GreekSkeptic
Tom Storm
DifferentiatingEgg
After a period of time, I fell into an overwhelming emptiness. I noticed that doing things and expressing myself in a certain way did not make me any "happier", so I thought that I was doing something wrong. It wasn't that I thought I haven't found that one thing that will fill up an empty bucket inside me. It was that there wasn't a bucket to fill up at all. And I really stressed out myself to the maximum, if you get what I mean. Feeling unworthy of everything, feeling incapable, frustrated, confused, trapped inside a reality I thought I was not built for. So, what one might describe as pain, came early. And I do not want to get graphic here. The existential torture and solitude was at its peak. Well, it still is but I'm more aware. This emotional anxiety, fatigue, confusion, dread felt as more real than anything I've ever felt before. — GreekSkeptic
the greatest thing ye can experience? It is the hour of great contempt. The hour in which even your happiness becometh loathsome unto you, and so also your reason and virtue.
The hour when ye say: “What good is my happiness! It is poverty and pollution and wretched self-complacency. But my happiness should justify existence itself!” — Nietzsche, Thus Spoke Zarathustra
Wayfarer
I haven't found a single thing to "save" myself, but helping and uplifting others is a whole new world to me now. Being good for society is interesting. Since I can't help myself, I'll help others. — GreekSkeptic
180 Proof
Yes. :fire:I keep asking myself "Why I won't kill myself tomorrow?" ... I’ll be disappointed if things change and I won’t be there to see it. I’m curious to see if I’ll ever feel something real. If I’ll ever break the void, the numbness, the existential torture. I’m curious to live and see if I’ll experience something new, and that “new” might be the real I’m looking for. — GreekSkeptic
Patterner
You don't know what has been worth staying alive for? A few weeks ago, you came up with an idea for an approach that, while not specific, you hope will eventually be shown to have been a good decision. But you don't know why you didn't end it over the previous several years?So, all this time, I keep asking myself "Why I won't kill myself tomorrow?". — GreekSkeptic
An excellent idea. We don't help others only for their benefit. It is of great benefit to ourselves.I haven't found a single thing to "save" myself, but helping and uplifting others is a whole new world to me now. Being good for society is interesting. Since I can't help myself, I'll help others. Now I would say for sure that that's something that keeps me here, and for the first time it does not feel superficial or illusionary - at least for now. — GreekSkeptic
LuckyR
GreekSkeptic
Astorre
This emotional anxiety, fatigue, confusion, dread felt as more real than anything I've ever felt before. It showed me not how things are, but how things are not — GreekSkeptic
GreekSkeptic
I believe fulfillment itself is something structured. That's what I call "box of thought".It was that there wasn't a bucket to fill up at all. — GreekSkeptic
This emotional anxiety, fatigue, confusion, dread felt as more real than anything I've ever felt before. It showed me not how things are, but how things are not. It's like it started to strip this "box of thought" away, and it was really really painful because I was hanging between a thread of "am I doing something wrong?" and "is this right?". — GreekSkeptic
Basically everything I perceived as truth I saw it collapsed, from how I feel for myself to how I feel for other people. — GreekSkeptic
It cannot be faked. For me, real means in a few words something that penetrates my numbness.)It sounds as self-destructive maybe I don't know, but I chased this kind of feeling. I tried to find ways to bring myself to the ground when alone. I told myself how bad I am, how unworthy, how ridiculous...all these bad stuff you know. It felt true, constant and honest. — GreekSkeptic
And it's NOT that helping others fill the bucket...its that it feels real. That's what matters. Happiness tries to fill a bucket I don't have, which is why it feels fake. Helping others ignores the missing bucket and focuses on the world outside, which is why it feels "real.".People shouldn't bear the pain of themselves. People shouldn't endure the pain of their own existence — GreekSkeptic
Jeremy Murray
Since I can't help myself, I'll help others. Now I would say for sure that that's something that keeps me here, and for the first time it does not feel superficial or illusionary - at least for now. Maybe that's the kind of hope I hoped for when I was younger. People shouldn't bear the pain of themselves. — GreekSkeptic
I argued that pain is the primary standard of truth because it is the only thing that feels honest and coherent. — GreekSkeptic
Corvus
Hope in a better life sounds like living doing nothing and expect things to get better. — GreekSkeptic
ProtagoranSocratist
So, all this time, I keep asking myself "Why I won't kill myself tomorrow?". I discussed this with some people throughout the years. The answers I get were "I hope for a better life.", "I live to enjoy and be happy", "For hope.". Superficial. It all sounds superficial to me. Hope in a better life sounds like living doing nothing and expect things to get better. — GreekSkeptic
I haven't found a single thing to "save" myself, but helping and uplifting others is a whole new world to me now. Being good for society is interesting. Since I can't help myself, I'll help others. — GreekSkeptic
Philosophim
Feeling unworthy of everything, feeling incapable, frustrated, confused, trapped inside a reality I thought I was not built for. So, what one might describe as pain, came early. — GreekSkeptic
baker
Helping others. — GreekSkeptic
/.../
Writing in The New York Times, Natalie Angier called the book a "scholarly yet surprisingly sprightly volume." She wrote,
pathological altruism is not limited to showcase acts of self-sacrifice... The book is the first comprehensive treatment of the idea that when ostensibly generous 'how can I help you?' behavior is taken to extremes, misapplied or stridently rhapsodized, it can become unhelpful, unproductive and even destructive. Selflessness gone awry may play a role in a broad variety of disorders, including anorexia and animal hoarding, women who put up with abusive partners and men who abide alcoholic ones. Because a certain degree of selfless behavior is essential to the smooth performance of any human group, selflessness run amok can crop up in political contexts. It fosters the exhilarating sensation of righteous indignation, the belief in the purity of your team and your cause and the perfidiousness of all competing teams and causes.[7]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pathological_Altruism
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