Oh, Hey, He’s Back

I’ve jotted ideas down in worn-out journals and loose sticky notes. Good ideas were written on ripped pieces of looseleaf that are now sitting in some garbage heap far, faraway. Although those ideas will never come to fruition, the original idea I had for this blog remains intact: This blog was created for the sole-purpose of discussing video games and my thoughts on ’em.

With that out of the way, there are 2 things I should say before I actually update this blog:

  1. I’m sorry to you, my derelict blog; you deserved better
  2. And yes, I was definitely too busy to update this blog because, well, adulthood

Anyway, that’s it. New blog post every Thursday (I hope).

The Hunt

I like to think that my professional and creative pursuits stem from a noble root. For example, creative expression or the need to connect with others are fine reasons to pursue writing, but a thing like recognition is superficial and hollow. But the truth is, I hold myself on too high of a moral standard. I find myself dipping below that fine line between superficiality and righteousness and getting wrapped up in some moral dilemma.

When I was twenty, I read Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro, the first novel I’d picked up and read on my own after the end of high school. When I finished it, my brain turned to soft clay and felt as if were being pulled apart and reshaped by a sculptor. My brain was undergoing a reconfiguration process, or something of the sort, I thought. It was only later that I realized I had had a “moment,” or what most people might consider euphoria.

I sifted through my memories of the book like old photographs, hoping to find something I’d missed or perhaps needed to think through, but everything was accounted for. And even after the investigation, all I kept thinking about was that damned book.

That one moment in time led me on a winding path to college as an English major. I went after that feeling.

I read a variety of literature: from science fiction stories about the universe coming to an end, stars turning off in rows like lights in a stadium, to the plight of slaves in the antebellum south. And although I felt immense empathy for the fictional characters of these stories, I never quite found or felt that mind-bending feeling.

And then I thought that this fruitless chasing of a feeling and a moment in time might just be what’s at the core of an addict’s mind. The addict is always chasing a feeling similar to the first one that made him want more, and all the time in between his highs are intermittent shiftless lulls.

Does any of this make sense? I don’t know.

 

 

Is Anyone Out There?

Cyberspace is a vast and lonesome place. Like a novice hiker lost on a mountain trail, the countless places within the net can seem dizzying to some, which is why I left in the first place. But I made my way back again to the digital, just as I do in my real life (more on this later). Instead of thinking that my life has become a horrible cyclical hell, I’m choosing to believe that I’ve found a loophole, a glitch in the matrix, in this long and arduous journey, and am now moving to another (hopefully better) phase of this life.

The net is an abyss, and I’ve thrown a stone from the rubble down into this cavernous space so that I might hear a response. In time, if I’m fortunate enough, I might hear the sound of an echoing thud.