Hazy shades of ambivalent

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Many people don’t care about my unemployment, but I write about it anyway. It isn’t my fault no one wants to hire me. I got another rejection from a graphic design job. All those studies I had haven’t gotten me anywhere. I’m getting tired of trying to find something to apply to. I must apply for at least one monthly, or they will take my benefits away. I have ambivalent feelings about the whole job thing. I will never get experience when I can’t even get an internship. I’m getting too old for this shit. I feel like a failure when it comes to work. It’s like people think I want to be unemployed. I’m a healthy person, so that isn’t why I haven’t got a job. The only fault I have is my lack of work experience and my atopic skin, so I can’t do specific jobs. Other than that, I should get something. I only get suggestions for jobs I’m not suited for. I want to do something with graphic design and photography. But how can I get experience when I only get rejections?

I’m worried I’m not suitable for becoming an entrepreneur, either. Even if I had gone to a course about it. Getting people to notice you feels like hard work, and all that paperwork sounds overwhelming. I can’t decide what to do. I don’t have the confidence to succeed without having job experience in the field. I can hardly get any likes on my personal social media accounts. What if I don’t find clients, and if I do, how do I do things? It’s been a while since I designed anything. I try to make up fake projects, but I never have time. I have too much free time on my hands and too much sleep. If I had a good reason to wake up earlier, I would. I should get a grip on myself. I have no one who can give me a pep talk anymore. My late mother was good at that. My late dad wasn’t the same since he had other things on his mind. He had a business, so entrepreneurship should be in my blood. He made jewellery, but my field is different. My cousin has a business, and also my late grandfather, who I never met because he died when my mother was a child. A few people in my family tree were entrepreneurs, so it wouldn’t be surprising if I decided to do it, too.

If there is a positive thing about being unemployed, it is that I can do things that interest me. I can go places without having to think about whether I get off work or not. The downside is the financial side, and the other is not having human contact. Life can become one-sided if you don’t do something else for a change. I wish I wasn’t forced to apply for jobs when there is nothing suitable to apply to. There is more to life than wasting your time on writing applications. Especially when you know you won’t even get an interview. I wish I could leave this wheel of job search forever. I can either accept my current fate or do something about it.

“Why are these things never clear” Captain Jack Sparrow in Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End

A death in my family

sunshine rays through clouds
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I’m sad to inform you that my dad passed away on Thursday, February 8, 2024. After a month in the hospital because of pancreatitis, he didn’t make it. I hoped and prayed he would get better. I didn’t want him to die so soon. He was only 79 years old. He would have turned 80 on March 25. I saw him on Monday 5th, and he was still conscious and talking. He was under the covers, and he said he was cold. I didn’t realise I wouldn’t see him again like that. I didn’t go and see him the next day. I wish I had because on Wednesday, the doctor called, and she said his condition had become worse and they had stopped treating him. They had put a prohibition of resuscitation on him on February 3. I’ve read they can cancel it if the patient’s condition improves. I held on to that thought. When you have hope, you don’t think about death. You never know when your end comes. I wish I would have talked about it when he could talk. But as my dad used to say, dwelling on the past is unnecessary. It’s true; you can’t change things that have already happened.

Seeing him lying in the hospital bed, I couldn’t believe it was a matter of time before I had to say goodbye. The nurse said perhaps he could hear me, so I talked to him and showed affection. My family never said I love you, but we proved it by caring. You don’t want to let go, and it feels like you can never stop crying. I held his hand and told him to say hi to my mother and sister wherever he went. It was terrible to see him like that. He was sleeping with his mouth slightly open and breathing intermittently. His head was on the right side of the pillow. It looked uncomfortable, so I asked the nurse if they had moved his head, and they had. I was worried his neck would get stiff or something. They had given him pain relief, and he was unconscious, so he didn’t feel anything. I was in the room for at least 2 hours. Before I left the hospital, I asked the nurse if he felt anything, and the answer was he was already in that place. All you want your loved ones to be is painless and not knowing that they are dying. It felt uncanny that my dad was leaving this earth. I knew he would die, but I wasn’t ready for it. Somehow, I knew it would happen because of the way he lived. He didn’t live a healthy life. Let’s just say alcohol was a part of his lifestyle, and he knew it, but he had reduced the drinking. The last time he drank a lot, it was at Christmas, so maybe that’s why he got pancreatitis. The cause of death was a blood clot in the heart.

The waiting was the worst. It was a matter of time before they would call from the hospital and say he was gone. At 11.40 am, they called, and that was that. He had died about 11 am. The day I had dreaded was here, and it was too soon. I wished my dad would have lived a few more years. When my mother died in 2013, he was there, and things were easier because I didn’t have to handle all the funeral planning. I am the only surviving family member, and things would probably be more complicated if I didn’t have relatives like my cousin. Also, you can find help from other sources. I have been thinking about why my dad was taken away from me so soon. Maybe God or some high power didn’t want Dad to suffer from a memory disorder. His memory wasn’t as good as before. Living with a memory disease isn’t easy for anyone. Maybe there is a reason for this all. In some ways, it’s a relief that Dad doesn’t need to suffer from anything anymore. Life isn’t easy for anyone. You lose loved ones, and you grieve them. I’ve been in that situation too many times, though. I wish I didn’t have to cry this much, but that’s how I handle grief. Even writing this blog post brought me to tears. I haven’t called his half-sister because talking about his death is difficult to say out loud. I called her when Dad was dying, but I didn’t get through. I don’t even know if she’s still around. She’s over 90 already, so you never know. My dad was the one who used to call her, so it feels a little strange to talk to her on the phone. The last time we met was before Covid. There are a few other calls to make to Dad’s acquaintances, but I don’t know how to tell them. Some of them I have never met.

There are so many things to do when planning a funeral. Not just that, but every practical thing you need to handle. It can become too overwhelming during grief, but by doing one thing at a time, things will be done eventually. I will see this as a new event and a new start. When the funeral is done, and Dad is put down to rest, things will feel more manageable. I’ve had difficult times before and will survive this one, too. Things won’t be the same again because the people who knew me all my life are now gone. With them around, I could be myself, but now I’m unsure. I’m not good at getting to know new people. Or they don’t want to know me. I’m not dependent on other people, and I don’t feel lonely, but perhaps those feelings will creep upon me one day, but now I don’t. Life will go on, and I hope things will improve once again.

RIP Dad

Bloganuary: I wanna be loved by you

rock giving a heart to another smaller rock
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Can you share a positive example of where you’ve felt loved?

Bloganuary 2024

The words, I love you, have never been used in my home. But caring about one another is love, too. You don’t need to say those words. Showing that you care is love, which is more important. If you love me, show me how I say.

I feel love when someone shows they care. My parents have shown me they do. Especially my mother. She was also dedicated to how I did in school and kept in touch with my teachers. She always worried about me. Sometimes, it was a little too much for my liking. Even when she was sick, she still worried about how I would manage. I knew she meant well, even if it sometimes agitated me. Now, there are times I wish she was still alive. I wouldn’t need to meet all the problems that might be ahead with my father. Honestly, I’ve felt a little lost after she passed away. She knew about things my father didn’t, so I could ask her for advice. My father always thought about his work, so my mother was the caretaker. This wasn’t a positive example because it also brought sadness.

If I could hatch again from the eggshell of life, I wish I could have the same family without illnesses and deaths. My big sister was a significant part of my life. It was short, but I felt loved by her. She was excited when I was born. I was only 6 when she died, so I don’t have many memories of her besides the photos and videos of her. Sometimes, I think about how things would be if she were still alive. Losing a family member at an early age changes a person. Thinking about the positive memories makes it feel better.

sisters
Me and my big sister, Nina

The closest people in your life make you feel loved. When the world gets cold, your family is the one to count on. They don’t need to say they love you because those are only words. Showing them how is the key to one’s life.