I mean, I know I am, people have always told me I am.
Right now it's hard, for a couple reasons. For one thing, the having to go to different buildings to teach is just a drag, especially in the spring rainy season. I never appreciated how good it was to be able to walk less than 300 feet, all indoors, from my office to my classroom. I could come in in the morning and park and not have to worry about moving my car or finding parking somewhere else. My building is a modern building and it has plentiful restrooms (and PARITY in restrooms, as many women's as men's). And the water fountains work (they do not, in some of the other buildings, or the plumbing has been deemed unsafe for potable water in the old fountains). And you also have to remember everything you might need - or do without it. There's no "I gotta run back to my office, I was going to hand your exams back but I left them on my desk"
So it just wears on me.
But also, other things.
In another group I am a part of, one of the members is having issues. Apparently they have some either undiagnosed or undermedicated emotional issues, and they're kind of going off the rails - the sort of "everyone is against me, everyone is being rude to me" and they're firing off e-mails to the whole group. It's not an issue I caused in any way, I am not involved with the thing that upset them, and I furthermore have no authority to do anything to fix it.
but they keep e-mailing everyone. I finally set up a filter, it really was that distressing, and in some cases there were eight coming in an hour. I asked a more senior member what we should do and her response was that we should ignore the e-mails and some in the group are trying to get the person help. But still, it is distressing to me - when this person is medicated, they are fine and I like them as a person. But now I'm gonna feel like it's walking on eggshells because I don't want them to go off on ME and think of me as an enemy.
And another thing at work, today - I have a couple students in class who have been difficult. I've had to speak to them several times about being loud in class (side conversations, and, more commonly, CLEARLY texting each other and then laughing about it. As a result, I feel like *I'm* the target of what they're saying (it could be) and it throws me off my game and it's also.....just rude. It's loud enough it disturbs the students near them. So I keep reminding them, one day it was rather sharply said because I was TIRED and I was HURTING and it was like the third time I had to do it that day.)
well, one of them was coming down the hall and griping in to their phone - "I'm on my way to lab. I hate lab. I really hate lab" (the student sees me coming out of my office to go to my other class) and loudly adds, twice "I HATE BIOLOGY"
and yeah, I know, I take things too personally. But right in that moment - when I was tired and hurting and had been rushing around (taught two lectures, was leading a field lab, was unsure about the field lab because we'd had heavy rain and I was afraid the place would be muddy and difficult to sample in), it just hit me and deflated any confidence I had. Oh, I didn't react to the student, and they may never even come back to lecture (they skip A LOT).
But the other, more clear-headed thing: why major in something you hate? I mean, yes, granted, maybe in that moment they were frustrated, but I don't remember ever saying I hated my whole major. I might have said, like "organic chemistry lab is super frustrating" or "I don't really see the point of me having to learn this specific thing for what I want to do, but okay"
But I have also dealt with people where, when I was doing something like career counseling and I asked them what they got interested in or excited about in biology, and their response is "nothing" (In some cases it comes out that they were told certain jobs in biology paid well, or they somehow thought they'd enjoy it once they got to med school or something). But like I remember I would have said stuff like "how plants work!" and "the different kinds of insects in areas" and things like that. In fact, I had a little difficulty choosing a major because I also liked French and English and linguistics....though I do think I chose the best one for me.
But I also realized another thing: my immediate assumption when I get the sense someone dislikes me is to wonder what I'm doing wrong, what I could change that might make me more likeable (or: more likeable to them). Intellectually I know not everyone will like a person, and I do have some people I am uncomfortable around or that rub me the wrong way. But I do wonder if maybe my "gee maybe I need to tone down my specific brand of weirdness and become more Normal" is a response to having been unpopular as a kid, where some of the teachers actually seemed to obliquely hint that if I were more "like" the other kids, they wouldn't harass me.
I don't know. I struggle some times with human relationships because I dislike rejection and I also like to keep a lot of myself "back" because I'm afraid if people find out too much about me, they will use it against me (another thing that happened when I was a kid; confiding in people sometimes meant they just had ammunition against me).
But I wish I could break through and go from "they don't like me, therefore something must be wrong with me and I have to figure out what it is and work to change it" to "they don't like me, that's their loss" or even "they're being rude to me not because I deserve it but because they're acting like a jerk" (seriously: being flipped off by a random driver if, like, I am not driving fast enough to suit them - even if I'm going the speed limit or a tiny bit over - it can ruin my whole day)
I also realize that lately, most of my human interactions have either been unpleasant (you see a couple examples here) or someone needing something from me. And I don't know how to get more "good" interactions, or ones that aren't "talking shop." I probably identify with my career too much (an offhand comment on, of all things, Monday night's NCIS, made me sit up and go "oh no. That's ME") and I really do need more "outside" things where I can interact with people without doing "work." But I'm not sure even how to do that! I can't find just-plain social groups here that meet when I'm free.
That said, bringing the van back, I pulled in to try to park it (the parking area for the motor pool is TERRIBLE because some of the area was taken over for tennis courts, and it's too small) and the fifteen passenger vans are always hard to park. A man in a pickup pulled in in front of me (I didn't realize who it was at first) and it meant I couldn't easily fit into the place I wanted to go into. But then he got out of the truck and I saw it was the chief of campus police (whom I know slightly). He had come back from a funeral (our county sheriff died suddenly last week) and he motioned for me to roll my window down, and when I did, he said "do you want me to park that for you so you can just drop off the mileage sheet and go" and I thanked him and said yes - because I know he could do it better than I could, and anyway, if he clipped one of the other vans it wouldn't be MY fault then. (but of course he got it parked just fine). But yeah, that did make my day a little better, but I seem to experience too little of that sort of thing.
And yes, I realize some of this is that I'm over tired and my allergies are bad and it's the middle of the semester, and there are a lot of bad things happening, but it's just hard and human interactions have mostly not been great.