Aliens… alienated

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When I was growing up, the word ‘alien’ was a shorthand way of conjuring up images of E.T. Phoning Home, eating mashed potato mountains while humming an electronic beep-bop tune, or an assortment of green-hued light beams, metal donuts, and other-worldly secrets deliberately concealed or accidentally revealed… oh, and THAT movie where no one can hear you scream (because an alien is sucky-stuck to your face… ugh.)

[If you know, you know!]

Then there was a lizard-human phase where the aliens came to inhabit humans… body-snatch us, or live within us and amongst us, taking over important government roles or the youth of today…

Later in life, the word ‘alien’ zoomed closer to home, and became attached to migrants. Sorry to single you out USA (I’m sure you are not isolated in this matter), but it’s from your news that my feed became flooded with terms such as ‘illegal alien’, ‘undocumented alien’ and ‘nonresident alien’.

According to Wikipedia: “The term ‘alien’ is derived from the Latin alienus […which] came to mean a stranger, a foreigner, or someone not related by blood…”

Much more recently, (late 2025), I came across a series of photographs taken of youth in Spain in an article with the title: ‘Suffering, betrayal, impending doom’: Spain’s alienated youth – in pictures | Photography | The Guardian

The article opens: “Magnum photographer Lúa Ribeira worked intensely with young people – shooting them in dystopian landscapes on city limits to reflect their feelings of disconnection.”

The collection of images was published in a book “Agony in the Garden” – you can visit the site to see some of the images (I don’t want to get in trouble with copyright): Lúa Ribeira – Agony in the Garden (or larger, in the Guardian article mentioned previously).

The Guardian article notes that “The project’s title refers to the biblical passage about Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane before his crucifixion. My intention was to connect contemporary reality to more universal themes of suffering, betrayal and impending doom.”

Oooph.

It hurts my soul that young people feel that way.

I vaguely remember being a teenager in the 1980s, crying about the extinction rates of animals, singing the Sting lyrics “I hope the Russians love their children too” (1985) and having nightmares for weeks after watching the post-apocalyptic American movie “The Day After” (1983) and the British version “Threads” (1984):

[file source: 1983 – The Day After – Movie Trailer (Rated PG)]

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30 years later, my specific fears have, and have not, come to fruition… some still linger… and a few new worries have been added to the mix.

BUT – on the whole, I confess, my life is #blessed enough that I remain optimistic – I look for the glimmers of happiness and hope, and try not to catastrophize (too much) on all the things that could go wrong, without letting myself become indifferent to the suffering that is happening to others.

I’ve been lucky enough to finish school, have a rewarding career, marry the man of my dreams, raise wonderful children… so perhaps my fears are tempered by the knowledge that as much as I want it all to continue, I’ve had a good life.

For the youth of today, they’re yet to have those experiences – so it must feel disheartening to hear the news, and read the paper, or worse still, live through the horrors modernity might offer… “suffering, betrayal and impending doom” become all too real…

How terribly sad that makes me.

The days where my migraine-brain makes me very unwell (and an attack makes me feel like my head is stuck in a vice, my right eye starts to close over and my right side becomes paralyzed, I drag myself across the bedroom floor to get to the bathroom, or just use a blow-up mattress to sleep there), I too feel alienated from the rest of the world.

Chronic pain will do that to you.

And yet – on those days when the pain is less, and the suffering lifts, then the sense of betrayal and doom lifts too…

My mood is absolutely tied to my pain levels…

…especially when I feel paingry.

This post is starting to sound more depressing than I would ever want to share – so let me end by saying – you’re not alone – reach out if you feel alienated (on my CONTACT page or to others closer to home who can give you a hug).

AND – keep an eye out for those around you who might be feeling disconnected to the world around them (due to pain, relocation, separation or worse). Reach out to those people and lend a hand.

In the same way that scientists send pulses of sound and light into outer space in the hope that someone, or something, will reply – send some love and good will into the world around you and know that one way or another, it WILL bounce back…

Take care taking care, Linda x

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PS – shoutout to my blogger-friend Z.F.Thrimej’s (When Deadlines Become Zombies) who, in response to a post last year (Is Life Becoming Kafkaesque?), put me in touch with a movie called “District 9” whose trailer implies it is perfectly suited to today’s post. It refers to aliens who accidentally arrive here on their (space) ship in search of a better life and are poorly (and poignantly) received as… illegal aliens.


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7 responses to “Aliens… alienated”

  1. John Avatar

    Thanks for the reminder, that was a good movie. I feel sorry for youth today as they never had the chance in my view, to have a real childhood.

    Building tree forts, riding bikes with their friends so far from home that the parents had no idea where they were.

    No internet or phones. No video games, just hours upon hours of fun outdoors playing with your friends. Coming home when the street lights came on. Do children today even know how to go outside and play?

    So sad. We old Boomers are damn lucky!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Agreed! I’m Gen X and we had it pretty good too! Most of the kids in my neighborhood now still have play-dates organised by parents, they get dropped off and picked up, and are contactable at all times by phone (some of my GenZ daughter’s friends have to have the trackers turned on their phone so their parents can see where they are at all times)… there’s not as much freedom and adventure, and although the world MIGHT BE more dangerous, I suspect it’s just that we treat it as if it were… good luck to the kids of the future… I still can’t imagine what it might be like…

      Liked by 1 person

      1. John Avatar

        They are gonna need that good luck, Linda. I think the world is much more dangerous today in many ways.I can ramble about that but I won’t. I hope you and yours have a safe and wonderful new week. 😎🇦🇺

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  2. Warren Avatar

    the day after was unreal…….I just rewatched it, a really poor version on YouTube, but still makes a point…..can still what Ronald Reagan saw and how he felt, and then acted..wanna make something in schools mandatory, that would be a good start.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      It’s amazing how some things you never forget… I still remember conversations about placing mattresses across windows to protect you from broken glass… not sure about the wisdom now, or that it could ever be enough… but somehow the idea of my bed being put to use in a war made me terribly frightened… so sad for all those around the world for whom this is their current reality…

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  3.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      💕

      Like

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