Rory Marinich produces a brilliant essay that touches on a number of issues. In particular, read this excerpt on a different kind of loneliness —
It is a lonely existence. I’ve had fewer than a dozen friends with the same focus in life. Of those friends, maybe one or two were as focused as I am. It’s a peculiar loneliness, because it doesn’t seem outwardly lonely. I’m not socially awkward in the usual sense. I’m not forced into being an outcast. I can root for sports teams and flirt and generally be my age without attracting pity stares from pretty people. I am capable of shooting pity stares at awkward people myself.
The loneliness is deeper and harder to solve. It’s the feeling that I get when I’m sitting next to a girl late at night and her idea of a late-night musician is Lil Wayne. I’ve got nothing against the guy, but when I find that the music somebody’s going to play to feel introspective is Lil Wayne, there’s this sorrowful, angry thought: She is not like me. There’s something difficult about spending weeks and months without meeting somebody who loves the same things you do. You get used to it, but you don’t like it.
After reading it, I printed out the entire essay, stapled the pages together, inserted them into a brown envelope and put the envelope in my “Sad But True” drawer, which, of course, sadly, doesn’t exist.
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You should probably write something here…
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