Fellow city dwellers, you'll know what I mean.
It's that same feeling you get when you leave a movie theatre and pop out into the mid-day sun. Everything and everyone is moving so quickly. The brightness is jarring. The sound of cars, deafening. A horn honk makes you jump out of your skin. You make eye contact with people and it seems like they know you—very Truman Show.
Old pic, but it works. |
A man stops in front of me and signals for me to remove my headphones. "Do you know how to get to Sesame Street?" he asks in a French/Italian/Spanish/Something accent. I respond with a "heh heh" chuckle, but his blank expression doesn't change. "Oh, an actual Sesame Street? In Edinburgh?" I ask. He nods without any sense of irony. "Um....no, I don't. Sorry."
And I run.
Must get home to my pajamas, my laptop, the Real Housewives, a bowl of pretzels, a door that locks and windows that shut.
Ah, that's better.
Now, save your pity. I am not mentally ill. This doesn't happen to me every day. It's just that sometimes, if I let my guard down, the outside world can be super unsettling. If I'm not in the right frame of mind (tired, been working all day, etc.) a series of innocent events can feel like the universe is conspiring against me.
Can you relate?
Namaste,
Margaret
P.S. Having to say "namaste" is the WORST part of any yoga class.
P.P.S. I know I don't have to say it and that yoga is all about doing whatever's comfortable to you. But still.
P.P.P.S. My experience today made me think of this:
1 comment:
In ken more poop doesn't steam
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