Do we really want to break the cycle?
“I sit here at the counter of my boring job. Doing nothing. Two boys enter the shop. Oh, one has truly bad skin, filled with pimples. Probably a teenager, or in their early twenties.
Is it already so warm outside? I chat with myself, they’re only wearing sweatshirts. I mean, it’s still just February, a day before Fasching — so it can’t be that warm, can it?”
“My mind feels empty, as if I killed it with that vitamin D shot yesterday. I was down for days. No wonder — I haven’t been outside for weeks. My levels were already low when I checked my blood in August. I tried lifting them with just recommended two drops a day. Unsuccessful. Yesterday, I took the weekly dose all at once.”
“Rap music from my coworker’s playlist plays in the background. I like it. It reminds me of my younger years. He’s back from his lunch break. Big guy, never cold. But now he’s freezing.
That’s something different, I think to myself. So it can’t be that warm outside.
“I look around the shop — clothes everywhere. It makes you want to buy something, anything, just to satisfy that feeling of boredom. I have the urge to buy something. And even if I throw it away — who cares?
Wait. What a stupidity. When did I start acting so wastefully?”
“The phone rings. Of course, I won’t answer.
I’ve been here alone in my quietness for hours. I don’t want to talk to someone now. Maybe I’m afraid. Maybe I don’t even know how to anymore. Ever since I moved here, away from my friends and family, I’ve been hiding. Hiding from everything.”
As the hours pass, I am more and more glued to my chair. I don’t want to get up or even move. Every noise that doesn’t fit — resonate with my surrounding, and that hypnotizing Tupac’s song that plays in the background, angers me.
A customer’s hello electrified me. It pulls me back. Annoys me. I don’t want to be here.
“You’re not lazy. You’re stuck in boredom — your brain is rejecting everything around you because it feels pointless.” I try to explain the feeling of emptiness and melancholy that I feel.
“ I know I am bored. And I feed it. Keep it alive.” I laugh rolling my eyes.
“Yes, because boredom is predictable. You know how it feels, so you keep it. The alternative is doing something, but that takes an effort. And effort means uncertainty. Even if you hate being stuck, at least it’s familiar.” I argue with myself.
“I know,” I go on, but I also feel anxious. I have this energy building up in me, and the more it builds up, the more I push it down. I am staying glued to my chair, torturing myself. I feel like I’m going to explode. Like eating too much, sleeping too much — too much energy that I don’t want to release.
That’s exactly it. Your body wants to move, but your mind refuses. The more you hold it in, the worse it feels. Right now, your brain sees everything around you as pointless, so small disruptions feel unbearable. Don’t try to overpower it, try doing one small, intentional thing that breaks the loop — something different.
“But What?” I ask myself uninterested.
“I don’t want to break this pattern, I want to suffer like this till seven, until I am done and free to go home.” I comfort myself.
Come on! Just move! Stretch your arms, stand up and sit back down. Don’t think about it — just move. Rearrange something on the counter, drink water.
I once read that small actions can tell your brain you’re still in control.
Answer the phone — Just once. Not because you have to, but to prove to yourself that you can. Squeeze your hands, clench your jaw, then release. Inhale and exhale sharply. Shake out your arms. This way you can let some of the pressure out under your conditions. Change the music. Sit somewhere different. Make your brain to notice the shift.
“I am emotionally sick, I torture myself, and all you give me is — move?!”
It seems simple. But it is not. Moving signals to your brain that you’re not completely stuck and releases a bit of motivation. Enough to break the cycle.
“Fine, I’ll try!”
And just like that, completely ignoring myself, I fall back into the cycle.
I stare at the rack of caps, my eyes straining to sharpen the image. Two by two in every row. Each has a red sticker. Discount. A sharp, pinching voice is piercing my brain — a customer slides metal hangers across the rack. Making that awful squeaking sound.
The laughter from the outside of the shop, brings me back into the present. I force myself to engage. I mean I must. I can’t just ignore the customers. It feels painful, as if I am obliged to talk to them. To help them out.
I force myself to smile. It helps. It lifts the air. Makes it easier to breathe. And after all, people are not that bad. Not at all. They smile back.
Until the next “hello”, that brings the frustrations back. And easy as that I fall back into the loop of my avoidance. The waiting. The comfort of doing nothing.
