This might sound kind of weird, but, I don’t know that I’ve ever “felt loved”.
I mean at least not by a person.
I am a Christian, and I have experienced God’s love. I think most skeptics would doubt that’s a real feeling. And since I can’t prove to them that it is, I don’t know if that counts for them.
I think there is a psychological reason for why I don’t feel human love.
I recognize love, in my mind. But there are walls up that block it from reaching my emotions.
Growing up with an emotional manipulative and abusive father, it’s not rocket science.
For my father, saying “I love you” was usually only a thing that happened when he was berating me.
It was pretty twisted in a way.
“We’re doing this because we love you, Natasha.”
And what they were doing was berating me for everything I ever did around them.
If you want the full story of how this started, keep reading. Otherwise that was my TLDR explanation.
Let me explain:
I was told I was rebellious. Even though I hardly ever broke a rule in my entire life. I’m not kidding, I barely even broke bedtime rules. I like limits and boundaries, they make me feel more balanced. I wasn’t the type to unravel them without a good reason.
But yes when I decided something wasn’t good for me or helping me anymore, I would protest it.
So when I decided I wasn’t enjoying drum lessons anymore, I said I wanted to quit. That’s where it all started.
This was after a year long of taking them, which my father agreed on as a trial period. When I brought up to him that I didn’t want to anymore, he said “Oh you’re not gonna quit.”
Mind you, I hadn’t ever actually used the drum in a real performance, or any performance. And the only time I even tried to play along with my dad and his friends, they criticized it because it was too loud…you know, because you learn drums to play a quiet instrument.
Since I saw no purpose whatsoever in learning it anymore, I was miffed at my dad breaking his agreement with me.
After thinking about it, I pointed that out to him, respectfully enough, I thought. And he said fine, I could quite.
But that wasn’t the end of it.
He talked to his best friend and the friend’s wife, as well as my mom, about me wanting to quit, like it was one big crime.
I couldn’t understand why they cared so much. Since I wasn’t using the drum for anything, what did it matter?
But it turned into a whining session where his friend aired some other grievances about me that I had no idea he had.
Apparent’y, I made some joke during one of his music lesson with one of my sisters. Just about tomato sauce. That was it. I didn’t even really direct it at him, just made a joke about the ingredients in tomato sauce. He was deeply offended.
Now, as an adult who has taught a class, I completely could understand why he might have been annoyed that I interjected while he was teaching.
However, as an adult who teaches 10-11 year olds, I would expect that behavior from that age group, without it really being malicious. And I was only 12 at the time of this conversation.
A 12 year old interrupting to make a joke isn’t , in my mind, a big deal. If it happened to me, I would have simply given the kid a warning, explained why it was disrespectful, and left it at that. If they didn’t do it again, I wouldn’t even tell the parents because who the heck really cares that much?
Apparently, my dad’s best friend.
Now he never said a word to me about this, oddly enough, nor did he ask my mom to talk to me about it delicately.
I didn’t hear about it till this big confrontation with 4 adults, all of whom told me I was a brat, disrespectful, and not nice to other people.
At the time, I also took singing lessons from this best friend’s wife.
She didn’t like me much because I couldn’t stand still while I sang. And I got tired easily. Also I didn’t like the music choices that she insisted on. She didn’t ever teach us any songs we actually got to pick, and when I asked if we could learn any songs I actually knew and liked, she said no because they were pop songs.
I guess it was her right as a teacher not to teach it if she didn’t like it, but she really shouldn’t have expected me to be interested in learning if it was all music I didn’t care about. I’m pretty sure music teachers in actual public school pick at least some songs the kids like.
I found out years later that the reason I can’t stand up easily is I have uneven legs, so I tilt to one side when I stand (good think my name isn’t Eileen), and I have a more curved spine than usual and a curved tailbone, making it hard to stand straight for long periods of time. I have gotten a bit better with some chiropractic treatment and exercises to improve my core, but it’s never been easy for me to move the same as other people, and it probably never will be unless the problem is resolved. Which is unlikely.
So she got mad at me for something I couldn’t help. and I told her and my mom that I just got tired and didn’t feel right standing.
The crazy thing is, you can sing sitting down. It wouldn’t have been a big deal. Sure it’s better to stand,but I wasn’t going to be doing any Broadway musical, it would have been fine for me to sit while learning. She sat while teaching me.
Even moving around, which was still easier for me than standing because I could at least shift balance, she wouldn’t allow.
I suppose, maybe it’s not her fault that she didn’t know I had a real problem and just thought I wasn’t listening to her. But the issue is, she never even considered any alternative explanation other than I was trying to be defiant.
Well, to be fair, after she got on my nerves with this crap for weeks on end, I was trying to be defiant. But it didn’t start off that way. If sh’e d been nice to me, I wouldn’t have wanted to act out. But she did all this from the start, when I wasn’t trying to do anything to set her off.
I know, not the most mature thing–but I was 12 years old. 12 year olds aren’t mature. Even so the worst I did was probably roll my eyes and act bored, which is rude, but hardly the kind of rebellion I would think would warrant a four person intervention.
Again, no one just sat me down and talked to me about this in a normal way first. Which is my first recourse as child care provider myself. I always gives kids a warning before I jumped to a full lecture. If they ignore the warning, then I know they’re blowing me off. But if they don’t, then they were just being kids with short attention spans who don’t know social etiquette yet. I make allowances. It’s not like every kid is going to be able to figure this out intuitively.
Anyway, to get back to how this tied into love.
During this dialogue we were having, which felt more like a one sided monologue to me, they were criticizing pretty much everything about me.
Even at the time I didn’t think it made a lot of sense, 4 adults, two of whom I didn’t really know that well, and barely talked to the one, and my parents, all criticizing me.
I’m now very against this approach in practice. I think most people with experience with kids or even teenagers would be. Two people is about the limit for any confrontation with a kid that’s not a medical emergency, I’d say, without it feeling like you’re bullying the kid. I’ve seen kids cry over less, as it is.
Oh and I was crying through most of the conversation. Do you think they stopped? Do you think they tried to comfort me and get me to calm down?
Nope.
Tey told me I shouldn’t cry anymore.
And my singing teacher even picked apart the way I was sitting as being a defensive psotiosns.
Can’t imagine why I would have feel the need to protect myself , under the circumstances.
Now that I’m experienced enough to know how weird this situation was , I’m amazed my mom didn’t see it that way. But I figure my father probably bullied her into it, as he usually did.
The icing on the cake of all this was that one thing I was getting in trouble for was something my dad told me to do, and though I even expressed doubt about doing it to him, he said it would be fine. So I did it.
It was not fine.
He conveniently had forgotten he told me to do it. He admitted to it during the confrontation.
Do you think they stopped? Do you think they apologized to me for the mistake? Do you think they admitted it wasn’t fair?
Not in my memory. But I have blocked out a lot of it, I could be wrong…I do know it wouldn’t be in character for them to do it. I can’t recall either of the other two adults ever admit they were wrong.
My dad would only admit he was wrong about imagined things, not real things. Go figure.
The part that made this about love, much to my dismay both now and then, was that they claimed this entire humiliating experience was done out of love.
Yeah…it really felt like being torn apart for 2-3 hour staring was an act of love.
In the end, though, I did still quit the drum. I find it funny that the thing that set this off was still something I won about. Yet, I feel like I lost more than I gained from the experience.
I’m not sorry now I quit drum, it wasn’t for me. I’m not even sorry I took singing lesson, I enjoy singing. Granted, I hated taking them for that woman, but I did like learning it and I like knowing a bit about it now.
I do still wish she’d taught me how to sing different styles than she did so I could have used it more widely, but them’s the brakes.
Of course one incident might not have given me a complex about love, though for some people that might be enough to do it, but I’m a reasonable person, and I was even as a teen, though less so then, of course.
Still, I could have probably put together that that wasn’t right, if my dad hadn’t reinforced it over and over again.
But pretty much any time my dad and I were alone for longer than 10 minutes he’d start up on the subject again. Bring up every example they had, remind me that his two friends,and even their family, didn’t like me. Say I was a lot like a narcissist.
The funny part is my dad is the the actual narcissist, or has BPD. One of other or both, maybe. I now know it’s common to project your own toxic traits onto someone else, I don’t know that at 12, of course.
Always though, my dad would end or begin or interject into the middle of these lectures, that this was done in “love.”
I’m a very sensitive woman. I always have been. I won’t say verbal abuse is worse than physical abuse, both suck.
But to a sensitive person, it was devastating to hear this so many times.
I’m not a meek type of girl though. I fought back.
But since fighting back, both the first time,and every time after that, never got my anywhere, it created this complex where I feel like nothing I do will ever change people’s minds about me, and I expected them to dislike me, secretly, even if I’m not aware of doing anything to them to cause it.
I expected that for many years every time I met any new person.
Unfortunately, the world had a lot of touchy people in it, and sometimes, I got proven right. I’m sure my insecurities didn’t help with that, since insecure people tend to do things to tick others off anyway, but sometimes it really just came out of nowhere.
The unlucky times my dad got involved, he would usually agree with whoever it was. Even if it was the Sunday school teacher beefing with me for causing problems just by sitting in her class doing nothing.
My sister was there too. They don’t call her in for questioning. She didn’t even know what I did, to this day, I don’t know. But I know my dad was always ready to agree with anyone who had a problem with his daughter. Didn’t matter how unbalanced that person was to begin with.
All the little things my dad did to sabotage my life, but they added up.
I can’t of course, lay the blame for everything at his feet. Some of it was my fault. Some of it was other people’s besides my dad’s.
But the person who twisted the knife every time by calling it love, that was my dad.
I’ve never had people comment on how little I seem to be able to receive love.
Because when someone says that word, I flinch sometimes, inwardly.
I actually prefer if people use words like “I care about you” or “I appreciate you” because they ton’d set me off the same way. My dad certainly would never use words like that.
But “proud for you” is a trigger too, because he used that also.
It never meant anything. I figured out years in that he didn’t mean it. And I figured out also that even if I had done something to be proud of, he would have meant it. He didn’t think that way.
Pride in us wasn’t about what we did, or even about us being his kids, it was always about what he thought we wanted to hear to do what he wanted.
See, some people just never give love, and that’s bad enough.
Other people use love as reward for good behavior, and that’s just as bad, or maybe worse.
The type of person really talk about is the kid who uses love as a motivation if and when threats aren’t working. Just so you can be both scared, and then feel guilty for being scared.
Gas lighting at another level.
Thanks to this, I can’t feel love easily.
I won’t say it’s impossible. I feel love for other people. It’s easier when it children, people who don’t scare me.
That’s what got me, truth didn’t help. Truth is very important to me. If I assume something about someone, and alt er find out a fact about them that calls that into question, I actually changed my mind. I can’t imagine not doing that. But there are many people who will never change their mind, no matter what the truth is.
It’s hard to realize that when you’re not that kind of person.
But I’ve learned to let it slide off my back more.
I’m not writing this to say that my dad ruined my life. Or even that he ruined my relationships. I have good relationships with some of my family. And I have friends. I’m learning to get better at all this.
I hope one day to have a good marriage–which I will probably get counseling for, but that’s just good sense.
And a good relationship with my own children, if God grants me them like I hope.
But I’m not going to lie about my life and say all this didn’t matter or have some effect. Admitting it mattered actually is part of healing.
So it did matter and it is sad. Even saying that took me years to get to. I’m glad for the people along the way, here and there, who did take my side and tell me that that wasn’t normal to go through that.
I had a very good grandmother who would sympathize with me, she was still there for me when my parents weren’t. I had a good youth leader who helped me see at least some of what my dad did was wrong years before I could go to therapy to her the same thing.
I wasn’t always alone. I was just alone too much for it to be good.
But we take what we get in life, and I see no point complaining about it. I think we get what we need ultimately if we seek it, but not always the way we imagine it.
I’ve still never really had father figure other than God. But God has been enough, I know that will sound weird to the person who’s not a Christian, but it is what it is. Think I’m crazy if you want, I really don’t care. Until you have a better cure for broken hearted and lonely people, I don’t really think I’ll swap out mine.
I hope that I will learn to like the word “love” when people say to me again.
I think all this came to mind not just because of the prompt, but because of a thing one of my friends, who is a very blunt person (too much like me probably) said to me at my birthday party.
She pointed out: “Look how loved you are.”
I was thinking that it was nice of them all to show up. And I thought she was right, they were trying to show love.
Yet, when she said it, I felt nothing expect probably confused.
Like I usually feel when someone says that. Or uncertain. Maybe it’s fear, maybe it’s just doubt. Maybe they’re the same thing at bottom.
If I accept that, then how will I handle it when they end up doing the wrong thing to me, or leaving me? As everyone will, sooner or later.
Unfortunately for the person who has “avoidant attachment” disorder, as one therapist told me (he was an ass though, but he might have been right about that–he didn’t help me with the problem though), the fact is that being separated from the people you love is inevitable.
It’s hard enough for a healthy person to accept loss and grief. It’s harder if you’re someone like me who has had very little chance to even feel loved at all, so any short stint of it that will be taken away again feels cruel.
I have learned however, that often we’re more loved than we see.
And that the way I interpret love is not always the way people show it. A lot of stuff is just not communicated right.
And recently, I had an ordeal that my friends did not exactly make me feel better about. Doing a lot of the same things that set me off–but I didn’t blow up at them.
I was a bit upset, but I didn’t lash out at them because I knew, at least in my head, that they meant well and were trying to help.
While I would rather actually feel better, I do at least derive some sense of comfort for the fact that I have people who will attempt to help me, even if they don’t succeed. Having grace for people is important.
And that’s a huge stride for me, from where I started from.
So if you related to this post at all, I can tell you that it’s small things like that are along the path to health.
I don’t have it all figured out yet, but I know that at least being able to treat people with some degree of trust, even if you have doubts and anxieties, is the only way to start.
It might take years for me to feel it the way others do. I can be mad about that– or I can accept it and keep trying.
Maybe this is my favorite Naruto characters are Sai and Gaara. Both characters who pretty much embody the journey of learning to feel things again and feel them the right way.
Or my favorite author is C. S. Lewis, who wrote that it was important to be able to feel the right way about things, to be a whole and happy person. [It’s in the “Abolition of Man” book.]
If you met me in person, you might not even guess this about me. My friends have told me they wouldnt’ have before I told them.
I take that good sign. I’ve worked enough on the issues I have are not all obvious. That’s progress. They used to be blatantly obvious to people, based on what they told me.
I’m not a closed off person in every way either.
I guess my point in all this it is to say that these issues don’t define me, and they don’t define you either. You can have issues like this and still be a loving person. So they make you more loving because you over-compensate, in fact.
But I think you can never been too loving, so it’s a win-win. Sometimes broken stuff can be fixed to be stronger than it was naturally. Like when they cut off the trunk of trees to graft in a stronger trunk, but keep the old root system. (They can do that with fruit trees, did you know that?). You gotta know what to keep and what to throw away.
Well this got pretty long for a daily prompt post, so I think I’ll end it here. I hope some of this was encouraging, since it was kind of raw and heavy for this kind of post, but it was where my mind went, as as you know my motto is to keep it honest.
Since I read “The Happiness Project” by Gretchin Rubin, I became a lot more aware of clutter in my house.
I’ve never been a “neat” person, and I’m still not, to be honest. Not how people would define it.
But I have started to eliminate stuff I don’t need, and to clean up after myself much more often.
I also implemented a lot of organization methods for areas of clutter for our whole family.
Like I purchased new laundry hampers so my sisters and I could divide ours up, since we share a room, and it used to all get mashed together.
I put organizing drawers in so I could collect old cards and books that I didn’t want to throw away, but don’t really need at all times.
And recently, I bought hanging shelves that you can put on doors, or nail to the wall. We have a small bathroom that 4 people have to share, and a small bedroom, and the shelves help free up our space a lot. I already can’t believe we ever didn’t have them. It’s so nice never to lose my hairbrush or face cream under the sink now.
Everyone agreed it was an improvement. The crazy thing is, we had the clutter for years, I’m not kidding, years, and did nothing about it.
I’ve come to realize how easy it is to improve your life , even with limited space, if you just get creative.
I’m sure this skill will come in handy if I ever have my own place.
My grandmother, my father, and my mother, all tend to hoard stuff and not throw it away. I inherited a tenancy to hang onto things long after they’re not useful anymore from them…I’m trying to change my habits.
But I think another way we could de-clutter is in our digital world.
I delete apps I don’t use anymore. (Which is better for your phone anyway).
I also have deleted YouTube channels that I never check, and ones that seem to stress me out too much to watch.
Keep my recommended feed full of what’s interesting or wholesome, right?
And I don’t use most social media, and what I do use, I tend to not have notifications on for unless it’s important, just so my phone isn’t clogged up with endless updates on stuff I’m not going to check anyway.
Face it, if we live in a first world country, we can’t get away from needing cell phones unless maybe you’re Amish (and you wouldn’t be reading this if you were). But we can control the phones more by making conscious choices about what we allow on them. I have limited games and other apps on mine.
I think clutter is more about what takes up mental energy than always about what you possess.
Some of us should cut back on reading trashy novels or comics. It’s okay to have some trashy stuff, but it shouldn’t be the only thing you read. It clutters up your mind with a lot of useless information that has no real world application.
It’s good to balance out any cheap or poor quality content you consume with content that helps you learn, or feel more encouraged to do what you need to do. Staying grounded isn’t just an exercise you can do with your 5 senses, it’s also something you can put into your mind.
We all have mindless stuff we like, but the more intentional we are about being aware of what goes into our minds and hearts, the less it will control us.
I find that I’m most often the most bogged down with random crap when I’m paying the least attention to what I consume.
(This works for food too.)
So yeah, that’s how I de-clutter–and I probably could stand to de-clutter some more right now. That’s the fun part, there’s always something else you could do.
People say they want to avoid work and chores, but I was so much more depressed when I didn’t work or do chores that I now think having at least a few tasks ever day or week that you need to get done is good for your mental health. Now if I don’t have one already, I’ll find one on purpose. It helps me not waste time being bored so much. Only so much media you can watch before you feel listless.
I love big cats, and little cats, in general, but lions are the coolest.
They have organized families, and they care for each other as a group. Sometimes they also show an odd sense of compassion even for rival lions or other animals.
They get a rap for being killers, like most predators, but they’re really mostly not hostile and gentle unless they’re hungry.
With some exceptions, it seems like even in the animal kingdom there are good and bad eggs, but over all, lions are awesome.
I’d like to go on safari sometime, if I could ever afford it, and see them in the wild.
Several years ago my family went on a road trip to Wyoming to visit relatives.
That was the last road trip I went on with my father.
That was the one he punched me on.
Only in the arm, but, it was still a violation of trust. He threatened to do worse if I ever hit him again.
I hit him because he walked in on my in the bathroom, deliberately, and then just laughed instead of apologizing. Acing like a middle schooler (no I’ve know middle schoolers who were more polite).
I’m not defending my actions per sec, I still probably shouldn’t have done that (though if it was any other guy doing the same thing my father would have been fine with it). I guess I thought if he’s going to act like a creep, I’d treat him like one.
But that logic didn’t go over well with my family.
Still, my dad retaliated too much. He hurt me when he hit me back, and he could hit harder than I could. Also, he hit me twice. But it wasn’t really the phsyical pain that bothered me, it was that he did it at all. Something my mom always said he’d never do, though he’d threatened to plenty of times.
My dad had a nasty temper, and the thing I realized was it didn’t matter if you could argue I deserved it (which is what my aunt basically said). My dad got mad over stupid things all the time, even if this time it was valid, if he’d hit me over this, he’d do it when it wasn’t valid too.
I was scared of him getting that angry again–but then I always was scared of his anger.
I didn’t know at the time hat that kind of fear shouldn’t be the kind your father inspires in you.
That with a safe man, you wouldn’t even be able to picture them hitting you even if they were angry.
There are men I know like that, but my father was not one of them. Not from when I was a little kid.
The next year, when they all went on a road trip, I stayed home. Best decision I made where that was concerned.
By the year after that, my father had moved out. Actually, it was right after their trip. Where I heard there was plenty of drama that I was happy I missed, no doubt I’d have ended up in the middle of it.
Something died between me and my dad on the trip though. Maybe if he’d let it be a wake up call, and had tried to change, and fix things after that, it could have recovered.
But instead he blamed me for what happened, claiming he “didn’t know what else to do” since I “never respected him”.
Even though the entire incident was started by him disrespecting me.
But my dad is good at gas lighting.
My father wasn’t often physically abusive. That incident was the closest he came to it, usually he didn’t do more than yank me out of chairs or rooms he wanted to be in, and threaten to hit me if I talked to him the way I did.
But since it had gotten worse over time, I had a feeling it would just keep getting worse till it became a consistent thing, if we pushed him enough. We all walked down eggshells around him because of that.
My life got much better once he moved out (really we made him move out).
I’ve shared the story on this blog before, more while it was happening, in fact, but, I doubt most of my new followers have read those posts, so sharing it again after all this time is probably a good idea for context.
There’s too much to really tell the rest, though.
I’ve had good road trips since that time, and I hope I will remember them for years to come, but it’s probably not up for debate that that one is the most memorable.
I’m likely to remember it till my dying day unless I get dementia in my old age.
I’m not really sad or mad about it now, it just reminds me of why we did what we did, and why it needed to be done.
I hope other people had more pleasant memories for this prompt though.
I got a longer one because I live in the part of the country that is currently on fire!
I’m all right, no worries, but the schools here are closed and we can only hope they’ll be open by next week.
Which is really the least of our worries.
You know, other people get snow days, but along the West Coast, we get “fire days”. I’d say that’s way worse.
Also this is the worst fire incident we’ve had in 50 years or more, they keep saying.
This topped off a pretty weird two weeks for me. As I’ve been sharing, I’ve been doing a lot over break. My break was less relaxing than my actual job.
I bought a new car that I had to take to the shop three times. Twice it was a pretty minor thing, just some software updates that they at first told me could have been a head gasket leak that would cost 4 or 5 grand…thanks for that 2 hours of panic attack!
The other was to get the brakes checked, which they told me were fine, but then another place told me were not, in fact fine, and I will need to fix them soon. So…yeah, that was nice.
The other time I just had to get a tire patched, so no big deal.
Thankfully, the car seems to be fine now, and I hope it will stay that way for a few months at least, since I just got it.
Also I went on my first planned trip on vacation without my mom, and the day we left, I had an allergic reaction to medication I was on because of my wisdom teeth getting taken out, and I had to go ot the ER while on an island, to get meds for it.
Thankfully, it wasn’t a dangerous reaction, but it was bad enough to get hives for 4 days. I’ve never had those before, I don’t recommend it, though my case was mild, but still.
So…yeah, then we got back, and found out there was fire all around the area we live in, and my work would be closed all week.
Which is a minor concern, because the real problem is the many friends I have who may have lost their jobs or houses, or their families have, since this started.
Despite the crazy week I had, I know I’m the lucky one, and that’s saying something. All that could happen in one week, and there are still thousands of people having a worse week than I am, just in this county. That’s a staggering thought.
I’m not sure I have any words of wisdom to make a cliche speech about hanging together, but, I can say, it does put things in perspective.
I was tempted to feel sorry for myself, after all, my trip was partially ruined, and I had several days of anxiety I didn’t need, while I was trying to recover from hives, which doesn’t help with hives.
And I was worried about getting to work and making a bad financial decisions.
But then I realized how bad things were in the county right now, and that I really had very little to complain about compared to them.
I have a house and my workplace is likely to reopen, since it’s not in the red zone. So I’ll probably still have a job next week, unlike many people. We didn’t lose power, so far, and no family I have lives in the red zones.
It could have been much worse.
It could be a lot better, but, you know, no matter what’s going on with you, someone else is having a worse day, probably. I mean, if you can even read this post, I guarantee someone out there is having a worse day than you.
I don’t want to be accused of using this disaster just to generate more traffic to my site, but I did wonder if anyone would be interested in the perspective of someone who lives where this happens.
A lot of people say California is scary because of the earthquakes–and well, the lunatics.
I agree about the latter, but a fact many people don’t realize who live outside this state is that the wildfires that happen pretty much every year do much more damage than 80-90% of our earthquakes do.
Every now and then, we have a bad one, but the majority of us barely feel a jolt when it happens, and it doesn’t usually spread outside the strike zone, while a fire like this can become two fires, or in this case, up to 6.
And since we get dry weather a lot here, and that impacts fires, but not earthquakes, environmentally, we’re more in danger.
People are blaming our government for not preparing for this, and while I’m sure there is some truth to that, the reality is that the worst fire is happening near the coast, there’s not a lot we can do about that area being dry. We use ocean water to fight these fires, but the wind is what kept us from doing that, not the lack of resources.
Sometimes, nature just fricks you over.
Some spiteful people online are also saying that this is what the people in Hollywood deserved, and they don’t really feel sorry for them.
A lot of people don’t like California, after all.
Heck, I live in the area and I don’t like it a lot of the time.
Still, it is our home.
And whatever people think about Hollywood, it’s really not most of the state, like outsiders believe.
It’s true that the rich stars who had to evacuate probably have plenty of money to rebuild with, making it hard to feel sorry for them compared to the other people, still it’s their home too.
And there are many more people who are not well off, and were just doing their jobs. I know one person who had to leave a hospital they worked at over this.
I’ve noticed that we humans tend to rush to assume things are karma and judgment when disaster strikes.
Even I do, and I wonder why. Because while making sense of it is something we want to do, I don’t really see how it makes us feel better.
I mean, it could be, but the tricky thing about assuming that, is that you have to ignore how many people who are good and were innocent get caught up in these tragedies.
People like to cite religion as a source for saying all this was judgment, my own father likes to do that.
However, at least in the Bible, many disasters are recorded that were not God’s judgment. The bible even kind of makes it clear that not all bad things are a judgment. Sometimes, they are just bad. Sometimes, there may even be other forces at work besides God.
Why do we rush to assume we know what it is? Like we all know the Mind of God?
Besides which, all the churches, hospital, charities, that get affected by this, are we going to say that God judged them also?
I guess some people might believe that, but I have a hard time swallowing it.
If you’re wondering what it feels like to live through this, it’s weird how things can feel normal, in one way. As long as I don’t step outside and inhale the smoke that makes us feel sick and cough.
And as long as I don’t turn on the news.
Or check my churches’ small group chat to see how many people have family in danger right now.
It’s been strange to me many times how easy it is to ignore tragedy even when it’s close to home, because it’s not right in my backyard.
Yesterday, there was even a faulty alert sent to our area, and then another one this morning, scaring people, who thought we were out of the burn zone.
For a second, we weren’t sure if we might have to evacuate after all.
The thought went through my head that instead of just losing money from not working, I might be facing losing my house and stuff instead.
Thankfully, it was a false alarm, but even for a few minutes, I understood a little better how other people feel.
People are coming together, that’s the nice thing. It’s a lot like how the hurricanes affect people on the East coast.
I feel like I’d prefer the hurricane to this, but I’m pretty sure if I actually saw one, I wouldn’t think so. They’re still more destructive in the long run than the fires.
Still, I think of how scared the students at my school probably have even this week, and it’s weird. Mostly we only worry about school shooters and fires being started in the lab in our schools.
And even that’s bad enough, but you’re used to that threat, so you become dull to it.
You don’t really get used to the threat of wild fires. They’re unpredictable.
They think humans may have started it. We can hope by accident.
Maybe tha’t why we assign blame for this so easily too. Fires, unlike storms, can be started by man. We’ve all seen Bambi. It’s easy to blame the pot heads and crazy people out here.
Yet, it often is an accident. Or just faulty equipment. Not malicious intent (sometimes it is, and then I do think those people deserve what they get.)
The reality is tragedy can be tragic because it’s accidental, and it just happens.
I can’t moralize really about to, since eI don’t know how it started either.
I know we’ve been praying a lot out here, though some people have reported that their family/friends didn’t appreciate the gesture too much.
Whether you believe in God or not, I think it’s good to understand that people pray because they don’t know what else to do to help, but they want to do something. And some of us have no other way to intervene. I’m not offended by Muslims or Buddhists praying for me, even if I don’t acknowledge their gods. I appreciate the support.
There’s no reason to be harsh to people who mean well. Though, when we’re stressed, it can be hard to remember that, so I also hope we can be forgiving of people who may get snippy with us under the circumstances.
I was told we might get some financial aid from the government for my coworkers and I, but honestly, I think most of us don’t need it the most of anyone. If we’re going back to work at all, we’ll be better off than thousands of people right now.
I hope the government directs its resources to the people who will be homeless and jobless for months after this.
I guess that’s all I have to say. Things have taken a better turn today, and if the weather cooperates, we may get all the fires contained by Sunday, at least partially, so I hope if you pray, you’re praying that the weather will stay clam and the wind will not return.
If you are interested in donating to this, there are many things people are setting up to help the victims of the tragedy, if you look it up online, I’m not a patron of any particular charity, but I saw that some are being put together on social media.