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Why can't you be what you want to be?

 
 
Reply Thu 23 Mar, 2006 04:07 pm


Why is it that all the things i lust after in my life are the unattainable? It's probably a stupid waste of time, years and years of being in dreamland, one minute a rockstar, the next a character in a Stephen King book or a time-traveller or great magician or some supernatural being, whatever my mind leads me to. Always, no matter what i'm doing i'm only 20% there, the other 80% of me is off far far away. Then when you click back to real life everything is disappointing, there is no magic, no adventure.

sigh, pass that wine before i chew my wrists open

Rolling Eyes
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 2,010 • Replies: 45
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Bella Dea
 
  1  
Reply Thu 23 Mar, 2006 04:14 pm
Your first problem is that you have already defeated yourself by stating that you can't get to where you want to be. You already think that somehow, you don't deserve to have what you want. The truth is that yes, sometimes we CAN'T have everything we want, say like becoming president of the US (the odds of acutally becoming prez are pretty low since there is only one position open every 4 years). But do you think that any of our former presidents thought for one second that they couldn't be president?

The point is, if you want it you have to go for it and realize that you deserve it. Quit the self pity act, get out there and make your dreams reality!

If you want to be a magician, what's stopping you?
0 Replies
 
Sturgis
 
  1  
Reply Thu 23 Mar, 2006 04:49 pm
Why is the other 80% off far far away? If that's the case then maybe it's time to look at the 80% and see what is there...maybe that is where you really want to be.

As to life having no magic or adventure, look around...adventure, excitement and even magic are everywhere. You just have to open up your eyes, soul and mind and allow them to be part of your experience, and vice versa..
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Stray Cat
 
  1  
Reply Thu 23 Mar, 2006 08:46 pm
Ok, you guys have inspired me! I'm going to follow my dream! I'm going to do it!

I'm gonna become....the best damned ventriloquist in the world!!!
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djjd62
 
  1  
Reply Thu 23 Mar, 2006 08:56 pm
i live by the motto, where ever you are, be somewhere else

if you can function being 20% here, and 80% somewhere else go for it
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Reyn
 
  1  
Reply Thu 23 Mar, 2006 09:04 pm
Hmmm, I smell the start of a very strange A2Kian thread here.

<Twilight Zone music playing quietly in the background.......>
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Thu 23 Mar, 2006 09:10 pm
Whatever you decide to become, be the best in the world; always compete with yourself to improve.
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blacksmithn
 
  1  
Reply Thu 23 Mar, 2006 09:42 pm
Give up. Spare the rest of us the existential pose, vacant stares and whining.
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Lord Ellpus
 
  1  
Reply Thu 23 Mar, 2006 10:40 pm
blacksmithn wrote:
Give up. Spare the rest of us the existential pose, vacant stares and whining.



Well said, blacksmithn.

This is the reason why Simon Cowell and co. have made so much money.

Does anyone remember the times when ambitions were set at a realistic level, and aimed at the real world?
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kickycan
 
  1  
Reply Thu 23 Mar, 2006 11:15 pm
Miss Slipknot,

I know what you mean. Life. What a raw deal, huh? Well, I'm going to help you out. Right now. Miss Slipknot, here is the great secret to getting though life happy and healthy. It is, basically, the meaning of life.

The meaning of life is potatoes.

Blue potatoes.

You're welcome.
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Thu 23 Mar, 2006 11:20 pm
kickycan, I knew we could count on you for the true solution for the meaning of life. You're the greatest!
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Treya
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 Mar, 2006 12:24 am
Re: Why can't you be what you want to be?
Miss Slipknot wrote:


Why is it that all the things i lust after in my life are the unattainable? It's probably a stupid waste of time, years and years of being in dreamland, one minute a rockstar, the next a character in a Stephen King book or a time-traveller or great magician or some supernatural being, whatever my mind leads me to. Always, no matter what i'm doing i'm only 20% there, the other 80% of me is off far far away. Then when you click back to real life everything is disappointing, there is no magic, no adventure.

sigh, pass that wine before i chew my wrists open

Rolling Eyes


You can be what you want to be. You are the only one who can do it. People can't do it for you. The "perfect job", "perfect boyfriend", "perfect anything" can't do it. You have to be happy with who you are. Once you are happy with who you are, then you can see what's really important to you and move towards that.
0 Replies
 
flushd
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 Mar, 2006 12:30 am
You want what you can't have.

Once you've gone through a few sh*tty jobs, rustled through garbage bins looking for a couch for your crap apartment.....

You'll wake up and realize "Sh*t. I better get off my butt and do something, or else I'm gonna die like a pathetic loser."
Laughing

Or. You can just train yourself now to want what you have. <<I recommend this choice.
0 Replies
 
Chumly
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 Mar, 2006 12:47 am
Re: Why can't you be what you want to be?
Hi Miss Slipknot,

I like what you say and I find myself in the same boat at times. Reminds me of an excellent old movie called "The Secret Life Of Walter Mitty". Go rent it and tell me what you think.

James Thurber is one of America's best known humorists, and "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty" is his best known story. The story's main character is a middle-aged, middle-class man who escapes from the routine drudgery of his suburban life into fantasies of heroic conquest. Upon the story's publication, Walter Mitty became an archetypal American figure. Today, people still describe a certain kind of neurotic, daydreaming man as a "Walter Mitty type.''
Quote:
"WE'RE going through!" The Commander's voice was like thin ice breaking. He wore his full-dress uniform, with the heavily braided white cap pulled down rakishly over one cold gray eye. "We can't make it, sir. It's spoiling for a hurricane, if you ask me." "I'm not asking you, Lieutenant Berg," said the Commander. "Throw on the power lights! Rev her up to 8500! We're going through!" The pounding of the cylinders increased: ta-pocketa-pocketa-pocketa-pocketa-pocketa. The Commander stared at the ice forming on the pilot window. He walked over and twisted a row of complicated dials. "Switch on No. 8 auxiliary!" he shouted. "Switch on No. 8 auxiliary!" repeated Lieutenant Berg. "Full strength in No. 3 turret!" shouted the Commander. "Full strength in No. 3 turret!" The crew, bending to their various tasks in the huge, hurtling eight-engined Navy hydroplane, looked at each other and grinned. "The Old Man'll get us through," they said to one another. "The Old Man ain't afraid of hell!" . . .

"Not so fast! You're driving too fast!" said Mrs. Mitty. "What are you driving so fast for?"

"Hmm?" said Walter Mitty. He looked at his wife, in the seat beside him, with shocked astonishment. She seemed grossly unfamiliar, like a strange woman who had yelled at him in a crowd. "You were up to fifty-five," she said. "You know I don't like to go more than forty. You were up to fifty-five." Walter Mitty drove on toward Waterbury in silence, the roaring of the SN202 through the worst storm in twenty years of Navy flying fading in the remote, intimate airways of his mind. "You're tensed up again," said Mrs. Mitty. "It's one of your days. I wish you'd let Dr. Renshaw look you over."

Walter Mitty stopped the car in front of the building where his wife went to have her hair done. "Remember to get those overshoes while I'm having my hair done," she said. "I don't need overshoes," said Mitty. She put her mirror back into her bag. "We've been all through that," she said, getting out of the car. "You're not a young man any longer." He raced the engine a little. "Why don't you wear your gloves? Have you lost your gloves?" Walter Mitty reached in a pocket and brought out the gloves. He put them on, but after she had turned and gone into the building and he had driven on to a red light, he took them off again. "Pick it up, brother!" snapped a cop as the light changed, and Mitty hastily pulled on his gloves and lurched ahead. He drove around the streets aimlessly for a time, and then he drove past the hospital on his way to the parking lot.

. . . "It's the millionaire banker, Wellington McMillan," said the pretty nurse. "Yes?" said Walter Mitty, removing his gloves slowly. "Who has the case?" "Dr. Renshaw and Dr. Benbow, but there are two specialists here, Dr. Remington from New York and Dr. Pritchard-Mitford from London. He flew over." A door opened down a long, cool corridor and Dr. Renshaw came out. He looked distraught and haggard. "Hello, Mitty," he said. `'We're having the devil's own time with McMillan, the millionaire banker and close personal friend of Roosevelt. Obstreosis of the ductal tract. Tertiary. Wish you'd take a look at him." "Glad to," said Mitty.

In the operating room there were whispered introductions: "Dr. Remington, Dr. Mitty. Dr. Pritchard-Mitford, Dr. Mitty." "I've read your book on streptothricosis," said Pritchard-Mitford, shaking hands. "A brilliant performance, sir." "Thank you," said Walter Mitty. "Didn't know you were in the States, Mitty," grumbled Remington. "Coals to Newcastle, bringing Mitford and me up here for a tertiary." "You are very kind," said Mitty. A huge, complicated machine, connected to the operating table, with many tubes and wires, began at this moment to go pocketa-pocketa-pocketa. "The new anesthetizer is giving away!" shouted an intern. "There is no one in the East who knows how to fix it!" "Quiet, man!" said Mitty, in a low, cool voice. He sprang to the machine, which was now going pocketa-pocketa-queep-pocketa-queep . He began fingering delicately a row of glistening dials. "Give me a fountain pen!" he snapped. Someone handed him a fountain pen. He pulled a faulty piston out of the machine and inserted the pen in its place. "That will hold for ten minutes," he said. "Get on with the operation. A nurse hurried over and whispered to Renshaw, and Mitty saw the man turn pale. "Coreopsis has set in," said Renshaw nervously. "If you would take over, Mitty?" Mitty looked at him and at the craven figure of Benbow, who drank, and at the grave, uncertain faces of the two great specialists. "If you wish," he said. They slipped a white gown on him, he adjusted a mask and drew on thin gloves; nurses handed him shining . . .

"Back it up, Mac!! Look out for that Buick!" Walter Mitty jammed on the brakes. "Wrong lane, Mac," said the parking-lot attendant, looking at Mitty closely. "Gee. Yeh," muttered Mitty. He began cautiously to back out of the lane marked "Exit Only." "Leave her sit there," said the attendant. "I'll put her away." Mitty got out of the car. "Hey, better leave the key." "Oh," said Mitty, handing the man the ignition key. The attendant vaulted into the car, backed it up with insolent skill, and put it where it belonged.

They're so damn cocky, thought Walter Mitty, walking along Main Street; they think they know everything. Once he had tried to take his chains off, outside New Milford, and he had got them wound around the axles. A man had had to come out in a wrecking car and unwind them, a young, grinning garageman. Since then Mrs. Mitty always made him drive to a garage to have the chains taken off. The next time, he thought, I'll wear my right arm in a sling; they won't grin at me then. I'll have my right arm in a sling and they'll see I couldn't possibly take the chains off myself. He kicked at the slush on the sidewalk. "Overshoes," he said to himself, and he began looking for a shoe store.

When he came out into the street again, with the overshoes in a box under his arm, Walter Mitty began to wonder what the other thing was his wife had told him to get. She had told him, twice before they set out from their house for Waterbury. In a way he hated these weekly trips to town--he was always getting something wrong. Kleenex, he thought, Squibb's, razor blades? No. Tooth paste, toothbrush, bicarbonate, Carborundum, initiative and referendum? He gave it up. But she would remember it. "Where's the what's-its- name?" she would ask. "Don't tell me you forgot the what's-its-name." A newsboy went by shouting something about the Waterbury trial.

. . . "Perhaps this will refresh your memory." The District Attorney suddenly thrust a heavy automatic at the quiet figure on the witness stand. "Have you ever seen this before?'' Walter Mitty took the gun and examined it expertly. "This is my Webley-Vickers 50.80," ho said calmly. An excited buzz ran around the courtroom. The Judge rapped for order. "You are a crack shot with any sort of firearms, I believe?" said the District Attorney, insinuatingly. "Objection!" shouted Mitty's attorney. "We have shown that the defendant could not have fired the shot. We have shown that he wore his right arm in a sling on the night of the fourteenth of July." Walter Mitty raised his hand briefly and the bickering attorneys were stilled. "With any known make of gun," he said evenly, "I could have killed Gregory Fitzhurst at three hundred feet with my left hand." Pandemonium broke loose in the courtroom. A woman's scream rose above the bedlam and suddenly a lovely, dark-haired girl was in Walter Mitty's arms. The District Attorney struck at her savagely. Without rising from his chair, Mitty let the man have it on the point of the chin. "You miserable cur!" . . .

"Puppy biscuit," said Walter Mitty. He stopped walking and the buildings of Waterbury rose up out of the misty courtroom and surrounded him again. A woman who was passing laughed. "He said 'Puppy biscuit,'" she said to her companion. "That man said 'Puppy biscuit' to himself." Walter Mitty hurried on. He went into an A. & P., not the first one he came to but a smaller one farther up the street. "I want some biscuit for small, young dogs," he said to the clerk. "Any special brand, sir?" The greatest pistol shot in the world thought a moment. "It says 'Puppies Bark for It' on the box," said Walter Mitty.

His wife would be through at the hairdresser's in fifteen minutes' Mitty saw in looking at his watch, unless they had trouble drying it; sometimes they had trouble drying it. She didn't like to get to the hotel first, she would want him to be there waiting for her as usual. He found a big leather chair in the lobby, facing a window, and he put the overshoes and the puppy biscuit on the floor beside it. He picked up an old copy of Liberty and sank down into the chair. "Can Germany Conquer the World Through the Air?" Walter Mitty looked at the pictures of bombing planes and of ruined streets.

. . . "The cannonading has got the wind up in young Raleigh, sir," said the sergeant. Captain Mitty looked up at him through tousled hair. "Get him to bed," he said wearily, "with the others. I'll fly alone." "But you can't, sir," said the sergeant anxiously. "It takes two men to handle that bomber and the Archies are pounding hell out of the air. Von Richtman's circus is between here and Saulier." "Somebody's got to get that ammunition dump," said Mitty. "I'm going over. Spot of brandy?" He poured a drink for the sergeant and one for himself. War thundered and whined around the dugout and battered at the door. There was a rending of wood and splinters flew through the room. "A bit of a near thing," said Captain Mitty carelessly. 'The box barrage is closing in," said the sergeant. "We only live once, Sergeant," said Mitty, with his faint, fleeting smile. "Or do we?" He poured another brandy and tossed it off. "I never see a man could hold his brandy like you, sir," said the sergeant. "Begging your pardon, sir." Captain Mitty stood up and strapped on his huge Webley-Vickers automatic. "It's forty kilometers through hell, sir," said the sergeant. Mitty finished one last brandy. "After all," he said softly, "what isn't?" The pounding of the cannon increased; there was the rat-tat-tatting of machine guns, and from somewhere came the menacing pocketa-pocketa-pocketa of the new flame-throwers. Walter Mitty walked to the door of the dugout humming "Aupres de Ma Blonde." He turned and waved to the sergeant. "Cheerio!" he said. . . .

Something struck his shoulder. "I've been looking all over this hotel for you," said Mrs. Mitty. "Why do you have to hide in this old chair? How did you expect me to find you?" "Things close in," said Walter Mitty vaguely. "What?" Mrs. Mitty said. "Did you get the what's-its-name? The puppy biscuit? What's in that box?" "Overshoes," said Mitty. "Couldn't you have put them on in the store?" 'I was thinking," said Walter Mitty. "Does it ever occur to you that I am sometimes thinking?" She looked at him. "I'm going to take your temperature when I get you home," she said.

They went out through the revolving doors that made a faintly derisive whistling sound when you pushed them. It was two blocks to the parking lot. At the drugstore on the corner she said, "Wait here for me. I forgot something. I won't be a minute." She was more than a minute. Walter Mitty lighted a cigarette. It began to rain, rain with sleet in it. He stood up against the wall of the drugstore, smoking. . . . He put his shoulders back and his heels together. "To hell with the handkerchief," said Waker Mitty scornfully. He took one last drag on his cigarette and snapped it away. Then, with that faint, fleeting smile playing about his lips, he faced the firing squad; erect and motionless, proud and disdainful, Walter Mitty the Undefeated, inscrutable to the last.
0 Replies
 
yitwail
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 Mar, 2006 12:59 am
ta pocketa as W. Mitty would say. Laughing
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Miss Slipknot
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 Mar, 2006 01:07 am
Jesus ok man, get off of me. Ya'll act like you're exactly where you wanna be, A2K must be so fullfilling. Thanks for the advice and for judgement passed. Kiss my ass
0 Replies
 
Miss Slipknot
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 Mar, 2006 01:10 am
Thanks Chumly, i'll definitely check it out
0 Replies
 
Miss Slipknot
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 Mar, 2006 01:14 am
Bella Dea wrote:
Your first problem is that you have already defeated yourself by stating that you can't get to where you want to be. You already think that somehow, you don't deserve to have what you want. The truth is that yes, sometimes we CAN'T have everything we want, say like becoming president of the US (the odds of acutally becoming prez are pretty low since there is only one position open every 4 years). But do you think that any of our former presidents thought for one second that they couldn't be president?

The point is, if you want it you have to go for it and realize that you deserve it. Quit the self pity act, get out there and make your dreams reality!

If you want to be a magician, what's stopping you?


Thank you, i've been put in my place, massa.
0 Replies
 
Miss Slipknot
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 Mar, 2006 01:16 am
blacksmithn wrote:
Give up. Spare the rest of us the existential pose, vacant stares and whining.[/quote

thanks for the advice from upon high, i feel truly blessed
0 Replies
 
Amigo
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 Mar, 2006 01:45 am
Miss Slipnot, How old are you? Your giving up already????? How do you know in what and where your talents lay.

" A thousand times I tried, only once did I succeed." -Abraham Lincoln

"Shoot for the moon, land apon the stars"
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