Real Life - Page 2
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SeaSwift
Scotland4486 Posts
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Lightwip
United States5497 Posts
There is a point where you realize that games really aren't worth obsessing over anymore. You didn't when you got married, because you were still a child. No wonder things went wrong when you weren't ready for what you tried to do. Expecting a forum of 90% high school/college students to have adult problems is just not going to happen. Most will leave by the time they become old enough to do so, barring a loyalty to old friendships. That being said, I hope you manage to make things work. Seems like you're on the right track. | ||
3FFA
United States3931 Posts
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DueleR
United States207 Posts
Basically, I don't really know how I feel about games. I've only ever played Blizzard games seriously (every game except WoW, which I never played) and by and large, I've loved them. I always tell people how much I learned about real life through gaming, and I still believe that. Nobody's who's not a gamer really understands, but I always talk to people about how playing D2 twelve years ago taught me perseverence, or how playing Starcraft when I was a teenager taught me multi-tasking and how to make good decisions under pressure. But at the same time, gaming has eaten up a huge chunk of my life and it's also affected my "real life" negatively. I still remember failing the first class of my academic career in 2000 after D2 came out because I would play until 4 AM every day. It was a downward spiral after that and it was only after I quit gaming entirely in 2004 that I got my life back together again. Came back in 2010 with Starcraft 2 and now I'm back playing Diablo 3, but on a much more casual and manageable level now. I guess I still love games and I still love talking/reading about them, but I'm at a stage in my life now where I'm much more wary now about the potentially negative effects of excessive gaming. | ||
surfinbird1
Germany999 Posts
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Emnjay808
United States10633 Posts
5/5 | ||
tests
United States160 Posts
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iamke55
United States2806 Posts
On July 02 2012 23:56 Smancer wrote: I did start producing at work. It became an outlet for me. I really shined. I grew my skillset by teaching myself SQL. I started working closely with a lot of the people on the Database team. Being a person that is able to really understand business from a marketing perspective and being able to do some pretty technical things is a great niche roll that companies will pay a lot for. I was a top performer. I was awarded stock. I was able to afford my own condo. I met a really nice girl who coincidentally had my old job as a math teacher. Very sweet girl, pretty, caring, nothing like my ex. She moved in last week. I got a new job outside of the software business. Something with a bit more security, and yet another pay bump. I do okay for myself. I had a wide grin on my face when I got to here. What a heart-warming story! There are few things harder to do in the world than breaking your own bad habits to better yourself as a person so you have my respect and admiration. | ||
fire_brand
Canada1123 Posts
Great story though, I'm happy you've managed to pull yourself out of that pit and into the life you have now. | ||
Probulous
Australia3894 Posts
There comes a point in everyone's life where they realise that older people were once young too. That some of that boring bullshit your parent's spout is actually advice born of adversity. When you realise that everyone is just struggling to survive and live a happy life. That it is OK to be wrong, over and over, your life is your life. That you aren't special, or different or unique. It is liberating and you can see how it changes people. I have made huge "mistakes" in my life but they force you to decide what you want to be. Now I am happily engaged, completed my post-grad and working for a wonderful company. More over I am happy and grateful for what I have. Congrats mate, truly defining yourself and making your life be, what you want it to be is the most satisfying action. PS: Thanks for bringing a smile to my dial | ||
don_kyuhote
3006 Posts
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DRTnOOber
New Zealand476 Posts
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emperorchampion
Canada9496 Posts
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where
144 Posts
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FractalsOnFire
Australia1756 Posts
I'm trying to find words that will express my thoughts but they aren't coming to me. All i can say is, its inspirational and i think you of all people know how rewarding it is to change your life for the better. | ||
Wrongspeedy
United States1655 Posts
On July 02 2012 23:56 Smancer wrote: Perhaps I am just too old for this place. Or perhaps there just aren't enough actual adults creating content in the blog section. Maybe, just maybe, no one cares about real life problems, and the drama of high school resonates the most with Team Liquid readers. Either way, I decided I would write a little bit about my life for my own reflection. In a place where I know none of my peers will ever see. I was first married right out of college. I had met her there my sophomore year. We were introduced a typical party in the city. In one of those apartments I cringe at now. Dirty floors. Greasy appliances. Second hand furniture. Tons of hormones. Loud terrible music. Keg of beer that tasted like water. 5 dollars to get in. At the time I had played Diablo 1. Then Diablo 2. This was the game where I came up with my current gamer name. Smancer. Skeleton necroMANCER. I would play at night when there was nothing to do, and most of the day when I wasn't competing in Judo, at the gym training, or in class. I had graduated college a year early. Of the 3 interns at the tech company I had interned at, I was asked to stay on board. After graduation I had expected to receive a full time offer. No luck, but they wanted to keep me on part time. It was early in our marriage, and I was basically dependent on her family for food and shelter. My parents had sold the house I grew up in and downsized to a small condo down south. There was no way I was welcome there. I knew I would have to find work if I wanted to ever be independent. Having a degree in mathematics from a respectable school I didn't know how lucky I was. I basically fell into a job teaching calculus at a high school. With no formal education classes or training; my first day on the job was my first day ever in front of a classroom. If you think being a student is hard, trying being on the other end. I was able to hold my own. I had gained some small respect from the students by way of my knowledge. It was clear that I knew quite a bit about mathematics. Almost all the high school math teachers I had met over the course of my employment there knew very little mathematics. They were simply people who had an education degree that did will in Algebra 2 back in the day. But the respect was only from a select few. I had great reviews from the department heads, and the administration for the three years I was there. I was miserable though. The salary was barely enough to get by. And I was now throwing my life away playing WoW. I bought the game the day it came out. Collector’s edition. I played and raided, and raided, and raided. Undead warrior. Off tank for the top guild on my server. The day my wife told me she had cheated on me was the worst day and the greatest day. She had wanted children, and had pressured me heavily. I wasn't ready. I couldn't afford kids. She was also in the school system and we couldn't have possibly afforded it. I had since moved away from teaching and landed a job as an analyst for a startup software company. I had done this for her. So that we could have a better income. Eat better. Live in a bigger place. She had made no sacrifices. She never helped with housework. And now she drops this bomb on me. The divorce was very difficult for me. I never told my family what had happened. Simply that she wanted kids and I didn't. I have a feeling they now know what really happened. She 3 months after the divorce was final; she remarried the fellow that she worked with. Big surprise. I didn't take this very well to say the least. I had moved into a shitty apartment. One where the elevator smelled like piss and I didn't talk to my neighbors. I just prayed they didn't rob me. There were nights I was afraid. I was completely on my own. The original plan was I would get both dogs for a week and then her. This didn't work in the long run and we ended up splitting them up. At least I had my guy. I probably would not be alive today if it weren’t for him. I had slipped into a really bad state. I smoked a pack a day; I smoked pot multiple times per day, and drank. I had put on a good 40-50 extra pounds. I didn't go out. All of the friends I had once had, sided with her. After all, they all grew up together. I was the outsider. My boss at work told me I was in danger of being let go. I stayed home every weekend drinking and smoking for almost 2 years of my life in a shitty apartment. Fitting that it could have been that same apartment that we met. I almost jumped from my balcony a few times. As my dog watched from inside the sliding door. My only friend in the world. Tears in my eyes, a blank, curious gaze from slightly tilted head looked back at me. That stare saved my life on more than just one night. I love my dog. New Year’s Eve a few years ago was a great night. I had my last joint and last cigarette that night. I wrote down three things on a piece of paper that I titled "Things you need to do to save your life". 1) Work - Really work hard at work. 2) Quit smoking, everything. 3) Go to the gym. The cigarettes were pretty easy. After about 2 weeks the cravings were pretty easy to get passed. The pot was pretty easy to stop as well. Although I believe it did some real long term damage. I have very difficult time with memory. I can't remember if I have taken someone to a restaurant 3 or 4 weeks after. I can't remember a lot of college, or my twenties. I did start producing at work. It became an outlet for me. I really shined. I grew my skillset by teaching myself SQL. I started working closely with a lot of the people on the Database team. Being a person that is able to really understand business from a marketing perspective and being able to do some pretty technical things is a great niche roll that companies will pay a lot for. I was a top performer. I was awarded stock. I was able to afford my own condo. I met a really nice girl who coincidentally had my old job as a math teacher. Very sweet girl, pretty, caring, nothing like my ex. She moved in last week. I got a new job outside of the software business. Something with a bit more security, and yet another pay bump. I do okay for myself. It's further away from the city. Perhaps in a few years I'll be able to buy a bigger place. Perhaps I'll marry her. It was really a struggle to get my life together. It takes a lot of work to keep a clean place. To have nice looking things. To perform well at work. To get to the gym. I really am starting to look in shape. I am very happy with my deadlift, squat and bench numbers. And I am working hard to get them better. I start the day at 5am to get to the gym. The days I don’t lift, I run. I hate the shit out of running but I do it. My dog comes with me. I don't have that much time for Starcraft. I love the game, and I love to play. I guess I now just love my life a little bit more than the video game. Finally. I wish I could tell you all how important it is to really work hard. You get rewarded for it in the long run. If you are in High School or College, set aside some time that would have been Starcraft time to really study. Not half assed. Set aside some time to take your clothes to the dry cleaner. To clean up your room. To make a proper meal with real food. You need to work at it. I just got a Certificate of Recognition for 5 years of work at my current employer tonight and I quit smoking Weed officially 78 days ago (took me a few months of outpatient to stop ahahaha -_-). I feel fucking great, I don't especially like my job, but it has potential. I just work hard with a grin on my face lately. My boss tells me to do something I don't like or corrects me and I just smile and do it. Before I would have fumed or been openly offended by some of it but now I realize that, that kind of thing just shit on all the hard work I was doing. I was too at a point where I felt like life had no meaning and I was just getting wasted everyday, and working only to sustain that. I wanted to die because I felt like life was pointless. My little buddy helped me through some tough times as well. http://www.teamliquid.net/blogs/viewblog.php?id=311353 I remember him dieing right before I went into outpatient. I had to carry him up and down the stairs of my apartment 4-5 times the night before he died, so he could go to the bathroom. I realized that I cared for him more than I did any living person (including myself) that night. And I really started to question what was going on in my life. When I couldn't stop smoking after that and I kept thinking about not wanting to live, I called work and told them I had a problem. I was in a really sad place, especially after losing him. The first few months sucked, but the last few months have been amazing. I eat out all the time (at nice little places, not fast food). I go rock climbing (bouldering) once a week. I actually want to be around people and try to put myself out there. I am completely honest with myself about my situation, and with other people. I am practicing guitar again, thinking about getting another part time job or going back to school. My life was on auto-pilot to shut everything out the last few years and the last few months I have taken the control back. 5/5 Thanks for giving me some more hope about my own life. I have somewhat of a plan now, and I am working hard at it, but MOAR hope is always good. And I feel like I need to be constantly reminded to not put life on auto-pilot. | ||
Aerisky
United States12128 Posts
Fuck yeah. Keep on trucking man, really enjoyed it. Always feel slightly guilty not leaving a worthy reply to such lengthy and meaningful blogs, but well, all I can do is thank you. | ||
frosecold
Venezuela76 Posts
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