useless mess (sappy sallows)

Originally published on sappy sallows (12 Dec 2023).

My friend Cyan and I met as we both experienced a personal loss. We decided to get together to produce some work that would help us find some sense of purpose in the haze of feeling like a loser. Not an autobiographical account of what happened to us as we tried to figure out what we wanted to do, but a self-analysis, in the best style of reflexive social scientists, to account for all the ways that what happened to us affected our ideas about the world and our place in it (as much as our self-awareness allowed).

I am not a Sociologist by degree but I care about the idea of being able to tell others I am a Social Scientist by my post-degree. I care about calling things by their name, giving them a title, in a way that makes them categorisable. Once, during an ice-breaking game, I was asked to describe myself as a machine. I said I was a BERT model; at the heart, I’m nothing but a classifier. Just a fuzzy identity, trying to assert my footing by telling others what to expect from me, and expecting others to tell me what to expect from them, with little ambiguity, with as little anxiety of uncertainty as possible.


My friend Cyan and I now have a new collaborator in our project and his work is about accepting our uselessness. I hate the thought of it, so maybe I should sit with this discomfort for a bit. Here I am, losing sleep and hurting my body with horrible habits just so that I can do the work of three semesters in one, just because I want to overcompensate for what I lost, just because I want to prove to myself that I am not a loser. I am losing a lot of things in order to prove to myself and to others that I am not a loser, even though I did lose something.

How useless will that be, in a year or two? Maybe one day I will rationalise my way into thinking that this has been an amazingly useful season. I can feel the seeds of that thought popping and spreading all throughout my insides, branching out into my limbs and getting ready to come out through my holes. The leaves, the flower, the fruit, I will cry them out and sweat them out and voice them out and puke them out for as long as they keep growing. Anything can be useful if you think very small, if you only think about yourself and a small handful of others. But life isn’t small.


My new friend Sunghoon is interested in how the experience of nature can help us recover the realisation of our own insignificance, in a comforting way. I have fallen out of touch with both the comfort and the anxiety of most natural things around me, outside the boundaries of the metaphors that I use to order this gelatinous space of flows, but I can still relate to the sky when I look up at night, not as a mind, but as a body. My skin shivers and my nerves buzz like a swarm of bees, like a swarm of drones, the more and the harder I try to picture how big the celestial bodies are, and how far away from me they are.

I am dust, with no use except to be cast out, to be thrown away. I am working hard for things that will never matter in the grand scheme of things. And, yet, I exist. And I am aware of that. And my body and mind are seeking control, in this uncertain world, to find some peace, to manage to survive through the hell of being too small to do anything. Addicted to making meanings out of things because I bear the burden of existing, and I wonder why, and I wonder how, and I wonder what, and for how long, and wishful thinking is the best I can do, when all hope is gone. How strange it is, to be anything at all.

Photo by Nathan Anderson on Unsplash

reduce, reuse, recycle: how to be disposable (sappy sallows)

Originally published sappy sallows (22 Dec 2023).

I was reading “Switchings under uncertainty: The coming and becoming of meanings” (Godart & White, 2010) to write something for my manuscript and then I decided to write something else.

My greatest existential terror is insufficiency. I’ve always felt like I had the ability to do a lot, and to do well, but not well enough to be great by the standards of greatness. Like a person who scores 81 when the cut to get an A is 82. I know a lot of people think I’m great, but I know there’s a lot more people in the world who wouldn’t think the same. And that’s horrible, because it means that there is an uncertainty level — an incomputable risk — that people that I meet will think I’m below their standards, be it because of my gender, my nationality, the way I look, the way I speak, what ideas I share, how much money I have, what I wear, what I believe in, what I have done with my life so far, and how many pages I can fill with this information.

At times, I could have simply avoided being places with those who could see through my limitations, and could point them out. The trick of being scared of being insufficient is the craving for being great, for being more-than-enough, for being so much that no one can ever say otherwise. If we’re being honest, someone’s low self-esteem is an epiphenomenon of their inflated sense of self, aspiring to be more than they were made out to be, by their birthplace, their birthparents, their birth rights. I’ve seen people surround themselves with people they thought inferior to them, and I’ve seen people crushing to the point of killing those they thought superior to them, if they had the power to inflict that kind of death.

Arrogance that is easily mistaken for humility is the greatest cognitive dissonance of our times, because we are all drowning in the anxiety of being left behind by a world with standards that we cannot meet, but we want to, because we cannot give up the illusory promises we have been made. I starve my body to fit into a smaller dress because I want the assurance of happiness that comes with skinny beauty. I destroy my body and deprive my mind of its much-needed rest because I am blinded by the promise of hard work that pays off, even as I rationalise my commitment to capitalistic ideals into commitment to myself and what I believe in — that I ought to do my best, in order to sleep at night (even if I don’t sleep at all in the process).

The discomfort of cognitive dissonances also keeps me up at night, and, truth be told, I am so self-aware that it makes me angry. A few weeks ago, after several painful weeks of overthinking and crying and dragging myself through the days, trying to understand what was wrong with me, I arrived at the same realisation I had had on the day things started going wrong; I had known the answer all along, but I had to, first, exhaust all the other possible explanations, to convince myself in a way that would allow me to close that door for good (or something like that). I have, indeed, opened the door to make peace with my own insufficiency. But I’m still stuck, standing by the door, the same place I was when I grabbed the doorknob and pulled it. I am paralysed because I am too scared to confront the truth in a way that forces me to find some sort of resolution. Because I’m insufficient by several standards, and I’m weak and I’m also one of billions and, statistically speaking, there will always be way, waaaay more people to whom I won’t mean anything, than people to whom I will mean something.

To mean something to someone, such a stupid-sounding aspiration, but one that we cannot live without, because meaning-making is the only thing we have, as humans, on earth. And to mean something to someone means that someone will care about me, enough for me not to disappear, even as I feel as if I’m fading away. But what security is there is meaning something to someone, if everyone is a larger or smaller version of the same mess I am made of? As much as I have let others down, I have been let down, and the reason I am terrified and I cry to sleep at times these days is because I was, once again, counted as being worthy of being thrown away. Once again, the insufficiency I am not ready to come to terms with came back to hit me, and my inherent, statistical disposability reminded me the odds will always be against me. And every attempt at controlling the outcomes will be inherently, statistically more likely to be unsuccessful than the contrary.

And the universality of the experience doesn’t help that much when it hurts. To know that everyone else out there — including the ones who inflict the pain and discomfort I experience — are also trying to establish their footing, and resolve their existential anxiety, and sleep well at night in the arms of something other than the absolute historical contingency of facts. What I realised is that nothing is ever absolutely meaningless, but not every meaningful thing means the same, to the same extent. In fact, we might even not care at all about what something means, or even how useful it can be, if the possibilities are not clear, tacit, tangible, desirable, or even reasonable, or if there isn’t enough empirical evidence to verify that it means something to me. What I’m trying to say is that something can be meaningful and still be disposable, because it doesn’t fit, because it doesn’t serve us right now, because it’s meant to be thrown away anyway, like a plastic spork in a box of takeout fried rice, or even like, oh God, like a pair of disposable rubber gloves, whose disposability literally saves lives in the right context.

And what is the opposite of disposable? Reusable doesn’t sound that good to go with meaningful and useful, but I don’t feel ready to think about that yet. There are multiple other layers to consider. But I do think it’s interesting that things can be meaningful, and useful, and still worthy of going into the bin. Like candy wrap, the moment you open it, and you finally get the chocolate you coveted. You can’t eat the paper. You shouldn’t eat the damn thing. So, yes, sometimes we’re just the paper hiding something better, more important, more significant, that requires me to get out of the way for others to get their hands on. Is it that absurd? Sometimes, it feels like such. It feels unfair that I should be measured up against a pair of wooden chopsticks to say if it’s good or not that someone decided to throw me away. I would say i’s just a technicality, at best, because it all comes down to how we play with the meanings, and if we feel enabled to switch them towards our favour, when it’s convenient to do so.

Even so, right now, I still feel pretty much like I’m stuck in the trash bin of someone’s life, and I need to make my way out of it, if I want to see things more clearly.

Featured image by Julio Lopez on Unsplash