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	<title>The Laursonian Institute &#187; doubt</title>
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	<description>An exercise in thoroughness</description>
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		<title>Seriffed</title>
		<link>http://www.laurieandlewis.com/laurie/?p=831</link>
		<comments>http://www.laurieandlewis.com/laurie/?p=831#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Mar 2010 05:53:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Laurie</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[life]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[doubt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[friends]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[self]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I showed Lewis a sample of my handwriting from high school, and it&#8217;s almost unbearably minuscule.  Crafted with such precision and detail as to be unreadable.  At the time, that&#8217;s exactly what I was hoping.  I could put thoughts so tiny down on paper; so tiny that few would see and fewer would care.  It&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I showed Lewis a sample of my handwriting from high school, and it&#8217;s almost unbearably minuscule.  Crafted with such precision and detail as to be unreadable.  At the time, that&#8217;s exactly what I was hoping.  I could put thoughts so tiny down on paper; so tiny that few would see and fewer would care.  It&#8217;s almost as good as writing in code, but better at capturing the meta-level of feeling like a minuscule, illegible individual.</p>
<p>It has been remarked on occasion that I&#8217;m more aware of my motives and thoughts than others.  I often wonder how much of this is made up, and how much of this is just the product of too long staring into my own self.  I can&#8217;t imagine myself any other way, and a failure of this kind of imagination not only serves to create an infinity of shyness, but the surety of action.  I am the way I am because there&#8217;s no other possible way for me to be.  I&#8217;ve always felt very sensitive to insincerity and falsehoods &#8211; not that I haven&#8217;t used my share of both &#8211;  but it has keep me on the straight and obvious path in most situations.  When one thing is clearly contrary to my nature, there&#8217;s no reason to pursue it.  This strong feeling of right and wrong which seems so entirely undeniable in my make-up also makes me feel like a good case for morality in atheism.  It&#8217;s not because some religious authority told me to act the way I do, but because my parents raised me with a strong moral pole.</p>
<p>On the other hand, knowing oneself too well can be very much a maddening endeavor.  When I feel unsettled about something, it&#8217;s almost consuming.  The irreconcilability of two potential actions, the lack of an obvious right, the need for action without precedent&#8230; all of these cause me undue anxiety.  In situations which require tact, politics, strategy, or serious compromise, I might as well be lost at sea.   There aren&#8217;t many situations where what I want and what should be possible or allowable don&#8217;t match up.   I generally work hard for what I want, and achieve that, and am satisfied with my results.    Or I don&#8217;t try, and I don&#8217;t desire whatever result would have come from that effort.</p>
<p>Now, I&#8217;m stuck in the middle of something ridiculous, but my brain keeps running over and through the situation.  I&#8217;m feeling a little drunk on success of such a minor variety, but I want to repeat it again and again.   After all these miles I&#8217;ve come, I&#8217;m still the illegible tiny-writing girl dreaming of acceptance and popularity in some circle of those I respect and want to know.  I pick someone I think is a person to aspire to, and I want to know them.  I want them to know me, accept me, encourage and inspire me.  I need intellectual stimulation based in respect and safety and mutual enjoyment.</p>
<p>This weekend, Lewis and I and another couple had a few beers together, and I felt like I was living that moment.  It was a pair I really respect and enjoy, and I want them to like me.  We had a really good night, and I think it was enjoyed by everyone involved.  I want more, but the issue is impossible to push.  The very knowledge that you desire someone else&#8217;s company this much is a damnable offense.  It demonstrates irrefutably the political and power imbalance in the dynamic, and I come out on the bottom side.  If having a good time with someone I look up to means this much to me, there&#8217;s no way I have anything to offer in return of equal value.  Nothing I can do will mean a quarter as much as this couple having a laugh with me, and it&#8217;s so incredibly maddening to know that.</p>
<p>I also know this isn&#8217;t likely the way anyone else involved sees it.  I can&#8217;t double-think, though the talent would be incredibly useful, and as such, I&#8217;ve already ruined it for myself.  I&#8217;ve let something get to me, and it&#8217;s tarnished me a little.  These moments of mine which are from the heart and soul, and not the mind, are impossible to enjoy without rusting the polished exterior.  If it&#8217;s something I&#8217;ve worked for, there&#8217;s sombre joy at the knowledge of success.  Success at the endeavor of being me and being liked for it is&#8230; like watching a movie so engrossing and beautiful that when the credits roll, you can&#8217;t help but feel a little more empty.  I see past myself, and the vision of myself as a confident and likable person just leaves everyday-me with an assurance of the impossibility of it all.</p>
<p>Yet I tell myself this &#8211; there have been, time and again in my life, people who rouse my spirits to this degree.  And there shall be again.  I&#8217;ve reached that point of being settled enough in Davis that I&#8217;m longing for friends and laughs outside my own humble walls.  And friends will come &#8211; it took me years in all my new homes to find my Bryannes, my Steens, Cerises, Darins, Armands&#8230; and I&#8217;m already at an advantage here.  I have a happy home life, a lovely husband, a large social network, and twice the confidence of prior years.  I just need to give myself the time and space and opportunity to find those people Lewis and I can spend countless days sparring and joking and theorizing with on the smallest of life&#8217;s details.  There are so many invigorating people on this earth, how long can it before we fall into the orbit of another?</p>
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