hey..thinking is not bad.......now i confess it harms my grades..but it
doesnt matter much...if i go even two days without thinking(like being
sorrounded by friends day and night!!)... I feel i am disappearing...its
like i have to be with myself all the time.. my friends think i am weird coz
when i go away..i go away completely..switch off my fone ... off the
grid...And i will tell you a plus side.. i never ever get bored...you'd
think at my age a kid cant stay without the internet and the cell fone.. but
i can live  days on end without them..thats why even my parents think i am
strange...some suggest i might be going into some sort of depression... but
i disagree...a detatchment i feel...but its not depresing in any way.. its
liberating rather...think for me is being with my Self..which i am
exploring..having only rtecently begun.. have to do a lot of Unlearning
first..its like begining afresh...

On Fri, Jul 9, 2010 at 7:55 PM, DarkwaterBlight <[email protected]>wrote:

> I was just thinking...
>
> It started out innocently enough. I began to think at parties now and
> then to loosen up. Inevitably though, one thought would lead to
> another, and soon I was more than just a social thinker. I began to
> think alone --"to relax," I told myself -- but I knew it wasn't true.
> Thinking became more and more important to me, and finally I was
> thinking all the time.
>
> I began to think on the job. I knew that thinking and employment don't
> mix, but I couldn't stop myself.  I began to avoid friends at
> lunchtime so I could read Thoreau and Kafka.  I would return to the
> office dizzied and confused, asking, "What is it exactly we are doing
> here?"
>
> Things weren't going so great at home either. One evening I turned off
> the TV and asked my wife about the meaning of life. She spent that
> night at her mother's.
>
> I soon had a reputation as a heavy thinker. One day the boss called me
> in. He said, "Skippy, I like you, and it hurts me to say this, but
> your thinking has become a real problem. If you don't stop thinking on
> the job, you'll have to find another one."  This gave me a lot to
> think about.
>
> I came home early after my conversation with the boss. "Honey," I
> confessed, "I've been thinking..."
>
> "I know you've been thinking," she said, "and I want a divorce!"
>
> "But Honey, surely it's not that serious."
>
> "It is serious," she said, lower lip aquiver. "You think as much as
> college professors, and college professors don't make any money, so if
> you keep on thinking we won't have any money!"
>
> "That's a faulty syllogism," I said impatiently, and she began to
> cry.
>
> I'd had enough. "I'm going to the library," I snarled as I stomped out
> the door. I headed for the library, in the mood for some Nietzsche,
> with NPR on the radio. I roared into the parking lot and ran up to the
> big glass doors... they didn't open. The library was closed. To this
> day, I believe that a Higher Power was looking out for me that night.
>
> As I sank to the ground clawing at the unfeeling glass, whimpering for
> Zarathustra, a poster caught my eye. "Friend, is heavy thinking
> ruining your life?" it asked.  You probably recognize that line. It
> comes from the standard Thinker's Anonymous poster. Which is why I am
> what I am today: a recovering thinker.
>
> I never miss a TA meeting.  At each meeting we watch a non-educational
> video; last week it was "Porky's." Then we share experiences about how
> we avoided thinking since the last meeting. I still have my job, and
> things are a lot better at home.
>
> Life just seemed ... easier, somehow, as soon as I stopped thinking.
> Soon, I'll be able to vote.
>
> Anynomous




-- 
\--/ Peace

Reply via email to