My introduction to Facebook... left me in tears.
If the `Trying Facebook' entry came out seeming
angry rather than sorrowful, then I should probably apologise
to anyone who read it.
When I went to bed, that night, I wanted to cry. My wife asked me why
I'd come to bed so late, I said "Because I'm depressed".
"This whole Facebook thing has just got me really upset", I said.
She said, "Then delete your account--it's OK, you don't have to use it."
I told her, "It's not Facebook per se--it's that it seems like my
friends are telling me that they basically don't want to be bothered
corresponding with me unless I can solve all of these
puzzles. That's what's bothering me."
When I awoke the next morning, I wanted to cry.
We were going to go visit Pam's sister and her family, so I made
myself a `healing mix' on my iPod.
- Nine Inch Nails: Somewhat Damaged
- Nine Inch Nails: The Great Below
- Nine Inch Nails: La Mer
- Brian Eno & Daniel Lanois: An Ending (Ascent)
- Pachelbel: Canon
- Beethoven: Symphony #9
- Vivaldi: Allegro
- Vivaldi: Adante
- Rusted Root: Send Me on My Way
- Shakira: Whenever, Wherever
- KT Tunstall: Black Horse & the Cherry Tree
- Morten Johannes Ervik: En fabelaktig s(k)jebne
- Ratatat: Mirando
- U2: Where the Streets Have No Name
- Donna Lewis: I Love You Always Forever
- Vitamin C: Smile
There were more, but I was back in perfect health by #16.
#4 is where I broke down, and where I began rebuilding.
Several of the pieces listed above are ones that I find profoundly moving
(Canon, in particular, always makes be cry--it's just that beautiful).
Listening to them--experiencing them all in series like that provided
a sensation of... liberation, hard to describe.
Maybe it's like flying--soaring. It's like..., I don't know--it's like
being loved.
In some way, being immersed in beauteous music is (perhaps) the same
sort of experience as the `pure light' experience that the doctor
described in `Sunshine'.
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