I'm going to check that one out NRDL. It seems to me that books that remain relevant for several decades *probably* have the most useful, most universal, and longest-lasting information.
I've been probing my mind some more, and I'm wondering if I should get another therapist. I'd devoted something like a year and a half of time to my last one, which resulted with me being abandoned for undoubtedly being such a difficult patient that refused to take our weekly/biweekly/then finally tri-weekly meetings to heart. I want to rationalize it saying that I was in a bad circumstance, saying that I had years of gnarled up, tangled rationalizations for all my insecurities to work through, but the truth was that I was just a noncommittal shit. Very noncommittal. In fact, I'd say that a great deal of my life I've been avoiding committing to a set course of action, of clearly defining *who* I am, and how I want to live my life.
The feeling of not wanting to dedicate myself, I think, stems back to a very early memory of mine, which was just innocently enough just me, at 8-9 years old, talking to my Mom as we drove around. She was telling me about Baptism in Christianity. At this point in time, I was already very leery of religion. I had already internalized that my Mom was a horrid bitch, despite supposedly being a Christian, and myself going to Sunday school to teach me about Jesus, which I had already intuitively felt was a farce, just another dishonest adult lying to my face for utterly nebulous and imperceptible reasons.
But she was telling me about Baptism, and I was curious about it because even though I felt that adults were lying to me, being so young I still had a feeling that there was something mystical or magical about the world that I wasn't grasping. I don't remember the exact conversation, but I remember that she was telling me that it marks a huge milestone in someone's life, and I remember the one important question I asked about it: "So when you get baptized, does it change you forever?" to which she replied that yes, it makes you closer to god and a better person forever; to which I felt deeply offended, a sense of offense that I remember to this day. Why did this hokey water ritual have anything to do with my state of being *me*? Why was I not good enough just being who I was? Am I just not good enough period? I wanted to prove my Mom wrong, but there was a lingering sense of doubt. It's a sense of doubt that I feel I've never shaken off since.
It reminds me of myself, being my shitkid self in Highschool, cause I haven't mentioned it until now, but I actually refused to cut my hair all throughout highschool, so I had this really stupid fucking mullet through what is the most socially intensive portion of my life, so it's pretty obvious why I was so unpopular. I still remember my reasoning though, was that if my haircut was alright *yesterday*, why is it not ok *now*, and why is it not ok in the *future*, and there was an extreme sense of stubbornness about not wanting to change, not wanting to grow up.
I had talked about my virginity earlier. and I feel that that same sense of stubbornness is in there too. My Mom's boyfriend of 15 years recounted to me that he changed completely on losing his virginity. My Therapist that I mentioned earlier mentioned something similar, that once I'd lost my virginity I'd be a completely different person, my whole perspective on life would change. And from other sources too, but those two I remember the most vividly... and that same sense of stubbornness and self-doubt kicks in again.
That's just something I thought I needed to share, because the truth is that I feel those feelings, and that I'm going to have to decide to commit to a choice, definitively, one day. and not just resent the world for supposedly manipulating me with social moors and expectations. I just wanted to say all that for my own good.