IT’S MY WORLD – AND YOU CAN STAY THE HELL OUT OF IT!
When I was a little girl, I had a tendency to become so engrossed in the book I was reading or the TV show that I was watching, that I would literally tune out my surroundings. When my mother would grow frustrated at my lack of response, she would snap at me “You just live in your own little world, don’t you?” I always found that odd. Clearly, I did not live in my own world. I lived in HERS. She chose everything from my wardrobe to my menu. She laid out my clothes for me until I was 13 because she didn’t trust my ability to coordinate colors. She prepared meals based on what SHE wanted to eat and cooked everything to her own taste (burnt to a crisp with no seasonings whatsoever.) My entire life – the school I attended, the friends I made, the church we belonged to – was the result of the house she had picked out before I was even born.
As a result, I clearly have control issues.
But now, thanks to modern technology, I actually DO live in my own little world. And it is awesome! For me, anyway.
I grew up in that horrible pre-VCR era where there were only three networks, summer was nothing but reruns, and if the president made a speech your entire evening was shot. Now, I not only have hundreds of channels to choose from, but I can also record my favorite shows and watch what I want, when I want. I haven’t watched a TV commercial in years. I’ve worn the fast forward button out on my DVR. And I’ve collected all of my favorite movies and TV shows on DVD so that I can rewatch them repeatedly.
Same thing with music. I never listen to the radio. I’ve got every song I ever remotely enjoyed on flash drives. It’s like the ultimate mixtape, only with a thousand songs. No commercials. No missing the beginning of the song because I changed the channel. No having to cultivate a taste for new music. In my car, it’s always 1985 and unless they covered it on “Glee,” I’ve never heard it.
I always enjoyed reading. But in school, assigned reading took up so much time I didn’t have much time left to read for enjoyment. In high school, I read Fitzgerald and Faulkner. In college, I read Shakespeare and Chaucer. Now, I read every teenage vampire series and John Grisham novel published. And I can carry all my books around on a device that fits in my purse. I joined a book club, but I’m thinking of quitting. Because this summer, I’ve read three books I didn’t like instead of any of the approximately 500 I have saved on my Kindle that I WANT to read.
So, does that mean I have a problem? Have I gotten so wrapped up in living the dream of a 6-year-old me that I’m becoming a hermit?
This self-indulgence really took off after my divorce last year. I sold my mother’s old house and bought my own for the first time in my life. It has all the features I’ve always wanted in a home: bay windows, open kitchen, vaulted ceilings. I had it painted in the colors I wanted. And since I didn’t have to argue with anybody over any furniture purchases, I ended up with a purple velvet sofa.
I no longer eat at the kitchen table like a normal human being. I recently read that “zombie eating” – eating while staring at a screen – has become the norm in America. At least I have the excuse of always eating alone, so it’s not as if I’m ignoring anybody.
I work for a small company and there are days that I literally only have contact with two other human beings. I no longer go to the mall because I can order everything I need from Amazon. I pick up my groceries and prescriptions at the drive-through. I can get any type of food brought to my door. Some weekends, I don’t even leave the house between Friday evening and Monday morning. The closest I come to socializing is Facebook.
Is this wrong? It’s as if I built myself my own little bubble and encased myself in it. I’ve removed all the annoyances of life – including other people!
I suspect that you’re either appalled or envious of my lifestyle. After all, it’s just an extreme version of what the rest of America is doing. Time-shifting TV has become increasingly popular. Many people have substituted social networks for actual socializing. We’ve sorted ourselves into cities and states with like-minded people. We no longer have a non-partisan news media because we don’t want it! We want our biases confirmed and our “news” delivered to us by networks that cater to those biases.
No wonder we have such a hard time relating to other people. It’s hard to see another person’s point of view when you’ve gone to so much trouble to craft your own – and to make sure that nothing unpleasant wanders into it!
Maybe I need to step outside my comfort level. Or just step outside period! Maybe I’ll try to round up some of these imaginary friends and meet for dinner in a real restaurant somewhere.
Or maybe I’ll just be eating Haagen-Dazs out of the container while sitting on my purple couch watching 30-year-old sitcoms.
Photo by orijinal
That said, most of the people we interacted with at the local Place That Has Stuff didn’t actually become close friends. They were just That Dude You Saw Every Time and then maybe after a couple times of not seeing him you’d be like, “oh hey, wonder what happened to That Dude I Saw Every Time”.Report
Keep calm and read Josiah Warren, amen sister.Report
“No wonder we have such a hard time relating to other people. It’s hard to see another person’s point of view when you’ve gone to so much trouble to craft your own – and to make sure that nothing unpleasant wanders into it!”
I was on a walking tour of an area of Louisville recently that was once filled with German-American families (my relatives among them). The main employer there was a large textile mill. Everyone lived within a few blocks and the neighborhood was also filled with pubs and every house had a front porch on which you would visit with your neighbors. So people talked on the way to work, on the way home from work, at the pub, on their front porches, etc. Someone also made a point that it was also a lot easier for union organizers back then because you could easily talk to workers as they were coming to and from work. Once that stopped, unions began their long decline.Report
Well, I’m not that bad….but I live similarly. I listen to the news during the commute or music. I do socialize–with nerds, the gf, and at class. But if I’ve been on social media a dozen times this year, it’s an aberration. I use it a lot only when the gf is visiting “ze home country”, otherwise I ignore the insanity. That probably is the single most significant thing I do that keeps me “free”. My liberal friends and I generally have an unwritten rule that we don’t talk politics–same for my more conservative friends. If you “go there” then I either smile and shrug my shoulders-keeping my opinion to myself, or I go full anarchist and start pushing back on every they said so much that they get frustrated and annoyed that I challenged their world view.
I’m not likely to change my opinions, neither or they. But my world doesn’t require that I only associate with people who agree with me, unlike too many people I’ve run into over the years.Report
I’m an introvert myself so this sounds lovely. I think my introversion has limits, though, as I eventually get bored when I am left with a couple of days to spend entirely on myself and by myself.
So is it “wrong”? Certainly not morally. Perhaps in the big picture/long view perspective your lifestyle is sub-optimal? But you do you!Report
Technically I am an ambivert ( I feel so cool having an edgy label!)
https://www.scienceofpeople.com/ambivert/
Generally I like being around people and it energizes me, but I also really value my alone time and the idea of having the house to myself for a couple of days and not setting foot out the front door is pretty awesome too. My job forces me to be extroverted at work, but in my personal life I make a really conscious effort to always be involved with at least a couple of different groups that force me to be social. Right now it’s the pointing breeds club and my disc golf league. It would be very easy for me to spend all day on social media so I need that balance.
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Oh neat, that’s cool! You learn something new every day.Report
I’m told that I’m an extrovert, but all of this sounds pretty dreamy to me. Excellent post.Report
It seems to me that you are enjoying a season of Things The Way I Like Them that you have maybe never had before. Which is great, but maybe not a permanent state of affairs.
I have my limit when it comes to social contact. I get to a point of “that’s enough, go away now”. And I’m terrible at small talk, it makes me anxious.
But I also like seeing people. It also seems to me that if that were everything, you wouldn’t have written this piece and worked to have it published.Report
I adore this piece! Really enjoyed it, thanks for sharing it with us!Report