Friday, February 17, 2006
No pain, no gain. Fine. But no guilt no pleasure?
Last week end, I finally completed my assignments. I'd looked forward to this day for the last 6 months, perhaps even longer. In my dreams, life stretched out, utterly beautiful and completely essay-free in every aspect. I'd made plans for a zillion different activities, whose only common trait was that none of them involved my sitting in front of a computer, forcing myself to be simultaneously creative and credible.
Early Sunday morning, I celebrated – by watching
During the last 12 weeks, life was full of illicit pleasures – several of them worth writing about. There were movies to be watched, books to lose sleep over and which once watched or read, begged to be written about. There were crazy incidents involving friends and colleagues. There were any numbers of items in the news I was itching to write about, any numbers of friends I have stead-fastly ignored... Now that I have all the time in the world for guilt-free hedonism, suddenly pleasure seems to be playing a tough game of hide and seek with me.
I tried calling up long-ignored friends. I called one friend well past
I've tried reading. I read the Sunday Times, caught up with old unread issues of the New Yorker & the Economist, Neal Stephenson's Cryptonomicon, Colleen McCollough's Julius Caesar1, Vikram Seth's Two Lives, Annie Prloux's Shipping News, Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway – just lost interest after about 5 pages in each novel. I've tried watching movies, was even lucky enough to catch a couple of good ones (Aparna Sen's movie, and Kanda Naal Mudhal). But you can only watch so many movies in a week end2...
The problem lies not with the book or movie, but in me. Take guilt away, and apparently, you lose the pleasure, too. This wasn't always the case. The problem is that with age, my ability to keep pleasure at bay has waned. When I was in 10th grade, for example, I didn't read novels or watch movies when I had "exams" to study for. I admit that the presence of my mom might have had something to do with that. But since I moved out of home, I don't let pressing matters like exams or deadlines keep me away from reading. If anything, I read more - convincing myself that my over-taxed brain needs a break... Sure, I feel guilty afterwards. But when I look at my pathetic attempts to "unwind" after 10+ weeks of some very hard work (OK, that's not entirely true, but there most certainly were pockets of moderately hard work dispersed over 10+ weeks), I worry that guilt appears to have gotten all enmeshed with pleasure.
What lies ahead? A heedless hunt for deadlines, hated assignments, or any other gun to my head so that I can enjoy guilty pleasures again?
In the meantime, I was finally reduced to cleaning my room and doing the laundry. And I didn't even get the halo I usually get after performing such selfless acts of courage. Today, I've been toying with the idea of writing long emails to friends in
[1] This sudden loss of interest is particularly hurtful because I'm about a third into the novel, and had found it fascinating till this week end.
[2] Only so many movies in a week end? Egad! What alien force has taken over my body and mind?
Falstaff: I agree. Cleaning in any context is ALWAYS a mistake :)
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