This is what it feels like: guilt and anger, overwhelming
fatigue, a hopeless sense of loneliness.
For the past few months, I’ve been feeling more tired
than I’d like to admit. Dreams are getting harder to come by. It’s getting harder
and harder to listen and to encourage. My words lack sincerity and depth. It’s
a shallow kind of understanding. My heart feels so empty and I’m scraping the
bottom of the barrel. But oh, I feel so much, this isolation. No one knows.
Which is something I don’t understand. I really have
nothing to be upset about. I’ve thought about it, I have everything. I have a
good job, good working hours, enough money to get by, food on the table, a roof
over my head, clothes to wear, family, friends, a boyfriend, a church, a ministry
to serve. There is no way I should always feel this lonely. I’m surrounded by
people.
But sometimes, more lately than usual, I think I could
just evaporate, and people won’t notice until it’s too late.
I have nothing to be unhappy about. I know it. I’ve
repeated it to myself over and over again. I believe in it whole heartedly. I know
the people around me who have it a whole lot worse. They’re going though
recession and pregnancy and bereavement and relationship issues and self esteem
issues and family problems and long working hours and bosses from hell and toxic
relationships and a whole host of other legitimate reasons why they should be
unhappy. Not me. I have none of that.
I’m just so tired. So, so, tired. I’m not sure anyone can
see that, through the fog of problems they’re going through.
It’s so strange, my body, despite its bulk should feel
this tired. You’d think with the amount of food I’m eating everyday and the
carefully calculated amount of calories with the right portions of roughage and
vitamins. It’s so strange that something this large can still be tired. But it
is.
I have nothing to be sad about. But I feel like my heart
is broken and I don’t know why.