No Time For Feelings
Work has sucked me dry lately. The week before last I clocked 71 hours on a high-pressure project. It’s been a few years since I was pushed this far out of balance, into a life that’s all work and no play.
It’s definitely unhealthy. My eyes have gotten twitchy. I wake up in the middle of the night worrying about work, needing to get up and jot down to-do lists that might otherwise be lost by morning. Then I can’t get back to sleep.
I’ve started to feel panicked, claustrophobic, like a prisoner in my own life. The place where I work has no windows. It’s possible to completely lose perspective there, to forget that life goes on outside, that just across the road is a beautiful park filled with birds, butterflies, and flowers. I don’t even have five minutes to go out and look at it. I can’t even go to the bathroom without four people stopping me on the way there to ask me questions or tell me what they need from me.
I feel like I don’t know who I am anymore. I’m just this robot that works and works and works.
It’s a temporary thing. It’s all on account of a big project that I’ve been working on, starting in January and already on the downswing. A couple more months and I should be able to breathe again. Still. It’s a long time to go without breathing.
May 25th, 2010 at 5:26 pm
Wow–I totally feel you. I have a high-stress “job” –it’s school, really–that makes me feel undone too. In fact, I was shocked reading your post, where you compared yourself to a robot, because recently [during a super-high-stress project], free-writing for a future post on my personal blog, I wrote:
“Sometimes I feel like a caffeine-fueled robot who was given two emotions: panic and ire.”
Hang in there. You’ll make it. Ask for help if you need it. I almost didn’t — and it was almost disastrous. I’ll be thinking about you, hoping you get some breaths in.
May 25th, 2010 at 10:18 pm
I know exactly how you feel. I wish I had some bit of wisdom to give you, but I still struggle myself. However, I just found this website and song the other day and maybe it will make you feel better: http://www.zefrank.com/chillout/
May 29th, 2010 at 10:24 am
Thanks for the sympathy! It really does feel better just to have some sweet people saying “Aw, poor you, we feel your pain.” And that song is amazing. I love seeing what people can do when we collaborate online. It makes me feel very optimistic about humanity. :-)