana selera musik w ternyata GITU-GITU AJA. Pernah nemuin lagu yg 'wuih kok enak' di playlist orang ehhh taunya ntu musik rilisnya pas w SMP. Man do I ever grow up.
Kalo ngomongin soal Spotify pasti w jadi berbusa-busa gitu deh. Dan ini w translate ke kenekatan w buat banting setir ngeganti topik tesis w jadi ke streaming service (padahal dah ditagih bu kaprodi buat lulus Desember... bujug ga tuh, ditinggal temen-temen lg deh T-T). Sampe sekarang pun w masih agak pusing buat formulasiin research gap nya. Kalo w baca-baca penelitian soal streaming service ini pada menarik abis menurut w, and I'm super passionate about it but will I be able to find and fill the gap in the academic literature?
W bersyukur bgt dosen pembimbing w super baeekkkk, dan w diperbolehin ganti topik untuk waktu yg sesempit ini. Tapi apakah w bisa mengerjakannya dengan baik dan konsisten? Terlebih w habis nekat ngambil gawean buat data analysis yang 'mampus-susah-abis'. But then again I got solid advice from one of my close friends that ultimately makes me feel confident about juggling these responsibilities (thanks Tina!).
I guess that's all I wanna talk about today. I'm gonna try and do my tasks, hope all goes well. Take care, folks!
A Tale of Four Cats
Tuesday, May 11, 2021
Becoming Sane
Menjadi Waras.
I initially had a hard time coming up with the English equivalence for this word. Waras. Being... 'normal'? 'regular'? 'mentally healthy'? A quick google translate consultation from the Bahasa word then found me in awe as to how obvious it should have been.
Sane.
Being sane.
I'm writing this after years of years being a- um... insane person? But not really. I have written many times about how I wish I actually have a mental problem so that I can blame all my mistakes on it. But not really. Do I really have that problem? Yes, but not really. To put it shortly, I have the symptoms, but not the actual disease.
I once had my doubts of 'getting better', not because I felt like I couldn't, but I just would not. I felt like it would make me... normal. And I associated 'normal' with being boring.
I told myself that if I were 'normal', then I would lose all my uniqueness. My quirks. I would be losing the depth of my emotional writing. I would not be 'the melancholy' of my peers. I would not be able to see things with the same emotional lens I used to see the world in; losing my foggy perspective. In short, I treat the emotional state of the 'mental illness' notion as part of my personality.
But it's not right. I'm relatively normal, compared to many others. I just had some problems. Frustration. Anger. Mood swings. And what are problems if they were not to be solved?
So how was the experience of going to a psychiatrist?
I went because of the strong recommendation of a friend, since I've been having constant demotivation, tendency to detach myself from friends and colleagues and the works I'm supposed to be doing, frustration due to being not able to concentrate, extreme spikes of emotions that make hurting others and myself almost feel good. Of course I did not tell her all of this, only that I've been demotivated and detached.
So to a psychiatrist I went. It was almost impulsive. I decided to go right then Monday first thing in the morning because I was on the verge of madness and was too frustrated for my brain to receive any cognitive stimulation; and I wanted to cry so bad even though what I had to do was (luckily) just an online class (so none of them see me tearing up). If only the doctor was available right then in the morning, I would gladly skip class just to get a prognosis on what the fuck is wrong with me. But she didn't. I had to consult online via video call and the soonest available time is at night.
As per usual, you cannot expect doctors to read your mind of scan your brain immediately to know what disease you might be having. They are going to ask you 'what's wrong?' or 'how can I help you today?' and you will have to explain. So that's what I did. I explained what I was feeling, what I've been feeling and all the frustration. She would ask some questions that I answered honestly, and surprisingly, I found myself okay with all that. I thought I would be dumbfounded or feeling traumatized by the qiestions, but perhaps to some extent I have made peace with some part that I would once deemed unacceptable.
I know some people don't have the privilege to even be able to tap into their own emotion, to recognize what they are feeling, to communicate that they might be having problem. I'm lucky enough to own it and being able to speak of what I feel about (even though my problem also has something to do with detachment issue).
She said that she understood what it is. She encountered many cases like this, especially among college students.
I was relieved, and although at first I felt like it would be offensive that all these subjective emotional frustration and personal things that affected me and being affected by me, which were my own, which I thought were unique and personal, was just a number in the statistics among her list of patients over twenty years of practice. But that does mean I am normal, I just had some issues to solve. So to some medications and 'adjustment' of lifestyle I was prescribed.
So how does it feel being 'sane'?
First up we have to define how it is to be 'sane'. Quick google search will take you to the term 'of sound mind', 'rational', 'not mad or mentally ill'. So am I already sane, in a sense? Am I already released from my demon, which might be there or not there at all? Everyone is entitled to their subjective feeling about how sane they are, how 'normal' they could be, but personally I feel like not being 'sane' means that your mental state is bothered so much that you can barely function. In my case, it was the ups and downs of emotion, difficulty of concentration, and tendency to self harm. Speaking of being sane, I feel like there has been improvement from my original state of affairs.
Feeling sane is.... let's just say, it's amazing. All the initial worries I had about me losing my depth, my quirkiness, my uniqueness, they're just untrue. I can still write, make twisted jokes, discuss philosophical matters, all without the constant inscurities of my abilities, worries of looking stupid, and large inertia that usually inhibited me to do so. It's like I have more mental energy to actually do the things that I wanna do without all the anxiety, without the negative 'what-if's, without the tendency to give up before even trying. The things that I only used to wish to be able to do, now are real things within my grasp of initiatives. I feel more hopeful, more in control of my self, and more at ease with my emotional spikes.
I could finally concentrate on reading, doing my homeworks instead of dwelling on emotional frustration that wasted so many of the times and energy I could be doing work or having fun.
My friend once said "in a short time you will be introduced to the original you who never appear often, which is your sanest and truest self", and she may be correct.
It is too soon to tell that where this state would continue from here, since it still has been only two weeks since my first consultation, but given my objective assessment, the medication helped much and I am significantly turning on the right track.
What I regretted the most is how I wish I have had gone sooner. All those gap years that I spent wallowing and feeling sorry for myself, it could be years of me actually doing what I had always have in the bucket list of my mind.
Monday, April 5, 2021
Peripherie
I have a bad habit of occasionally detaching myself from reality. I suspect it's coming from my preference to follow people instead of my own ambition, but that could be a story for another day.
Reminiscing (or blaming) my educational background in physics, I have the tendency to think on a rather abstract plane. [Not trying to boast, but rather seeing this as a form of self-observation that could be both a blessing and a curse.] By abstract, I mean theoretical. By theoretical, I mean I tend to explain or write things as basic as possible. It's as if I'm trying to make my thought to make sense to someone alien or unfamiliar with the subject matter. What.
Whenever I try to write in academic manner, I always find myself to trace the concept to its most basic constituent. If I want to explain about uranium, I somehow feel the need to make clear about the ideas of atoms first. What an atom is, what it's consisted of, how atoms relate to elements, and then the characteristics of uranium itself. Wait. That example is making too much sense, since naturally the topic of science is (almost) always deductive.
Of course, when talking about special scientific explanation such as quantum field theory, it's inevitable that people would like to know first about Schrodinger wave equation to understand what the heck you are blabbering about, then you need to make clear on the concept of Planck constant, and how the mathematics fits into this physical reality we're in. Well I guess you can always put it in simpler terms, if you're expert enough. Most of the times I'm not comprehending well enough to go beyond the realm of memorizing.
But since I'm already accustomed to obscure materials like this from the get-go, let's just say that it has become my reality, and it detached me from other forms of reality. Such as the one where you just simply live in, and form comprehension through action.
...That's quite an extensive way to say that I'm a total teacher's pet. A classroom bug. I learn things from books. I learn from theoretical viewpoints. But when it comes to actually living, I'm a total newbie.
I don't know how to act myself. I don't know where to put my hands when I walk. I don't know which way to stare when I take a gander. I don't know when it's appropriate to interrupt people without destroying the flow of conversation but also not having to deal with the expense of my sanity. I didn't know there are many ways to express love and people differ so significantly on it. I didn't know blogging was never a realistic way to earn money. I don't know a lot of things that people commonly understand before they even reach my age.
Recently I figured out that it's what can be called 'tacit knowledge', the kind of knowledge that's embedded in people, yet not documented in written or produced form, and it makes up approximately 70% of total overall knowledge. Things that you know how to do, how things work, but barely written or documented because there's no urgent need to do so. It's because usually we treat them as if they're common sense - or that it's not just your job. I mean, you don't normally go out your way to write a guideline on how to wear button-up shirts, on the procedure to order coffee in a certain cafe, or how to prepare your headspace for reading a difficult textbooks. With these things people ordinarily learn through other people who tell them how it's done, or through your own experience, but it's rarely something you can look up in books (or maybe up until now, thank you information age).
But I wished - I wished someone would have written me guidelines on how to live life.
That there would be a book solely dedicated to teach you how to tie your shoes. How to learn to drive and change your tires. How to pick for good electronics, parts where they could malfunction and how to fix them. How to chew quietly and where to put your hands when you walk. How to remind yourself not to slouch and drink eight glass of water every day. How to make friends and avoid saying things that might hurt them. How to remember to pick up your backpack after you sat it down to play basketball.
Obviously, you would say to me, that it's not how life works. You have to experience it all yourself and learn while you live. Things will happen, things will change, and you will have to somehow adapt to it.
You will buy one shitty earphone and have a bad impression on the brand overall. Then you will buy more earphone and found out that two years are a sufficient endurance time for one earphone to last. You will befriend someone, get attached to them rather unhealthily and you will have to separate when you graduate and you will not hear from them again and when you do it's as if you already live in different worlds and there's no bridging. You will meet someone and become closer until you push beyond the boundaries of friendship and then you will find that it's not all rainbows and sunshines. You will hurt them and you will get hurt, but the world goes on whether you survive or not. Very personal experiences, I know.
Even if there are detailed guidelines of how to live your life, there is still going to be loopholes or gaps. There's no formula for everything. Even if there is a generalized theory that applies everywhere, it's not going to help with your miniscule activities. Even if there is a personalized theory that applies for everything that you do or happens to you, it's not going to be entirely helpful or prescriptive for your future situation.
Rigidity is the enemy of flexibility, and adaptability is what makes humans human, after all.
Of course I might be able to talk all high and mighty like this, when in fact I would still resort to my old ways, old habits, just because it's hard to live in this present, in this reality.
Driven by my philosophy and desire for everything to be deterministic, I once had a phase where I tried to document everything that I do. What I ate, what I drank, what I did during the day, how I'm feeling, what problems I encountered, and what kind of thoughts occurred. I tried to 'stat' them out like I was in a game. Who knows if there's going to be a similar thing happening in the future, and I would be prepared for it when I already have the recipe.
Needless to say that it didn't work out all that well. Writing everything like that takes time, and it's tedious. There's going to be knowledge left undocumented, there's going to be emotions left unsaid. When you learn, you learn, and you can thank your brain for that. Just because you can write about it doesn't mean you have to. Just because you can write about it doesn't mean you've learnt. Description doesn't equate prescription. Just because it's written down in history books doesn't mean men aren't prone to repeating it again.
Due to that, I stopped writing, because what's the point then?
But needless to say, once more, that it's not the point. Just because I had a blunder in writing doesn't mean I have to stop writing altogether. In fact, writing might be just what I need right now. Since I've been so detached from reality, it could be a way for me to ground myself in the moment. Jotting down what I'm feeling, what I'm thinking, what I'm doing.
Not everything. Not trying to be clever. Not trying to form a recipe. Just write to be here, to be who I am and where I am right now.
Monday, March 15, 2021
Social Cuts
Prime steak of chatbox. Virtual interaction. We're in a room, somehow I'm alone.
...What am I talking about?
Am I just, not ready? Things that should have been easy but I don't have the energy to do, things that used to excite me but now makes me feel nothing more than a speck of nostalgia, things that could have been done but I decided to bail on instead.
Moonwalking backwards and proud of it, discomplishment is a virtue.
I used to keep a part of my child self intact within me because I want her to watch me grow into someone she could be proud of, but now I don't know if I could silence her crying. I bet she must be really disappointed.
I thought I was getting better? What's wrong? Is reality finally sinking in? After all this time?
Shoutout to everyone doing anything with their life and succeeding in it. I don't even know if I want to get out of bed this morning. Ungrateful bastard.
Friday, January 1, 2021
Another Start?
Hello and happy new year everyone! I know this year haven't been... the same, with the pandemic and all. I'm not going to say it's bad, or it's good, but it's... definitely bad. What am I trying to say? I'm not cut out for introduction like this.
Anyway. Here I am start writing again not because of a new year's resolution or anything like that, but because of a blog post by one of my twitter following (speaking of which, this is such an obscure term since you can't even define 'following' without some context of what twitter is, and saying that he's a 'friend' could be an overstatement because our ties are not mutual, I follow his account and know of him through his posts but he doesn't even follow me or know about my existence so yeah). I followed this guy because of our (previously) mutual interests in the MCR fandom (whoa such a long time ago).
There was a phase in my twitter account, where all I use to decide whom to follow was through their identities as a fan of whatever it is I obsessed back then. So I followed people who liked the same bands, TV shows or anime fandom as I did. And that brought upon a strange phenomenon, because they eventually grew out of that fanbase-ridden-identity phase and their online presence gradually changed from something akin to @-MCR_man into @[RealName], with posts that initially were about our mutually favorite bands becoming more of their personal views and daily experiences.
During this 'transition' period, of course there were 'selections', since probably their gradually changed online persona doesn't match my liking. Maybe they were a bit too vocal in their obscure opinion, maybe they bring too much negativity, or maybe they retweet about BTS a little too many times (hey it happens). So some had to go away, but some stayed. The stayed ones, weirdly, I developed what the scholars in social science called 'weak ties'. In essence, I have come to know these people by sidling in that small gateway of 'previously-liking-the-same-thing' and ended up knowing their education background, what they're doing for a living now, their other hobbies, their other favorite kinds of music, their other social media, and their blogs. Sometimes I get invested in their opinions, I look forward to their writing, I get curious of their current interests, and so on. But to say that they are my friends? I don't know, they might feel a bit weird since they don't even know me.
Anyway. I got sidetracked again. I started writing because of this post. How browsing too much twitter is feeding into the 'reactive' part of the brain and distract us from actual writing. The micro-blogging nature of this social media makes the flow of information so quick that it traps us into the 'fear of missing out', and that we hardly think logically to comprehend the vast information. So I'm not here to preach the 'danger of social media' or to summarize that entire blog post, I just want to say that he makes a good point, at least for me.
As a (formerly frequent) blogger, and self-proclaimed 'writer', of course it's a problem when I suddenly stop being excited or committed to writing, whether it's for recreational purpose, cathartic output, or a form of how I make my living. I admit, I do browse twitter a little too much nowadays, just to avoid the heavy burden of thinking (even the trivial ones), I tweet in hopes for any interaction from my friends, and scroll endlessly just for that tiny chance that 'something interesting might appear on timeline that I can react on it'. I've become something like an addict. And that's a problem.
I've abandoned the thought of writing for God knows how long. I've given up on writing as a catharsis because I never knew what to write anymore. I don't know what are my thoughts anymore. I don't know who I am, and what I'm trying to express.
This difficulty of getting myself in the headspace to write is also a strong contributor to my addiction towards Twitter. If I were to sit in front of the laptop screen for two hours to write something of substance - three pages of fiction, academic paper, anything, really - I would spend most of the time scrolling twitter without realizing it. This gives me a false sense of productivity, because I would feel like I'm attempting to focus but I mostly just divert my focus because brainstorming is too hard.
Of course I'm not saying that Twitter did all this, I'm merely proposing that Twitter is a symptom of something far more deep-rooted in me. The longing of instant gratification. The avoidance of thinking. The fear of missing out. I'm working out what the actual disease is, but knowing the symptom, I should probably try to minimize the chance of the symptom turning into something more fatal, right?
Anyway. That was a long-arse rambling about me justifying my effort to make 2021 a Twitter-less custom. I'm still figuring out whether I want to prioritize this year to be a 'blog-more' period or 'endless-scrolling-less' period. Hopefully both.
Thank you for reading and hope you all have a wonderful year ahead!
Cheers. T.