I think as a person who has had a drive for creativity their entire life, adulthood is driving me insane. I feel a desire every so often to make new things, to keep up with drawing, writing, and hobbies I left by the wayside, as well as learn new things and new hobbies and new stuff to be creative with. There are some ways with which I feel like I do get that outlet, like when I spend several hours programming something that I'm interested in making, but most of the time I just feel like I am underacheiving. Despite the fact that I *want* to do something, I somehow feel powerless to do so, like I just don't have the energy to push the ink out of the pen that should otherwise flow. I'm not really sure what to do about this, but I do think as far as writing goes that writing on things like Gopher helps. One, it's mostly for me, so I don't necessarily feel a need to make it perfect, but two, it is for an audience, so I stay in decent practice. Gopher's nice, too, because it's a quiet place. The web feels far too streamlined and expectant -- like if there aren't comments and page statistics then nobody's read your content and nobody cares, and Gemini, while great for some people, just does't feel quite right for journaling for me. I think Gopher's my sweet spot. Sometimes there are comments, which I can moderate just by editing a text file, and sometimes there are e-mails, but there's never the expectation of any of this; they're just a happy addition to a phlog that's made and otherwise would probably be forgotten about. There is something about the 40 hour work week that I think makes being creative a lot harder, especially when it's not your day job and your "creativity" at your day job is just linked to either your problem-solving skills or your exploitable ones. Personally, I don't think most jobs should require 40 hours a week; it's exhausting to the point that it's demeaning, whether or not you enjoy it, and often it's an excuse to keep you barely paid and too tired to do anything else. Of course, there are those out there with the resolve to work 60 or 80 or 100 hours a week and either don't complain or simply don't have the energy to, and in some ways I envy them, but the idea to me is a terrible one when after 40 hours, I am exhausted to the point I barely feel like sticking poptarts in the toaster oven or watching TikToks on my phone, much less dedicating myself to a new hobby or finding the energy to work on an old one -- much less actually sit at my desk and turn out work that is mentally, spiritually, and/or creatively involved. Even this phlog I'm only managing to turn out because I woke up early with heartburn after an effective five day weekend due to me getting sick (not COVID) and also Hurricane Ida. Now then, I could just be a hippie without a movement (after all, I do only bother shaving about once a week or two), but I figure my experience is probably shared by a lot of folks out there, especially the ones who haven't had ten or twenty or forty years to "get used to it" (probably better said as "properly assimilate"). That, or maybe I'm just working the wrong job for me, and whatever I'm doing shouldn't strip me of my dignity and my passion, and surely there's some mythological job better out there that will pay me enough to be middle class (i.e. do more than just put food on the table) and give me the drive to do forty more hours of personal work in my off-time. I'm not sure that I believe in such a thing, or at least the ready availability of it; I think perhaps it's the mythology of a dead religion -- or at least a sleeping one. -- In other news, I think the antibiotics the doctor prescribed me are causing me to have small seizures. Since my mental breakdown last March I've gotten to where my eyes will randomly dart out of focus and I will fall or at least begin to, but as the months have gone by that's gotten a lot less frequent. However, since I got sick and went to the doctor last Thursday, it seems like they've been worse. Now that Ida's passed, I'm going to try and call them today and ask about it. I've never been diagnosed with epilepsy, and I know I don't have photosensitive epilepsy, but there apparently is data to support the fact that certain antibiotics, including the one I am taking, can lower the floor for seizures to occur in epileptic patients. This is probably the second time ever I've had a bad reaction to a medication - the first being urinary issues with the narcotics prescribed after my wisdom tooth surgery 6 years ago - so it's definitely not a fun experience. Oh well -- I'm sure I'll be better soon. And hopefully can keep dodging COVID.