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17 Feb 18:28

Adventures in Depression

by Allie
Some people have a legitimate reason to feel depressed, but not me. I just woke up one day feeling sad and helpless for absolutely no reason.


It's disappointing to feel sad for no reason. Sadness can be almost pleasantly indulgent when you have a way to justify it - you can listen to sad music and imagine yourself as the protagonist in a dramatic movie. You can gaze out the window while you're crying and think "This is so sad. I can't even believe how sad this whole situation is. I bet even a reenactment of my sadness could bring an entire theater audience to tears."

But my sadness didn't have a purpose.  Listening to sad music and imagining that my life was a movie just made me feel kind of weird because I couldn't really get behind the idea of a movie where the character is sad for no reason.


Essentially, I was being robbed of my right to feel self pity, which is the only redeeming part of sadness.

And for a little bit, that was a good enough reason to pity myself.


Standing around feeling sorry for myself was momentarily exhilarating, but I grew tired of it quickly. "That will do," I thought. "I've had my fun, let's move on to something else now." But the sadness didn't go away.

I tried to force myself to not be sad.


But trying to use willpower to overcome the apathetic sort of sadness that accompanies depression is like a person with no arms trying to punch themselves until their hands grow back.  A fundamental component of the plan is missing and it isn't going to work. 


When I couldn't will myself to not be sad, I became frustrated and angry. In a final, desperate attempt to regain power over myself, I turned to shame as a sort of motivational tool.

 

But, since I was depressed, this tactic was less inspirational and more just a way to oppress myself with hatred.


Which made me more sad. 


Which then made me more frustrated and abusive.


And that made me even more sad, and so on and so forth until the only way to adequately express my sadness was to crawl very slowly across the floor.


The self-loathing and shame had ceased to be even slightly productive, but it was too late to go back at that point, so I just kept going. I followed myself around like a bully, narrating my thoughts and actions with a constant stream of abuse.


I spent months shut in my house, surfing the internet on top of a pile of my own dirty laundry which I set on the couch for "just a second" because I experienced a sudden moment of apathy on my way to the washer and couldn't continue. And then, two weeks later, I still hadn't completed that journey. But who cares - it wasn't like I had been showering regularly and sitting on a pile of clothes isn't necessarily uncomfortable. But even if it was, I couldn't feel anything through the self hatred anyway, so it didn't matter. JUST LIKE EVERYTHING ELSE.


Slowly, my feelings started to shrivel up. The few that managed to survive the constant beatings staggered around like wounded baby deer, just biding their time until they could die and join all the other carcasses strewn across the wasteland of my soul.

I couldn't even muster up the enthusiasm to hate myself anymore.


I just drifted around, completely unsure of what I was feeling or whether I could actually feel anything at all.


If my life was a movie, the turning point of my depression would have been inspirational and meaningful. It would have involved wisdom-filled epiphanies about discovering my true self and I would conquer my demons and go on to live out the rest of my life in happiness.

Instead, my turning point mostly hinged upon the fact that I had rented some movies and then I didn't return them for too long.

The late fees had reached the point where the injustice of paying any more than I already owed outweighed my apathy. I considered just keeping the movies and never going to the video store again, but then I remembered that I still wanted to re-watch Jumanji.

I put on some clothes, put the movies in my backpack and biked to the video store. It was the slowest, most resentful bike ride ever.


And when I arrived, I found out that they didn't even have Jumanji in.

Just as I was debating whether I should settle on a movie that wasn't Jumanji or go home and stare in abject silence, I noticed a woman looking at me weirdly from a couple rows over.


She was probably looking at me that way because I looked really, really depressed and I was dressed like an eskimo vagrant.

Normally, I would have felt an instant, crushing sense of self-consciousness, but instead, I felt nothing.



I've always wanted to not give a fuck. While crying helplessly into my pillow for no good reason, I would often fantasize that maybe someday I could be one of those stoic badasses whose emotions are mostly comprised of rock music and not being afraid of things. And finally - finally - after a lifetime of feelings and anxiety and more feelings, I didn't have any feelings left. I had spent my last feeling being disappointed that I couldn't rent Jumanji.

I felt invincible.


And thus began a tiny rebellion.


Then I swooped out of there like the Batman and biked home in a blaze of defiant glory.


And that's how my depression got so horrible that it actually broke through to the other side and became a sort of fear-proof exoskeleton.

14 Nov 07:54

DOCTOR WHO Fans Create Life-Sized LEGO TARDIS

by Blair Marnell

Who among the Whovians wouldn’t love to have a TARDIS of their very own? Aside from being one of the most iconic ships in sci-fi, Doctor Who‘s TARDIS represents the ultimate wish fulfillment for anyone who has ever dreamed of going on an epic adventure. If you could travel anywhere in time and space, where would you go first?

If you want to see a life-sized TARDIS made up entirely out of LEGOs, then you should probably head down to Sydney, Australia. The BrickMan Team has assembled a faithful recreation of the TARDIS in honor of Australia’s first ever Doctor Who Festival. It may not be bigger on the inside, but this TARDIS is plenty big on the outside!

LEGO Tardis 1

And if you look closely, you’ll see that even the famous Police Telephone sign is comprised of LEGOs.

LEGO Tardis 3

On The Brickman website, certified LEGO professional Ryan McNaught wrote a brief piece about the creation of the LEGO TARDIS:

Occasionally we build something that tops our usual standard of awesome, and occasionally we get to play with really cool stuff, like Dr Who. I remember as a kid watching the Doctor and his adventures around the galaxy, never for one minute did I think I’d ever get to build a life sized Tardis out of LEGO though!

Our team really did a cracking job on this huge model, and whilst I can’t tell you all the details about its build – The BBC are going to run some awesome competitions on it I can tell you that it was a lot of fun to build.

LEGO Tardis 2

The LEGO TARDIS is currently on display at the Zing Pop Culture Store in Macquarie Park until November 18. On November 22 and 23, the LEGO TARDIS will rematerialize at the Hordern pavilion in Sydney for the inaugural Doctor Who Festival. Current Doctor Peter Capaldi and showrunner Steven Moffat will be among the guests-of-honor at the festival. And wouldn’t it be awesome to see Capaldi sticking his head out of the LEGO TARDIS?

Doctor Who fans, what do you think about the custom LEGO TARDIS? Make the whooshing TARDIS sound effect and share your thoughts below!

HT: The Brickman

Image Credits: BBC

15 Apr 23:19

Watch: 'Malick: Fire & Water' Examines The Director's Use Of The Elements

by Kevin Jagernauth
As the debate rages on about Terrence Malick's latest "To the Wonder" -- in our recent feature, we explored how it has split up the staff of The Playlist with those who both admire and have issues with the film -- what can be said with some certainty is that, love him or loathe him, he is a singular and never less than interesting filmmaker, and thus inspires a good deal more heartfelt chatter than most. Just as certainly the imagery in his films is bigger than mere pretty pictures; they strive to try and capture the ephemera of mood, emotion and tone and the bigger, broader issues the characters are grappling with. They strive for this, they don't always succeed. The natural world has been...