The windows were rolled down as my
Ford F-150 sped up the street, the crisp, cold breeze of the night air whipping
through my hair. My left elbow was placed upon the opening of the driver’s side
window, bent at an angle to where my chin could slightly rest upon my enclosed,
clenched fist. The aux cord was plugged into my phone, with my stereo’s subs
turned all the way to maximize the bass. I could feel the vibrations within my
hand as I gripped the steering wheel, the stereo playing the somber song of Come and See Me, by PARTYNEXTDOOR and
Drake. As I reached the narrow stretch of road up ahead, the streetlights
disappeared, leaving my headlights as the only source of direction I had. Soon
enough, the infamous gated community appeared in front of me, surrounded with
warm lights and paved brick sidewalks. As I reached the gate, I completely
whipped the car around, drove for about 10 feet, and shifted the gear into park
against the curb. I felt the soft fabric of my lanyard graze my knee, as I
twisted the key slightly in the ignition, turning the engine off but leaving
the stereo system on. I draped the lanyard around my neck, walked to the edge
of the sidewalk, and looked over at the whole entire city. All around me were
lights stretching as far as to the mountains miles away from where I stood.
Hundreds of thousands of people were living their lives, either driving on the
freeway or simply just sleeping in their beds in their houses. For some reason,
I felt that something was missing, but I couldn’t tell if it was something
absent from my surroundings or some part of myself that I had been missing, but
all the noise around me had just blocked it out, until now. I had never felt so
utterly alone and so coldly numb.
I couldn’t seem to feel anymore, as
if my emotions had shut themselves down without notice. I felt no sadness,
depression or negativity, nor happiness, joy, or warmth. I quickly realized
that I had been this way for some time, but the distractions around me had
provided a diversion away from myself. Why couldn’t I feel a thing? All my life
I had known that there was so much more in the world to be felt, discovered,
experienced, and enjoyed. It gave me purpose to continue living, whilst
constantly changing and evolving. But yet, standing there hundreds of feet
above the rest of the valley, I could not feel a single thing. When had I lost
this part of me along the way? Or was this
who I had always been? A nihilistic, numbed, emotionally distant man who
thought nothing meant anything. That we are all simply existing in a struggle
of life as we push an immense boulder up a steep hill, with no end in sight. Did
anything really mean anything? Maybe life itself and the experiences thereof
don’t actually have real value. Maybe value can only be given by someone or
something. Or maybe none of this mattered either. Maybe I was just thinking too
much. And maybe I was just a dumb teenager, thinking he knew more than what he
really knew. As I got back in my truck I drove home in silence. No radio, no
stereo, not even a single hum. Whether anything I cared about actually
mattered, I thought that perhaps my perspective upon what I thought mattered
determined
my
outlook towards the world. But even that I wasn’t so sure about. Then,
suddenly, a smile crept across my face as I looked out my window, up into the
black sky above, knowing that in 5 years I would forget all about this, knowing
that, in this moment, it all didn’t really matter.