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Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Injustice League

Posted by fxckfeelings on April 25, 2011

There’s plenty of evidence out there, from newspaper headlines to vicious drivers, that life is unfair. The clearest proof, at least as we see it at fxckfeelings.com, is that we never cease to get cases about unfairness and the need for justice it inspires. Accepting that life is unfair doesn’t mean giving up, just giving up on the futile goal of stamping out evil altogether. Learn to tolerate unfairness and manage the anger and pain it inspires. After all, given all the ways life can suck, we’re sure you have tons of other personal problems you can write in about.
Dr. Lastname

I was a wild girl as a teenager and took drugs and cheated on my boyfriends, but one of them stuck by me and now I’ve got a good marriage and 2 nice kids. Life has been pretty good to me, but lately, I don’t know whether it’s getting older or having some acquaintances die, but I feel preoccupied with death and a feeling of not being a very good person. I mean, focusing on those things makes me feel ungrateful, because I’ve been so lucky, but then I feel guilty that I’ve had so much while people I came up with didn’t get the same things I did. I wish I wasn’t so worried about death and thinking about what a jerk I was and how I didn’t get what I deserved.

What we all deserve is a good childhood and a decent set of genes. What most of us actually get doesn’t come close.

Instead, most people end up with a random mishmash that easily includes an extra dose of wildness and parents who are too wild themselves to help us manage our own impulses (the apple, and the genes, don’t fall far from the tree). In a world that’s this unfair, nobody can claim to deserve anything.

If you’re disturbed by the unfairness of life, especially the way it doesn’t punish you the way you deserve, you’re not alone (although it might not comfort you to know you’re in the same company as Woody Allen). Think of it as an instinct, a need for justice, that’s both good and bad.

The good side is that a passion for justice helps you be fair with your kids, and keep your mean side under control. The bad side is that it gets you mad and upset when things aren’t fair, which causes you to try to straighten things out, which, in this messy world, usually winds up with causing more unfairness (see: Vietnam). Instead, you need to get used to living with the feeling and keeping your hands folded in front of you.

The awareness of death is another one of those painful feelings that can be good or bad. The bad part is that it’s painful to lose people or die before your time or die almost any time (unless you’ve been previously softened up by a long, punishing course of illness, suffering and disability, and that’s another story).

The good part is that death-awareness helps you get your priorities straight. Yes, you’re gonna die, but that should make you think hard about what matters today. Hint: it’s not about feeling better, being happy, or owning more. It’s about doing whatever you think is important.

So what counts is what you do with this mess. If your boyfriend loved you enough to stick by you, you were smart enough to appreciate and take advantage of what he was doing, which means you both deserve credit. You’re not into drugging and excitement, but building a family together.

You’ve done the right thing, but don’t expect it to make your pain go away. Life isn’t just unfair, but painful and difficult. Don’t feel guilty that you’ve avoided so much of that pain, but proud that you’ve achieved so much in spite of your flaws. Doing good things, in spite of losing friends and facing death, is what makes us great.

STATEMENT:
“Life has been better to me than it was when I started out, and that’s partly because I’ve done the right thing and I’m on a good course. Sometimes I feel like I don’t deserve it or that I should be more happy than I am. Wrong. Unhappy feelings are part of the territory, part of what I work with. Fuck’em. I’m proud of my ability to ignore them.”

I don’t know why, but my grandmother always relies on me whenever she has a problem with her health, her roof, her taxes, whatever. She doesn’t rely on my mother, because she’s a flake, and she doesn’t rely on my brother, because she sees him as an important lawyer who doesn’t have the time to spare on her little problems. I’ve always pitched in because I’m a good guy who likes to care for people, (I’m a social worker), but I realized, recently, that my grandmother has willed the largest part of her estate to my brother because she assumes I can take care of myself and besides, I’m gay and don’t have any children. My goal is to deal with how angry I am and get my grandmother to see that she’s being unfair.

There’s no way you’re going to make things fair in your family (see above) or change your grandmother, so ask yourself instead what you can do with the situation as it is. I know that doesn’t take care of your anger, but that’s the idea, because almost anything that makes your anger better makes things worse. Anger is only useful to actors, professional fighters, and hack comedians. For everyone else, it’s a detrimental, dangerous pain in the ass.

It’s nice that your grandmother has money; that means she can pay for services without your having to worry about what will happen to her if you don’t help. Which allows to me to review the Three Laws of Giving.

1) Don’t give unless it will actually do some good (not a problem here, because your grandmother doesn’t misuse help). 2) Don’t give beyond what you can afford (meaning you’ve got other responsibilities). 3) Don’t give when it would be better for someone else to do it, and that’s the one that applies here.

If you charge market rate for your services, then your grandmother gets what she needs from someone she loves, and you get paid for your time and a little bit of the lost inheritance. Everyone wins, no one blows a gasket.

You can always try to overcome your grandmother’s prejudice by noting how much you enjoy helping people and how much more you could do if you weren’t as tight for cash. That’s the same pitch you would make with any potential funding donor. Beyond appealing to her rationality and generosity, however, you don’t want to go.

Most prejudiced people tend to feel it’s the other guy’s fault, so confronting them usually causes nothing but conflict. You might feel proud of yourself if you stand up to her, but when you add in the pain it causes her and everyone else involved, and her inability to understand where you’re coming from, it’s probably not worth it. You’re not an ultimate fighter, you’re a put-upon grandchild; don’t get angry, get paid, and then, get over it.

STATEMENT:
“I’m proud that I like to help people and I’m getting smarter about doing it while keeping other things in mind, like my obligation to take care of myself and consider other values and priorities. I can’t help but feel angry at my grandmother; but I will keep that feeling under wraps, if necessary, while I stick with my original goals.”

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