An anonymous reader writes
"Slate has a story about the guy who registered tired.com in 1997 and put up on the home page "Are you tired? Tell us why." He's collected 32,000 emails from tired people, including an one from a Navy ship at sea that's too good to be fake."
why i'm tired (Score:5, Funny)
enough said
kudos to whomever on the slashdot staff decided to post this story at the right time for it, at least on the East Coast
Re:why i'm tired (Score:2)
Re:why i'm tired (Score:3, Funny)
Sex? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:why i'm tired (Score:3, Informative)
Re:why i'm tired (Score:5, Funny)
I'm tired of all of these divisive things that separate us, instead of bring the world together. I'm tired of the metric system, different languages, and different currencies.
I hope the U.N finally ratifies Resolution 1325E [un.org] so that the world all has one standardized language, measurement systems, currency and time zone.
I am tired of people who toss in fake links to add credibility to their moronic posts. I'm tired of moderators who don't think I am funny.
Re:why i'm tired (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:why i'm tired (Score:4, Insightful)
And yes, USA is not the world, the world is metric.
Re:why i'm tired (Score:4, Interesting)
That'd be:
Based on most frequent use?
Rupee??? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Rupee??? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:why i'm tired (Score:4, Funny)
Oh please, that form of currency will surely collapse. Too many people store their rupees in jars and scatter them around the place for anybody to find!
Re:why i'm tired (Score:5, Interesting)
Dear tired.com (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Dear tired.com (Score:5, Funny)
A 199 Byte static webpage.... (Score:5, Funny)
Are you tired?
Are you tired?
Tell us [mailto] why.
Re:A 199 Byte static webpage.... (Score:2)
Re:A 199 Byte static webpage.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:A 199 Byte static webpage.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:A 199 Byte static webpage.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:A 199 Byte static webpage.... (Score:5, Funny)
he was gonna update it but he got tired...
I'm very tried (Score:4, Funny)
NO CARRIER
I'm really busy (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I'm really busy (Score:5, Insightful)
However, the most often use of LJ I see is this. People bitch about how shitty their lives are, or they bitch and blame others about shitty daily happenings in their lives. They also obfuscate names of people and places very poorly so anyone who knows them can figure it out. Lastly they voice the opinions they don't have the balls to voice during the day to real people, because they don't hold water. They seek encouragement and sympathy from people around the world to make them feel better. Because no matter what your problem is, there is someone on the Internet who will tell you how right you are in order to make you feel not alone. And that one person telling you how right you are validates your existence despite your actual complete wrong-ness.
The other side effect of Live Journal that makes it really bad is this. People go around reading the Live Journals of others and form sort of this behind the back society. They never say something to a person in real life anything that was said in LJ. But they keep it in mind. No longer is it necessary to gossip about people like old maids. Just go around reading LJs of everyone you know and you can get the real deal.
I just feel that this whole culture surrounding things like Live Journal is so shallow and meaningless. I feel filthy every time someone links me to LJ and I go look at it. The same filth you feel when you accidentally look at the magazines in the checkout aisle. Just get it off me.
It's a part time job (Score:4, Interesting)
They've never met any of the people that they read about. Ironically, when I asked if they wanted to go to a party, they responded, "No, such and such is at a party right now. I want to read about it in their LJ as soon as they get home!"
found it, guess I was just tired (Score:5, Funny)
I was so tired, I was expecting a letter as if from the ship:
I've been in service 50 years and they haven't rust guarded me for 15. Bits of me keep falling off and they've started replacing the fuel lines cheap underspec ones - it's only a matter of time before I blow up or kill my entire crew with the asbestos lagging...
My rivets are popping, my gaskets are leaking. The air smells of diesel, and someone keeps pissing in the air intakes. The bilge gas could kill a man at twenty paces, they haven't emptied it for years, and now it's classed as a WMD.
Less bloat gives more trust (Score:5, Insightful)
There's a lesson to be learned here. Less bloat, more trust!
Re:Less bloat gives more trust (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Less bloat gives more trust (Score:2, Insightful)
but with that being said, does that mean I trust microsoft now that their search engine looks almost exactly [msn.com] like google's?
Re:Less bloat gives more trust (Score:5, Funny)
Give me money.
Re:Less bloat gives more trust (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Less bloat gives more trust (Score:3, Interesting)
For similar reasons I use fluxbox rather than KDE/Gnome and read a good book rather than watch TV. (Nothing against KDE or Gnome, I do quite like both o
Re:Less bloat gives more trust (Score:3, Funny)
I'd guess "more tired, more trusting" instead.
Insomnia (Score:5, Insightful)
Agreed, insomnia is not a joke (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm saddened that when I was 12 or 13, everyone thought I was "rebelling" by staying up way too late, sleeping until the last minute, and being groggy in school.
I'm saddened that I spent much of high school taking nortriptyline (Pamelor at first, then the generic as Pamelor grew too expensive) every night, just to get to sleep.
I'm saddened that my doctor, somehow convinced that I was faking things, refused to issue more prescriptions.
I'm sadden
Re:Agreed, insomnia is not a joke (Score:3, Interesting)
The only thing that seems to be working without too many side-effects is smoking some good pot and drink a beer before hitting the sack... That's OK when you're 31 but how to get that when you're 12!
Re:Agreed, insomnia is not a joke (Score:4, Funny)
The first rule is, you're not supposed to talk about it.
And the _second_ rule is, you're not supposed to talk about it.
I heard the guy who invented it never sleeps, and he's raising an army.
Do you know Tyler Durden?
Re:Agreed, insomnia is not a joke (Score:5, Interesting)
On my death march earlier this week, I was having mild hallucinations, the nature of which was such that I was hearing things, specifically, music. At one point, a plane flew overhead, and the sound sort of morphed into a saxophone; this could have been a genuine auditory coincidence, but then I started hearing piano chords, specifically, a diminished seventh if my ear training serves me correctly.
My affliction is unique in that I can't so easily cope with the sleeplessness with caffiene, because the diuretic effect of it triggers a long-standing mild case of enuresis, which first, makes it even more difficult to sleep, and second, is obviously extremely embarassing (hence the AC).
I, too, am bound to Tylenol PM, a drug that at least sates my affliction such that I can usually sleep within an hour of taking it, and then I have a half hour window in which I can sleep, because the effect passes all too quickly. If I don't capitalize on it quickly enough, I have to wait another hour.
Since this is summer, and I'm 16, I'm presented with an unusual opportunity to avoid sleeping altogether. I've taken to staying up 24 hours at a time to work on my pet project, a fully equipped arcade cabinet, faithful down even to the coin mech. It's a lovely way to pass the time, though I'm reluctant to saw anything at odd hours, because I wouldn't want to wake my parents, who suffer from their own sleep-related ailments; my mom is an extremely light sleeper, and my dad is jetlagged with such frequency that he often finds himself sleeping in the rear storage of his Tahoe in the airport parking lot.
It's a hard knocks' life.
Re:Agreed, insomnia is not a joke (Score:5, Informative)
Many insomniacs are "cured" with the above mentioned measurements.
Additionally, has a psychiatric doctor checked you whether you suffer from clinical depression? Really severe insomnia often is a symptom of clinical depression.
Re:Agreed, insomnia is not a joke (Score:3, Informative)
I've found that whilst the above can help sometimes they aren't garunteed to work every night.
My doctors tried a number of things but option number 1 was always Prozac. What nonsense, they hand that out without thinking about it (in Britain anyway) and it really bugs me. No I won't take Prozac.
However one thing I found really did make a difference was to eat a sugary snack 20 mins before trying to sleep - raising my blood
Re:Agreed, insomnia is not a joke (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, Prozac is a selective serotonic re-uptake inhibitor. So taking it causes more serotonin to be present in the brain. Serotonin plays a very big role in your sleep patterns. In fact, one commonly marketed sleeping drug (which actually works) is L-tryptophan (a chemical also present in milk - momma told you, didn't she?), which is converted into serotonin in the body. Unfortunately it is now banned from over-the-counter sale, because of a tainted batch causing a nasty illness. You can still get it as a prescribed drug (Tryptan).
The other thing that helped was making a routine of going to bed - always doing the same things in the same order (now it's feed the fish, go to bathroom for a wash etc, then go to straight to bed). If after 20-30 mins I'm not asleep then get up, read/do something (not video games that get adrenalin pumping) for a further 20 mins and then go through the entire routine again.
DO NOT OVERFEED FISH. Thanks.
Re:Agreed, insomnia is not a joke (Score:5, Interesting)
I have come to belive that there is a small portion of the population that is geneticly predisposed to be the "night watchman". Perhaps its not as much now as when your tribe didn't want to get eaten in their sleep.
Re:Agreed, insomnia is not a joke (Score:3, Interesting)
If I have no association with the outside world, I will stay awake for 26 hours, become tired, sleep for 10, and wake up feeling refreshed, energized, creative - all those things that make life so wonderful to live. Unfort
Re:Agreed, insomnia is not a joke (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Agreed, insomnia is not a joke (Score:5, Informative)
If it helps any, here is what I've done to combat it. First, I don't drink coffee or caffine in general past 12 noon. Second, I try to keep a regular schedule. Sadly that schedule is often sleeping 1 am to 10 am, or 2 am to 11 am, but it's better than the completely random schedule I had before. Most important though, is that I can't do ANYTHING that requires significant thought after dinner (or at least 2 hours before sleeping).
Most times I can now get to sleep within an hour, sometimes I can even sleep the whole night without waking up. Of course, occasionally I am still hit with a bout of insomnia where I lie awake for 6 hours. But all in all, I'm doing better than I used to. I guess I'm lucky to have the flexability to choose my own timetable though.
Anyways, try to get off the chemical sleep aids, and see if you can somehow restore your circadian rythem (sleeping pattern) via repatition. Just go to sleep at a fixed time each night regardless of if you're tired, and get up 8-9 hours later, regardless of if you're tired.
Good luck. You are not alone.
Re:Agreed, insomnia is not a joke (Score:5, Interesting)
What do you find to do for two hours a day which doesn't involve significant thought?
Masturbating. Seriously. Spend 1 to 2 solid hours masturbating before bed (go slow, put on a porno or something). Make sure you have nothing to do after you orgasm, brush your teeth beforehand or whatever you need to do. After you have a good orgasm, go straight to sleep. Quickies won't work as well, and also if you stay awake enough after the orgasm, you might not be able to fall asleep.
Of course, you can replace "masturbating" with actual sex with another person, but hey, this is Slashdot...
Re:Agreed, insomnia is not a joke (Score:3, Insightful)
Men have a tendency to be sleepy after sex, whereas women don't have that tendency. It's a weird world. So women want to cuddle or get a back rub or something, when the guy just wants to sleep.
Re:Agreed, insomnia is not a joke (Score:3, Insightful)
Wow... (Score:2)
Kudos to slashdot? (Score:5, Funny)
Are you sure it is such a good idea to post this on front page of /.?
32000 messages in 7 years? The will probably get 32000 more in the next 7 hours.
Re:Kudos to slashdot? (Score:2)
Re:Kudos to slashdot? (Score:2)
Not if the site gets /.ed, in which case the email address is: tired@tired.com
Re:Kudos to slashdot? (Score:2)
Possibly the first slashdotting by email, and you go and make it worse!
Re:Kudos to slashdot? (Score:5, Funny)
32,000 messages about being tired of first posts, SCO, Microsoft, Goatse.cx, John Romero and fan boys. The poor guy is probably going to become very confused!
Work-Life Balance (Score:5, Insightful)
The eight hour day / 40 hour week was one of the Labour movements' greatest victories, but this has been largely eroded in modern professional occupations. Many people work crazy hours. There is a whole culture that working yourself and your family into the ground is a good thing.
However some enlightened governments have strategies to deal with this- the issue of work/life balance has been big recently- check http://www.dol.govt.nz/worklife/index.asp or
http://www.dti.gov.uk/work-lifebalance/what.html
Whatever happened to the 60's notion that technology would have us working less?
Re:Work-Life Balance (Score:3, Insightful)
Employers want full time employees, unemployment is strongly discouraged, we want more and better stuff, and we have a lot more rich people to carry around.
Re:Work-Life Balance (Score:5, Insightful)
Depends. Are you talking about the thousands of people who get fired for no reason? They're working less.
The people who work 70 hour days trying to start their own businesses so they can afford food and light and the people who are doing four people's job because more layoffs were just announced are working more.
Management is moving on to the salad course during the air-conditioned bonus announcement party. They're working less.
The customers are trying to figure out the voice mail menu. They're working more.
It would be nice if people could work less. It would be even nicer if work were pleasant instead of a giant fucking bitch-gripe grab the money contest.
Re:Work-Life Balance (Score:3, Informative)
It's quite possible for us to reduce working hours and maintain the same levels of productivity and pay.
Of course alongside laws on working hours, we also need to tackle the culture of working at home, on the train, on holiday, at weekends, etc.
Re:Work-Life Balance (Score:4, Interesting)
But now the trens is upwards again because we can't compete with the rest of the world if we only work 36 hours a week (or so they say).
See:
this story about siemens increasing the work week of it's german workforce. [dw-world.de]
If you're going into negotiations with your employer now I'd pray he had his head in the sand the last few months.
Suicide Notes (Score:5, Insightful)
Navy ship email (Score:5, Informative)
Okay. Now that's just disgusting.
Re:Navy ship email (Score:3, Funny)
I hope this guy isn't the ships cook!
There's a moral to that story... (Score:5, Funny)
Ever.
mm (Score:2, Funny)
No! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:No! (Score:2)
Re:No! (Score:3, Informative)
The problem is that, unlike with the tired mails, you actually want to _look_ at the stuff you get. And there, of course, you run the risk of running into the rack-flashing equivalent of really bad "I'm tired" nonsense. And that's not necessarily something I need to see when I'm too tired to deal with anatomical catastrophes.
Why I'm tired (Score:3, Funny)
Damn 24x7x365 availability... they'll be trying to page me out even after I'm dead.
Re:Why I'm tired (Score:5, Funny)
Damn 9-5 5 days a week. Can't they see my office door is closed.
Tired of Trolls (Score:2, Funny)
Web design (Score:2, Interesting)
A lot of webdesigner should take a lot at this site. It's clear, has no distracting elements, is fast to download and serves it's purpose perfectly. Unlike many other sites out there.
Re:I don't think it was (Score:3, Funny)
we're all tired (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm tired because I just woke up after 12 hours of sleep.
Spam? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Spam? (Score:2, Funny)
Spam advertising sleep pills.
Cause to rejoice (Score:5, Interesting)
So what, one might ask. Why is this reason to make merry? Because of the connection. The site makes its plea, and people give what they have, leaving their hearts just a tiny bit lighter. People reaching out to each other across the void, to total strangers, in a trusting bond of shared service.
We live in dark times. Madmen think nothing of murdering thousands to advance their creeds, wars rage across the globe, slaughtering the children of nations from the richest to the poorest. Human greed and shortsightedness have afflicted the globe with pollution and plagues. Still, the shadows have not stifled all hope; there is light, creeping in around the edges of the dark, showing the way out: somewhere there is a mail server that has received 32,000 (and counting) emails. 32,000 instances of basic unselfish sharing. Power of the human spirit, my friends.
Re:Cause to rejoice (Score:5, Funny)
I have a sleep disorder (Score:5, Interesting)
However, I often stay up all night, and have gone as long as five days without sleeping. The longest I've slept in one shot is 29 hours.
I have a hell of a time getting out of bed each day. It is endlessly frustrating to my wife, who would like me to share her much more regular hours. I always feel like I've been hit by a truck, when I wake up. My wife never used to understand why I would protest that I was tired, after waking up from fourteen hours of sleep.
I went to a sleep specialist, and had two sleep studies done, and was diagnosed with obstructive sleep apnea. The continuous positive air pressure machine that the doctor prescribed helped, but did not solve the problem.
Apnea is often caused by being overweight, and at the time I weighed 250 lbs, but I managed to lose 50 lbs and I don't think I have the apnea anymore. I still sleep very irregularly though.
It's a primary reason I am self-employed as a consultant. I don't think I could hold a job anymore, where I had to show up at any particular time.
It's 7 am where I am, and I've been working since midnight, and feeling great, but after getting out of bed yesterday afternoon I felt like hell and just wanted to take a nap until I came alive late into the night.
I don't think I have a circadian rhythm, at least not like other people.
Re:I have a sleep disorder (Score:5, Interesting)
At first the bypap(sp?) machine seemed like a huge pain in the butt. I had to wear that stupid mask at night and listen to the machine, but my snoring had stopped, which my wife assured me was reason enough to use the machine. For the first two weeks I really didn't feel any different I was tired all of the time and missing out on my young daughters early antics. Then one morning I woke up and realized that I wasn't tired anymore. It was unbelievable. I used the bypap machine for 6 months before the inside of my nose became so raw that sleeping with it became almost impossible. I often had nightmares that someone was going to take the bypap away and my life would go back to what it was before.
In the 6 months that I was on the bypap I lost 30 lbs and was enjoying life in a way I had not been able to since I was a teenager. Since sleeping with the bypap machine was beginning to become unbearable I decided to see a doctor about having some kind of surgery, so I would not have to sleep with a machine for the rest of my life. They scheduled me for surgery and a short time later I had widened sinus passages, no adenoids, no tonsils, and much less of a palette in the back of my throat. The two weeks after the surgery really sucked, I couldn't even drink water for 4 days. I was constantly coughing up blood and required an IV and home health to administer the much desired pain medication. After two weeks I was feeling much better and had lost another 20 pounds. It didn't take long to lose 10 more and become a bit more active. I've bounced around a bit since then, but I've never gained more than 20 pounds of the weight back and since I've started exercising it looks like I might drop another 10 - 15 pounds.
My life has never been better, I'm not tired, I don't fall asleep, and my wife doesn't have to elbow me at night as much anymore. If the cpap didn't help you sleep you should give it another shot. I say it will be at least two weeks before your body and mind recover from sleep depravation. I'm sure you also know the consequences of ignoring sleep apnea, which include increased risk of heart attack, increased risk of stroke, and narcolepsy.
I thought pretty much as you did that the sleep cycles that I had were just normal for me, but believe me you don't know what you are missing with a regular sleeping pattern. I was an all night gamer and worker. The only time I could stay awake was when I was really focused on something like programming or video games. Now I can still game all night and sleep late if my wife lets me...err I mean if I want too, but I also have the benefit of being able to live an alter, happy, and somewhat normal life.
Consult your doctor! (Score:4, Informative)
I urge you to contact your doctor. You might benefit from subsequent consultation with a sleep specialist. Nobody should force you into modifying your lifestyle if you do not want, but you might benefit greatly from learning more about the various known conditions and about your own problems.
after 7 years.. (Score:3, Funny)
tired (Score:5, Insightful)
1. Being stuck in a job - a LOT more people than they care to admit are into jobs they don't really like. Jobs that are no longer challenging. Or exciting. Jobs that are going nowhere. This is the primary reason for being tired, because the entire life, one day at time, is structured around the job - from sleep cycles, to time to be spent with family, take to wake up, etc. And it is very tiring and taxing, when this very job, isn't what one would really want to do.
2. Relationship - the less said, the better. Not every relation is pleasant. And by relationship, I don't just mean a boy/girl relationship. Relationship with the wife. with the kids. people at work. Neighbours. Between two nations. And it's so funny because though we all say "man is a social animal", this is precisely what we aren't taught - how to socialize, or how to maintain in a relationship. Or just be in a relationship. being tolerant. We are not taught that, but of course a whole load of algebra and trignometry, that finds no direct use in most lives.
Just these two are so crucial factors in defining the happiness and well being of each person.
For all weapons of mass destruction there may or may not be in the world, whether the world is safe or not, masses are mostly unhappy and hence "tired". And hence they find or try to find outlets to get of this tiredness. Whatever it may be.
Whoaa.. I've surprised myself I think!
Why? (Score:5, Funny)
A friend of mine said yesterday that he woke up at 4.30 and couldn't get back to sleep. I simply replied "As a parent, I can only say 'Screw you'."
Re:Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
A friend of mine said yesterday that he woke up at 4.30 and couldn't get back to sleep. I simply replied "As a parent, I can only say 'Screw you'."
I have four month old twins.
I bike to work, 12 miles every day.
I have not had to tell anyone to screw themselves.
I do get tired on occation, and I do feel down every now and then... but I doubt telling people to screw themselves would make me feel any better.
Try looking at the good things, concentrating on the bad stuff will only serve to make you bitter.
Besides, given that your friend had a different basis of comparison, his lack of sleep might have been a major issue for him. Stuff like this is always subjective, and trying to compare who has it harder is ofter rather pointless.
shades of "Hearing Aid" (Score:3, Interesting)
An amazing service really...
the joy of /. (Score:5, Funny)
nearly 100 in the first week, a rate that's continued steadily for almost seven years, neither rising nor falling with the growth of the Net
Man is that about to change...
Why was I tired ? Dead-end job. (Score:5, Interesting)
Finally I had the courage to save up some cash, quit IT for good, and "find myself". Introspection is so hard less than 1% of the planet indulges in it. It can reveal so many unpleasant truths about you. Like the fact that no matter how skilled I was, I was never going to fit in as a corporate whore anywhere.
When I finally took the plunge & did what I really wanted to do all along, there was no going back. Since then I've been so upbeat, so frighteningly happy, its scary. I've never worked so hard as in the past few months. It is both physically & mentally gruelling, but I never felt tired.
All you got to do is grow some balls, figure out what you really want to do, & then go do it. And yes, the nest egg is important.
Even Mike Kuniavsky is tired (Score:5, Funny)
Tired of masturbating into a pack of bologna. (Score:4, Funny)
I'm tired (Score:3, Interesting)
At 18 I was accepted to college because I graduated 13th in my class 3.9gpa anyway (still homeless).
At 20 I had to leave college, go home to work, to save my sisters from my parents.
at 25 got married.
at 27 found out wife had lupus & rheumatoid
At 27 I went back to college while working full time.
at 30 I had cancer & had to drop out of school (again) also went bankrupt and lost all savings
at 35, have no home of my own, still have no degree so work for slave wages at the only job(s) I can find (since most companies just toss my resume, given the lack of degree). Can't quit job & finish school because wife NEEDS my medical insurance. Can't start own company either for same reason.
life sucks and I'm very tired of it
Note to self, post this anonymously.... Screw it, don't care who knows.
Re:I'm tired (Score:5, Insightful)
Of people using their "I'm trapped in my job/life because $BOGUS_REASON"
I'm in my thirties. I graduated with a 80ish average in high school. I dunno what that even hits on the GPA-o-meter.
I've never held a job for more than 30ish months.
I never went to college.
I make $150K a year as a sofware development consultant.
The companies are not tossing your resume because it lacks a degree.
They are tossing it because you haven't expressed anything to them that they want.
Do yourself a favor. Learn to sell. Get a partime job as a salesman in a commission based job--even grow into it fulltime. You will certainly make better money than slave. Go to the library. Read Books by Zig Zigler, Dale Carnegie and the like. Once you are able to sell crap TVs and "Extended Warranties" and make 3-5K a month, you are ready to Get a real job without a Degree.
At 35, a degree is a useless peice of paper that will not get you a job. You are old enough to get there on your merits.
If a 35 year old came to me with only his newly minted degree as his sole reason for being hired, I'd show em the door faster than Anna Nicole Smith wolfs down a cheeseburger.
Re:I'm tired (Score:3, Informative)
now I'm tired too. (Score:3, Funny)
My number one reason for being tired (Score:5, Insightful)
Meetings are taking forever because these damn things keep going off. My programming staff is becoming mutinous. The idea behind these phones is that he wants people calling in to be able to get a hold of people quickly, but it's backfired because I've had to let most of my staff work from home three days a week so they can get stuff done. Productivity is down; the boss wants to hire more programmers, and I'm trying to convince him to hire a receptionist instead.
Seriously, getting started is the hardest part of any task. If you are constantly interrupted, you're constantly revisiting the most difficult phases of any task. Even if you are doing things that are easy it takes a toll. Getting buckled down to do something hard is nearly impossible.
Conversely, even hard things are easy, if you can get started and stick with them.
Why I'm tired (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm tired of being the guy everyone turns to for help.
I'm tired of fixing your computer, I'm tired of setting up this web site for you, I'm tired of undoing all the malware which you said, "Yes, I'd love to have everything installed from Spyware Incorporated automatically." Hundreds of people casually say, "Hey Mike, you're good with computers....." and explain to me what's wrong. Well, fuck off. Seriously, you got yourself into the mess, and if everyone I knew hadn't asked me at some point to help them on their computer, I'd do it. But it's obvious that a lot of people are fucking up their computers, so don't fuck up yours!
I'm tired of spending three hours letting you talk to me about your adonis. He's 6 years older than you. He probably didn't notice you. I'm tired of listening to you bitch and moan about how this guy you're kinda with is in Italy for the month. I'm tired of listening to you. Why don't you listen to me? There's a grand total of three people who I can talk to, who listen to me, what I have to say, what I have to get off my chest (thanks Steph, Karen, and Leah). Everyone else are ingrates. They know I keep secrets. Hell, I could make some of you so embarassed you'd go to a different school considering some of the things I've been told.
I'm tired of authoritative positions. I'll accept the responsibility, beacause for the most part, I don't have any trouble handling it, and it brings me out of the ranks of idiots. I just have trouble dealing with idiots once I'm in that authoritative. I'm tired of people criticizing me for not doing a job they've never even attempted properly. I'd like to see you try to manage a bunch of bumbling idiots with below average IQs who resent the fact that I'm in a management position. During the school year, I'd like to see you juggle a 30-hour-a-week-job, 10 hours a week on yearbook, 10 hours a week on stage crew, and AP and IB courses. The summer is my down time, the only time I'm not tired.
I'd like to see you all try. Yet, I'm still friends with you, because I'm nice. There are three people who I get something back from. You three are angels. I'm tired of everyone else, demons, devils, usurpers. You suck up my advice, you plead with me to help you. You bitch and moan about why I need to help you, why you need this so much. I'm. Fucking. Tired. Go spend some money, which you don't even make, it's usually daddy's money, and pay someone to help you. It's amazing what happens when you realize you can't rely on nice people anymore.
Is there anyone else out there who has to deal with this? The majority of the
Re:Why I'm tired (Score:3, Insightful)
People will always pester you for being competent. That's one thing you don't want to spoil. Don't become a prick computer guru who think's his shyt don't stink. Just be practical, don't jump through hoops, but don't blow them off. This will benefit you later in life (how you get al
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Er. what's the point ? (Score:3, Informative)
Fatigue can be caused by wide variety of infections, nutritional deficiencies, and other physical and mental disorders.
Re:Er. what's the point ? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you're drained of energy with no explaination, then sure, go see a doctor, but if you know why you're tired in spite of a good 6 to 9 hours of sleep each day, then a doctor may not be the right answer.
Assume you are getting enough sleep, and you are otherwise perfectly healthy. A stressful environment can really sap your strength. Pills and even counseling may make you appear to be more content, but the underlying problem may not be fully addressed- only masked.
Let's say you're struggling at work in an unexpectedly deadend job. At the time, you thought it was a promotion, but instead it was just a latteral move with slightly better pay that made moving any further up the ladder of success impossible. If you make any waves, they'll probably realize they can do nicely without you.
You make enough money to afford your family's present standard of living and there is no way for you to find another job at your current level of income. Your employer is unsympathetic and expects you to do your job to their satisfaction or be replaced by two lower payed employees. To them, you are not indespensable.
Your wife is having second thoughts because married life just isn't what she was expecting, and she refuses to have any discussions about it. She's itching for any excuse, and she's probably a bit smarter than you, and a hell of a lot more vendictive. She also has access to all your possessions including your bank account.
Your kids are doing fine, but you have no time for them because you are already putting in so many hours at the office. These days, they barely know you, but at least you get to see them most every day.
If you let your job fail, you lose your income, your wife will definitely leave you, and you'll probably end up losing your home, most of your posessions, what little access you have to your kids, and of course, any money in your next job will be going to child and spousal support, thus making your existence a living hell.
If you try to get your wife to help you, she'll just call you a wimp, chastise you, threaten to leave you, take the kids, and she'll find some way to have her attourney legally harass you until your employer fires you...
Hmmm... No way out unless you want to skip town and change your identity... But they'd probably find you anyway. It's a tough spot.
You come home each night, you eat well, you find time to excercise, and you get more than enough sleep. You're otherwise healthy, but you're tired. The good doctor isn't going to make it all better. In fact, getting you dependent upon some kind of medication may just screw your life up even more.
Re:Anonymous Coward (Score:2)
I don't think any site could handle the amount of traffic that would generate. Except