Free. Bored. And exhausted. No more.
āThereās this 8-month-old indie dog,ā G texted last evening. āToilet trained, vaccinated, spayed. Perfect for a first-time pet parent.ā
My immediate reaction: āNope! Not right now.ā
Not ālet me think about it.ā Not ātell me more.ā Just⦠nope.
Which is weird, because I love dogs. I love the idea of having one. I talk about wanting one. But the moment thereās an actual dog, an actual decision, I manufacture reasons.
We might travel in the next few months. L might move for her studies. Female dogs have periods - complications for first-timers. Sleep will suffer. Moneyās tight. Neighborhood dogs might be aggressive during walks. Our long-term plans are uncertain.
All valid. All logical. All excuses.
Because if I really did want the dog, I think think I should be able to figure out the travel thing.
Mishri is perfect for a first-time pet parent. But not for me. Not now. Why?
I also do this with the intent to be more generous.
Someone asks for money on the street and my brain immediately pulls on one or more of below threads:
- I donāt have change (usually true)
- They do this professionally, that kid isnāt even theirs
- Why me, why not that local-looking guy? Do I look gullible?
- Theyāre perfectly able-bodied, why donāt they work? I wish there was something fair to ask them of, say worth 10 or 20 or 50 bucks and I could pay them fairly right now.
- I canāt help everyone who asks
- How do I know their story is genuine?
- Shouldnāt the government handle this?
- Are they really blind or just performing?
Noble thoughts about helping, empathy, concern yada yada. But my actions? Conversations with myself while the person moves away. The gap between what I think I am (generous, caring) and what I actually do is actually quite wide.
L does better. She goes out of her way. Sometimes even making trips specifically to give, to help and volunteer. Her delta is smaller.
Couple of weeks back I was talking to Karthik about obsession.
About how everyone interesting to me has their thing. L with mental health and her work on democratizing access. G with writing and pets and murder mysteries and Agatha Christie. Sunaina with dance. Karthik himself with trading and community building. I could go on and on.
And me? Iām obsessed about not having an obsession.
Iām worried I donāt have my āworkā - something developing into a career or community I built or whatever. So Iām actively looking for the right obsession. Researching and prioritizing steps to find one.
Which is stupid for at least two reasons:
a) Thatās not how obsessions work. You donāt go looking for rabbit holes. You keep trying things till something pulls you in.
b) Looking for the right obsession means putting off the actual obsessing part. Because obsessing IS the action. You READ murder mysteries, you WRITE, you TRADE, you DANCE, you MEET people to help them. If Iām still researching which thing to obsess about, Iām not really doing.. anything. And thatās not how I want to operate.
I think I am starting to see a pattern here.
Not being tied to something - a pet, children, a house, a cause, an obsession - gives me flexibility to do everything else. But it also takes away the compulsion or urgency to do something. So I often end up doing nothing else.
The people I envy are TIED to things. They gave up flexibility for clarity and vigor that comes from commitment and routine toward a thing you care about.
They chose dogs despite travel complications, obsessed about software / hardware freedom despite opportunity cost and experiments. Or even something as bog-standard as rearing up their kids or pursuing that next promotion.
And they all have that thing I don;t: a direction.
Instead I have all the flexibility. And Iām exhausted. And kind of bored.
I suppose itās the right time to shake things up.
Itās January. Everyoneās making commitments. New habits, new goals, new year new me. Everyoneās asking āwhatās your focus this year?ā or āwhat are you committing to?ā Usually my answer has been wishy-washy or even scoffing at the very idea of new-year resolutions.
But now I think that more than mocking it I have been envious of that new year energy everyone has of a commitment, the āthis is what Iām doingā focus. Because at least theyāre choosing something.
Meanwhile Iām doing a lot of nothing. Very flexibly :D
So maybe 2026 for me isnāt about finding the right thing. Maybe itās just about choosing a thing. Any thing.
As I argued: āDone begets done.ā Ergo, nothing begets nothing.
Next time G mentions opportunity for dog sitting or dog-boarding, maybe Iāll say yes before my brain gets to reasons.
Maybe Iāll stop researching obsessions and just obsess about something for a month. See what happens.
Maybe when the next beggar asks, Iāll give whatever change I have instead of calculating fairness and impact.
Maybe.
Still figuring this out. But at least now Iām noticing what Iām actually avoiding.
That feels like something.