Sunday, July 7, 2013

Insomnia

I think I'm lonely. I'd forgotten how it steals sleep, how it feels to be willing to do anything to make it not be so.

I just figured this out. I've been lying here trying to figure out where this intermittent insomnia has come from, over the past few weeks since this phase started. Third year--it sounds so ridiculous. Like a joke. It should be impossible to be at this point in my education, my life, because I just got here. Yesterday. Two years later, I don't know anything yet, but there I am, in the hospital for 12 hours a day, seeing patients and generally pretending to have approximate knowledge of almost everything. And I like it. I like that my day begins and ends with kids--I like that fact that the interns and residents seem to enjoy my presence, for the most part. I see things I've only read about and I learn from attendings who want to teach. I have full days and friends on the wards, and I have connected with several classmates whom I truly enjoy. I leave tired but happy, and it should be enough.

But at the core of it, I still feel a vague nagging feeling when I get back to my empty house, of wanting family and friends around--not for intense interaction, but for that effortless, comfortable feeling of being near people who love you. The house seems very silent on most weekdays. My roomie is sometimes there, but more often has already gone to her boyfriend's by the time my key slides in the lock--I won't see her until tomorrow, most likely. My own boyfriend is on a surgery rotation, and by the time he finishes, it is late and there seems to be very little time for the kind of connection I'm missing, and that is difficult. The friends that are here are on other services, and their hours vary wildly, while most people not in my year are gone for the summer. As a cherry on the top of the litany, my birthday is almost here--and they have always been difficult for me. They tend to compound the feelings of loneliness for a myriad of reasons, and it seems this year won't be any different unless I work very hard to change that. I am trying, but my efforts aren't always the most intelligent.

(Short story I will regret tomorrow: At the risk of sounding self-pitying, I will tell you that one year I felt solitary enough to text a random friend, tell him that I was a year older, and that he should call me. The saving grace of this short story is that, in the middle of trying to figure out whether or not I should send such a pathetic text, he actually did call, of his own free will and volition, unaided by the guilt I was about to heap upon his head. That phone call went a long way towards making me feel remembered and connected, and I have always appreciated him for it.)

I suppose the point to this, if I were capable of making any coherent point past midnight, is that I'm finding third year to be sometimes quiet and sad and solitary, more days than not. It's been hard. I've not had the best of luck in finding a big enough variety of people to help shift the feeling away...and I am very much hoping that the discussing of said touchy-feely stuff, here, will do something towards letting me sleep instead of lying here listening to my AC drip. The house feels very empty.





2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I know this feeling.
I am sorry you do.

I am glad you have many things that make life good, for the most part.

Also: happy birthday.

Kylander said...

I wish i could say i understand how you feel, but the truth is, i don't. I've never felt "lonely" per se. The closest i think i can come to that is that i've been really bored before and wanted someone to hang out with. But in general, i don't mind being alone, even though i like being around friends. I'm what they call an ambivert (basically a halfway hybrid of the two extremes).

That said, it really doesn't sound fun. Personally, if i were in your shoes, I'd be like "oh, finally. i spent all day around other people, now i get some alone time." but even though i've never felt what you feel personally, i can, in a sense, understand wanting people around.

Hang in there ok? The fact that you are even succeeding in the medical field is proof enough for me to say that you are strong, even though i've never met you. So hang in there. You'll make it through this feeling, however long it lasts, as long as you don't give up. Something will change. The surgical rotation will end, you will have different hours, something. Just promise yourself to keep going :)

I probably overuse this proverb, but, "It's always darkest before the dawn."