
Pluto
Cat Extremist
- Dec 27, 2020
- 5,077
So there's this silly old cliché about a frog in boiling water. They say that if a frog sits in cool water that slowly has its temperature raised to a boil, the frog will die because it does not think to jump out at any particular point.
This is an outrageous insult to frogs everywhere. The myth is completely untrue and a real frog in that situation will jump out at some point, but nonetheless it remains a convenient metaphor for situations we face where there an incredibly slow deterioration. For example, ageing, or mental health that gradually worsens over time, or chronic pain. Because we will always adapt, it is possible to normalise extraordinary states of suffering without really noticing due to the limited change from one day to the next.
In my own case, it has been an incredibly slow decline from the wonderment of early childhood to the present day filled with physical discomfort, isolation, inability to do normal things like eating/sleeping, accumulated health issues and an intense suffering that is only properly relieved in sleep. Then there's growing older and slowly losing options for participating meaningfully in life.
There are always ups and downs, but the nowadays ups are a lukewarm contentment while the downs are intense storms of desperate grief. No way is this sustainable. I'm currently awaiting blood test results to see if my issues with eating and sleeping are considered 'normal' by the doctor, and if so I am thinking that I might finally commence shut-down mode, which will of course end with wiping electronic devices, finalising paperwork/notes and consuming my N.
So my question is, how and where do you draw a line in the sand? How to say enough is enough, even though each day is so similar to the last? It reminds me of a tube of toothpaste, where you can always squeeze one more blob out... until you can't.

This is an outrageous insult to frogs everywhere. The myth is completely untrue and a real frog in that situation will jump out at some point, but nonetheless it remains a convenient metaphor for situations we face where there an incredibly slow deterioration. For example, ageing, or mental health that gradually worsens over time, or chronic pain. Because we will always adapt, it is possible to normalise extraordinary states of suffering without really noticing due to the limited change from one day to the next.
In my own case, it has been an incredibly slow decline from the wonderment of early childhood to the present day filled with physical discomfort, isolation, inability to do normal things like eating/sleeping, accumulated health issues and an intense suffering that is only properly relieved in sleep. Then there's growing older and slowly losing options for participating meaningfully in life.
There are always ups and downs, but the nowadays ups are a lukewarm contentment while the downs are intense storms of desperate grief. No way is this sustainable. I'm currently awaiting blood test results to see if my issues with eating and sleeping are considered 'normal' by the doctor, and if so I am thinking that I might finally commence shut-down mode, which will of course end with wiping electronic devices, finalising paperwork/notes and consuming my N.
So my question is, how and where do you draw a line in the sand? How to say enough is enough, even though each day is so similar to the last? It reminds me of a tube of toothpaste, where you can always squeeze one more blob out... until you can't.