April 7, 2022: Time to become a new man again

Woke up wanting
to become a new man
again.

The birds were singing,
mockingly tweeting
while fragments of pointless conversations
and choruses from the night before
ricocheted in my head.

Memories blown to shreds.
Everything fleeting
except regret.

Thoughts – whirlwinds
in my crumbling mind! –
were like propelled balls
in a pinball machine.

I was crying, “God…  
Was I playing
beer pong?
I was. I kept on playing
beer pong,
losing almost every game.”

The birds were singing,
“He must become a new,
new man.
The man he is now
is self-destructing.”
 

April 2, 2022: To Find or To Lose Yourself

I was organizing my bookshelves when one of the books slipped and fell to the floor. It was Friedrich Nietzsche’s The Genealogy of Morals. I picked it up, opened it, and read the first lines of the preface: “We are unknown, we knowers, ourselves to ourselves: this has its own good reason. We have never searched for ourselves — how should it then come to pass, that we should ever find ourselves.”

‘What he says is true,’ I said. ‘Although, I remember a time when I was out there searching for myself. That’s how I spent my twenties, looking for purpose and the meaning of life, trying to figure out whether I was born to be a rockstar or an entrepreneur. But every discovery I made I drowned in whisky. And I had a good reason to do so: I did not like what I found.’

Today, I’m thirty-four, and I still don’t know who I am or what my purpose is.

The meaninglessness of everything demotivates me, though it cannot keep me from living my life to the fullest. I often manage to forget my inescapable, inevitable death and the absurdity of life, and I manage to enjoy the moment.

But that’s not the point. That’s not the point, at all.

Maybe we — knowers or not — can never find ourselves.

I don’t know… Can’t we? Maybe we can.

On the other hand, sometimes, the goal seems to be the exact opposite — to lose yourself, to get lost, to be intoxicated by life and lose control, to let go, to drown in the sea of forgetfulness and become one with the forgotten. Sometimes, to find ourselves means to lose ourselves.

Smoking a Rocky Patel at Fat Monk, Dbayeh, Lebanon

Have a Cigar: Rocky Patel A.L.R. Second Edition Toro

Name: Rocky Patel Aged Limited Rare Second Edition Toro

Country: Nicaragua

Shape: Box-Pressed

Size: (6 1/2 inches x 52)

Strength: Medium

Finally got the chance to smoke this Rocky Patel, which is listed as Cigar Aficionado’s number 5 cigar of 2019. I’m not 100% sure, but I believe this is also the first Rocky Patel cigar that I try.

The Rocky Patel A.L.R. Second Edition Toro is a well-made, box-pressed, premium cigar that you can proudly smoke publicly with a smile on your face that says, “Oh, yes, this is a great cigar.” (I love how it looks.)

It’s medium-bodied and flavorsome. It has a firm draw and burns wonderfully. So everyone can enjoy it.

I paired it with imperial stout, and I was very happy about it.