Sadness Is Not Badness
Season 2, #4: At the intersection of Nightwalking Avenue and Well-being Street
I PUT A LOT of thinking into this final post of the Nightwalking Season 2 quartet of posts (in January we kick off Season 3 and Stargazingβwhich is perfect for any new year). The mental lifting came from not feeling particularly βnightwalkyβ just now, since βwell-beingβ and βself-careβ have been more on my mind than melancholy or sadness in general.
Iβve been feeling good, being that Iβve jump-started a New Yearβs resolution two weeks early in order to βbuild into it.β When I mentioned that to someone they remarked it sounded like a solid plan. Rather than using a calendar date to start something, just decide what youβd like to leave behind, why youβre leaving it behind (an important step), and then just start living that way.
So thatβs what Iβve been doing since the week began.
Hey, you gotta take a first step. Why not now?
Even given the holiday season, after job losses, and the deaths of family and friends, Iβm not sad. Also Iβm not βjoyous,β so βneither glee nor peeβ is gonna harsh my current mellow, like chillinβ out on a bare branch that is the beginning of winter 2023-24β¦
IβD BE LYING IF I didnβt say thereβs a tinge of lonelinessβand its better half, solitudeβgoing on just now. You can want to be with people, end up actually spending time with them, and yet feel nothing but regret just the same. So, other humans are not the solution to loneliness.
Obviously, it comes down to yourself.
Realizing that, I wondered: How well am I taking care of myself? What am I actually doing that I βthinkβ is self-care when itβs just wallowing in pity party favors like bad food, alcohol, drugs, oversleeping or not getting enough sleep, not exercising, or indulging in stuff that isnβt moving me closer to my goals? So this past week I did a hard No on all that and itβs already working wonders.
Meanwhile, December is a great time to look back at the yearβs accomplishments (tick VG, I get a gold star I guess), where Iβm at now (could be better, so what needs changing? Letβs fold that in!), and where to go in the year ahead.

In the past year StoryShedβs newsletter definitely changed, from random multiple posts a month (prior to September) to seasons (three in total) with four posts a season, which has amounted to roughly two posts a month. Thatβs achievable given on Dec. 1 StoryShed launched a companion publication, The Guy Stevens Weather Report, thatβs about popular music history and a side project Iβm working on. The pivot was unnerving at first but I think Iβve settled into it nicely. Hereβs hoping youβll enjoy it too.
Things just now have been good, with plenty of off-work time to put things in order, make personal habit changes, deal with a potential housing move in January, and prepare to launch a podcast to go with the new Substack pub. I can only wish you this much productive anticipation and solitudeβitβs freakinβ restorative!
WHILE OUT LOOKING AT holiday lights with two old friends, we stopped to snap photos of the above display. One pal got out of the car to see if it had a dial toneβit did!
This was the most delightful Christmas display I saw all night. It had a tinge of nostalgiaβNightwalking sadness, if you willβin it, as in βwouldnβt it be wonderful if you could pick up that receiver and call anyone you wish you could talk toβ but either havenβt (because youβre afraid to) or canβt because theyβve either died or entirely disappeared from your life. Confronted with a question like that (βWouldnβt it be wonderful if you couldβ¦β) opens up all the whys and wherefores of conversations youβve had in the past, or recently, or hope to have in the future.
That, I think, is productive sadnessβnot a bad thing! From βsadness is not badnessβ to sadness as badass. LOL.
WHILE NIGHTWALKING IS NOT particularly verbal, it has βa form of self-reflective dark humor.β That front yard payphone easily reminded me of the chilling, yet darkly funny Richard Matheson story βLong Distance Call,β where an elderly woman gets repeated calls from her dead husband.
What could this mean?
Well, because Nightwalking is so tongue-tied it just might need visual promptsβbest discovered while out walkingβto bring whatever roiling emotions are just below the surface of your consciousness. Again, my post βNightwalking Speaks!β offers a spectrum of possibilities:
β¦thereβs a range on the mood scale (where a full-blown depressive episode lies at the far end, and Nightwalking at the other) where Nightwalking can evince curiosity, enough in this case where I went to the trouble of recording my thoughtsβso an analogy such as βlate afternoon, sunset, twilight, dusk, nighttime, midnight hour,β with Nightwalking being on the sunset to twilight-dusk range of the scale and a depressive episode being as βdark as midnightβ seems apt.
So coming across a gaily lighted front yard payphone in the days before the Christmas holiday brings to mind a βtwilight zone mΓ©langeβ of wistful amusement. Melancholy delight, if you will.
HEREβS WISHING YOU AND yours a bright path out of 2023 and into a promising year ahead. Iβll wrap up with an admission.
When I took the photo of the front yard phone above, I was appalled Iβd left the flash on and went back to shoot it again before we took off in the car. This last shot was the result. I was bummed but then realized this too had a charm to itβthe βnot badnessβ to counter my βsadness,β aka disappointment. Oh well. I like it.
Hereβs hoping you find similar moments, too.
A quick end-of-year thank you to all the new StoryShed subscribers. Welcome! So glad youβre here. StoryShed is the always-free publication of StoryShed Media, so no worries about upgrading or anything. Ever.
However if youβre a music buff or history and culture fan you might enjoy my new paid-only publication, The Guy Stevens Weather Report, which launched early this month and will post deep-dive essays, a forthcoming podcast, and interviews in 2024. You can read the debut post here:
Happy holidays! See ya βround campus and in the new year.
Addendum 12/23/23 | 2:14 a.m. CST
The Oracle speaks! Some background: Ten years ago when I was underemployed, I used to consider finding coins on the street a stroke of good luck. Curiosity kicked in (because, well, unemployment) and I wondered if the year on the coins I found coincided with a diary or journal entry I had from past years.
Yesterday I came across this penny, minted in 2006:
There is a journal entry for Tuesday, December 26, 2006β17 years ago next weekβthat describes a Christmas church service I attended that year. Does Oracle speak through the past and maybe point a way to the future? You decide:
It was something of a charming, not-fussy little parish church in Plymouth and the 82-year old celebrant nearly collapsed when ascending the altar. But his voice was strong and the music was good, and bright light shined through the stained glass. I was watching a lovely young woman who was led in by a slightly older womanβby slightly older Iβd guess my age, which is shocking for me to say, but I canβt judge ages anymoreβ40 is the same as 50 and even 60 can look surprisingly like mid-50s, so Iβd place her guardian at 50, tops. I couldnβt judge the age of the disabled young woman, but she could have been anywhere from 22 to 32. Definitely not older than that, although her eyes seemed dark and aged; she was striking to me for her Gallic nose and short-cut brunette hair that slid under her neck and framed her lips. I couldnβt place her disabilityβshe had to be led in and had trouble standing; she coughed often and yet her look was one of faith and determinationβand a sort of inner joy that caught my interest. I was tired during that service, as I sat beside D.N., I thought how much it recalled for me odd β70s momentsβbeing in the kitchen at Casco Point, the Rogersβ home, the Brady Bunch, the Partridge Family, anything that connected with and mythologized that time for me. I think it was the stained glass light belting down from the windows, or the faux trees and Catholic imageryβthe look of the determined young woman who was still lovely despite whatever cruelties life had thrown her way.
Anyway, I know Iβm going on a bit on this, but it was a feeling that stayed with me all the way into this morningβs bus ride, and made me feel connected with my past, present and future. Those are rare moments for me and I seize them with gladness. Thatβs as close as I come, I think, to a religious experience, and itβsβIβm afraidβlargely secular and sensual, if you had to categorize it.
Take what you will, cats, but DAMN Oracle.
Best Christmas gift ever.
Brilliant piece. Sadness can be a lot but it doesnβt have to be bad only.
As I'll share in a post next week ish (whenever it's ready), I too, am looking at what I'm doing for self-care, whether or not its working, and what I might actually need differently to feel different. We'll see ... See you in '24