Is It Not Knowing? Or Having Too Many Answers?
At The Bottom of The Internet
An especially American nightmare, the shopper who walks into the cereal aisle at the grocery store without a plan might well stand there for the rest of the day. Too many choices.
Though it is common for people to think that they do not know what to do at times of difficulty, often people suffering the whirling brain of anxiety sift through countless possibilities rather than facing none.
Doesn’t the internet, in this sense, act like a bottomless cereal aisle?
One solution, often offered, is to unplug or, as it were, avoid cereal.
Another is to have a plan: Grab your Rice Krispies and Honey Nut Cheerios (a great mix, by the way) and then get out of that potential delemna pronto.
But another is to let your “I” dance into options without letting what you try be overly determining, to see that lots of possible answers is a sign of abundance, not a reason to freeze.
Rather than trying to get it right for yourself, in other words, give an answer for one of the selves you are, could be, or wish to try out while leaving it it to your avatar to get the milk.
I want to connect settings. Want to connect three things first symptom I've been watching last year second what are you announced the title of this piece would be, having too many answers, and third song I listen to this morning. S
Out side of my back window I see a young man playing video games. All day most days. (By young I mean he is ten or eleven.)
Today I said I would write about having too many answers rather than not knowing what to do.