Fred Aiken Writing

Category: Blog

Get Off the Stage

Daily writing prompt
What’s the thing you’re most scared to do? What would it take to get you to do it?

My initial reaction is to say that the thing I fear most doing is socializing, but I suppose that’s not entirely true. I can, when prompted, socialize just fine. I just don’t like doing it. I’d prefer to live as hermetically as possible.

But when it comes to a genuine fear, then I suppose public speaking is pretty high up on that list. I absolutely detest getting up in front of a crowd and discussing a topic in great detail. I’m sure it’s just a matter of practicing and doing it repeatedly, but I think the initial fear of going up and having all eyes on you drains me of any motivation to ever volunteer, especially since it’s not like my job and/or lifestyle really calls for such occasions.

I never understood why it was required to do public speaking in grade school. There always seemed like a better way of testing a student on their grasp of the material, and the sort of speeches that grade-school students gave, myself included, were always so very terrible. If anything, I feel as if a good chunk of the credit as to why public speaking is so difficult for so many people could probably be attributed to the poor guidance given by teachers as to how to overcome one’s natural hesitations and dislike for speaking in front of the class.

The only feedback I ever received about how good or bad I did presenting the information I was supposed to regurgitate in front of the class was always some letter grade, but I was never really give any sort of concrete suggestions or feedback that could be considered useful in perhaps getting better and less nervous when giving a public speech. Instead, I developed a horrible anxiety about the whole matter, and that sort of feeling only grew with time.

Now, the handful of times in which I do need to speak in front of a crowd of more than three people, I will stutter and stumble over most words. I have a hard time looking at people, and so it probably just looks like I’m just staring off into space, which I will then become incredibly paranoid about and start to intensely look at everyone as awkwardly as possible. Without fail, I forget what I need to say, or I will speed through everything that needs to be said so fast that it becomes difficult to understand what it is I’m discussing, both for the audience and myself as well.

While I absolutely detest giving public speeches, I do not envy the position that anyone in the audience must go through while listening to whatever I’m talking about. I mumble. I sweat. I skip over huge chunks of the speech that I thought I had memorized. I do not follow a coherent line of reason. It really must be quite a mess listening to me stumble through my speech. And yet…and yet, for whatever reason, the audience will always limply clap at the end. Never because I did a particularly good job, but rather out of a sense of obligation, because, well, that’s what you do when you listen to a person give the most awkward, incomprehensible speech imaginable; just nod, and wait until they get off the stage.

With all that said, though, I’d much rather give a public speech than have anyone ever touch any of my nails. I have a true, though slightly weird, phobia about anyone touching my nails. It stems from my parents not paying too close attention to me while growing up, and so I got into watching a lot of inappropriate horror movies, especially the ‘Saw’ franchise and any of Rob Zombie’s movies. I credit having watched those films as the reasons why I can no longer stand gore in horror movies, nor do I like when anyone other than myself touches my nails, as I have this abnormal fear that they will rip the nail off and, I dunno, torture me or something.

It usually not that big of a deal. I just cannot go and ever get a manicure or pedicure, which is fine by me. But I also kinda dislike whenever people click their nails together, but that’s probably more so a personal preference in not enjoying that sound rather than a fear….though I’d say it stems from my fear of people touching my nails in some way.

The two fears have little to do with one another, other than the fact that they’ll elicit the same sort of heart-palpitating anxiety from me, and I’ll just start to shut down and want to be left alone more so than normal. So yeah, I guess just never ask me to speak in public or try to touch my nails, and I think we’re good, since I cannot see a scenario for the rest of my life where either of those things would be necessary to do in order to live a fulfilled sort of life.

Clutter Like it’s 2025

Daily writing prompt
Where can you reduce clutter in your life?

First impulse would be to say my desk. It’s usually always my desk. I put way too many things on my desk in the hope that if I have it withins arm’s reach then I’ll somehow be more productive…or because I failed the kindergarten assignment of putting things back where I found them when I was a kid. Either way, I usually have way too many things, like a distracting amount of things, on my desk.

But to be fair, I do clean off my desk routinely. I have this weekly ritual, that sometimes I skip, but always come back to at least every other week, sometimes monthly, in which I clean off my desk and put everything back where it’s supposed to go. The process isn’t all that extensive, though in my head I make it out to be this massive production, which is probably why I only do it every month, sometimes once a quarter…I dunno, but I do in fact do it at some point.

I also have a lot of online clutter. My wife complains that I have way too many tabs open at once on my browser. It’s usually only 4 or 5, and I’ve seen worse, but still, I suppose she does have a point. It’s not like I’m using all those tabs at the same time.

Then there’s the amount of favorite links in my bookmark folders that I try to think about as infrequently as possible. Links to things that I’ve been accumulating for the past decade or so of things that I thought looked neat or were interesting ideas, but I’m embarrassed to say that there’s so many damn favorites in my bookmark folder on my browser that I wouldn’t know where to start with what’s still relevant or interesting. A couple months back, I did get a wild hair to go through the favorite links in my bookmarks and found a depressing amount of the links were to websites that were no longer available for whatever reason.

I also have a lot of computer clutter, whether it’s my email with way too many unopened, probably-spam sort of emails, or my computer’s local drive that has every story, poem, academic paper, or anything else that I’ve ever written dating back nearly 20 years. At this point, I think there’s little to no chance of me ever going back through any of my old writing, and getting rid of it all would be pretty simple. Just a blanket delete on most, if not all, of the files. Though I suppose it’s nostalgia that keeps me from doing so.

Sometimes I wish it was easier to just discard certain things in my life, live as ascetically as possible, do some of those things that self-help gurus are always yammering on about when it comes to improving ones’ life by living as simplistically as possible. But I suppose at the end of the day, I often find myself not caring nearly enough to declutter my life that much. As I told my mom back when I was a teenager, “I’ll clean my room when I’m good and ready.” But jokes on me, I don’t actually have a concrete plan…

A Year and Now

Daily writing prompt
Is your life today what you pictured a year ago?

Pretty much, but I feel that’s mostly because not much has changed in my life in the past year. I still have the same job I had last year. And I still pretty much do the same sorts of things, like read, write, and play chess all day.

I suppose I’ve gotten to that point in my life where I don’t really aspire to radically change my life all that much within a year’s time. In fact, I kinda enjoy the consistency of how I live nowadays. There’s a simplistic freedom in knowing what to expect from day to day, month to month, and yes, even year to year.

Granted, that’s not to say that I don’t have aspirations for each year. Because I certainly do. And with regards to those aspirations that I had hoped to accomplish, well, I suppose I’ve fallen short on a good chunk of them.

At the beginning of the year, I had set out to try and re-learn playing the guitar, become more proficient in spanish and start learning portuguese, and to write more consistently each and every day. I want to say that I’ve become fairly proficient in my spanish studies, but nowhere near as fluent as I had hoped to be.

I bought a $50 guitar last year in the hopes that would motivate me to learn how to play, but I can confidently say that it has remained in the corner of my office space without being touched once. Except maybe to vacuum around and under it.

With regards to writing more, well, I guess it depends on what day of the year you look at. Some days I was incredibly productive and kept on task, while other days the little ADHD bug kept me thoroughly distracted all day and so I barely wrote my name to various work documents much less an entire paragraph of some story I was working on.

I suppose being in my thirties has made me sort of shy away from making major aspirations within a year’s time. I feel like it’s best to do incremental things within a year, but major projects and goals tend to take much longer, maybe a decade or so. In a way, that makes not fully accomplishing what I set out to do in a year not seem so bad, while also giving me a little bit of wriggle room to flesh out what it is I’m trying to do.

I really hate the idea of constantly having to reinvent myself, or do something dramatically different. I kinda felt like that when I was younger and in my late teens and early twenties, and the feeling was exhausting. Sometimes stasis is the best place to be, since even a tortoise can finish a race.