- This topic has 5 replies, 2 voices, and was last updated 5 years, 10 months ago by Anonymous.
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December 25, 2018 at 5:10 pm #270893Mr. RitzParticipant
I swear I just can’t figure myself out…
It’s Christmas day, been off for the past 4 days and the boredom is terrible. (Not much activity with family and friends this year, things just didn’t work out)
I’ve been looking forward to not being at work, even stressing about the vacation getting approved. Ok, got a week off with nothing to do and am hating it. Am I workaholic?
I keep imagining retirement is going to be great…. Or will it? Why do I look forward to time off?
It would be great to travel, but don’t have the money. I’ve lost interest in any of the hobbies I used to have, haven’t even wanted to listen to music very much. I live in a northern part of the country and the SAD is kicking in as well.
The wife has no problem sitting on the couch all weekend and reading or surfing the net, I can’t do that. If I’m not doing something, I get anxious.
One thing we did figure out: the wife teaches and is around lots of people all day. She needs the peace and quiet. I am around very few people at work and find I need stimulus of some kind, but have no idea what to do with myself.
December 26, 2018 at 6:58 am #270953AnonymousGuestDear Mr. Ritz:
Maybe this Christmas season is time for some figuring/ learning (“I just can’t figure myself out”). I just re-read some of the posts in your previous threads,my goodness, what an educational experience! Why don’t you re-read it? It has been a while.
You can re-read, take notes and come back to your current thread with thoughts, if you want. I will be glad to communicate further with you.
anita
December 26, 2018 at 10:08 am #271005Mr. RitzParticipantAnita,
I did re read them. Was there something that stood out to you as a solution? If there was, I didn’t catch it, other than the self employment thought.
December 26, 2018 at 10:15 am #271007AnonymousGuestMr. Ritz:
On my re-reading earlier this morning, a few hours ago, I remember the painful arthritis, which stands in my mind as a concern, I wonder what is the status on that. I noticed anger, a long time anger, years of anger at co workers who have it better, others having a better life than you. I noticed maybe a tendency to put other people down.
You asked if I noticed anything that may be a solution to your boredom when not working even though you looked forward to time off from work: no, I didn’t, not more than anything I already suggested. But maybe there is something in what I mentioned in the first paragraph above that should be looked at and maybe there will be some solution later.
anita
December 26, 2018 at 2:59 pm #271067Mr. RitzParticipantAnita, thanks for responding.
Since you asked, the arthritis is worse (it’s never going to get better is it?) I’ve accepted it as a normal part of life. It’s been bad this past 3 weeks as I have been doing manual labor at work, building large wooden crates for show displays to be shipped in. Not my job and probably shouldn’t be doing it, but I have a co-worker who’s year and a half older than me and he’s out there doing it too. Hard to wimp out when the he’s getting it done (BTW us older guys can work circles around the 28 yer old!).In other news, the super annoying co-worker that I complained about finally got fired this past spring, so I don’t have to deal with him anymore!
Maybe I have to be working in order to feel useful and not be accused of being a lazy person (something I think is a holdover from my father). Even thought he passed away 6 years ago, I still feel him over my shoulder sometimes.
December 27, 2018 at 6:09 am #271103AnonymousGuestDear Mr. Ritz:
I hope you will do whatever is medically sound to feel better having arthritis, whatever is recommended to practice daily so to minimize further damage, discomfort and pain.
Congratulations for not having that annoying, disrupting and disturbing co worker!
So it is your father’s voice raining on your vacation parade, I understand. It is amazing, no matter our age, really doesn’t matter, that voice is still there. But as amazing it is, it really is understandable. We shed our skin, not our brain, so the neurons that recorded his voice keep replaying that voice.
There is a way to turn down the volume of that voice, eventually silence it. It is a very long process but you do have time now, being on your vacation, to practice turning down its volume. First step to do it is to notice it when it starts speaking. Distractions are helpful, give you breaks from that voice, but it doesn’t go away without attention and intent, noticing it, then lowering its volume, again and again.
It also takes believing that really, you are not lazy, that he was wrong. That takes time, changing core beliefs that were never true to begin with. I was told by my mother that I was lazy. It was a surprise to me when I finally figured, in my fifties (!) that I am not lazy, and that it was never true!
anita
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