The alarm is set for 8 o'clock. It's just past midnight, and I am staring at the ceiling, my eyes glued wide open. For once, neither I nor the ceiling or spinning, but nobody has managed to get the gremlins in my head to stand down.
The last few weeks have been defined by bouts of Ménière's-related vertigo that have forced me to use a wheelchair to keep from falling down at work and to depend on other people to get me from point a to point B. At home this translates into far too much time spent on the couch watching reruns while mindlessly doom scrolling through text and images that I'm far too nauseous to absorb beyond a headline here or there.
When the fog clears, I try to paint - especially when the gremlin are keeping sleep away. Sitting and scrolling are becoming far too habitual, however.
This morning – it's morning now –– I'm out of thinner for my paint. I'm desperate so I get up and fill the tub, grab the first book I see in my office and sink into the bubbles.
It's not a novel. It's a book about the history of English which turns out to be great. I expect to be engaged, entertained, and sooth, when I read fiction, but I'm surprised how relaxing it is to learn something new at two in the morning. I'm having the age old problem of not being able to put the book down, but it's a different sensation from scrolling through toxic pages of social media posts.
Scrolling is turns my body into a clenched fist.
Each turned page, however, slows my heart rate. Each new factoid relaxes another muscle.
The book may keep me up all night, but I'm not worried about being worn out in the morning. The clarity that comes only from calm has helped me make a new rule. The next time anxiety tempts me to pick up the phone and scroll, I'll grab a book instead.
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