Yes, I did. What you're experiencing is the power of your mind in constructing reality. The power of your mind in determining reality. Reality isn't only out there. You participate in its creation. The terror is your creation, you are its father, and it is your child. You are the dreamer of demons, and the moment you realise that, that's the moment you realise that you have power over the demons. You dreamed them up - they weren't there to begin with. You don't have to let them become your masters - you are the boss.Anyway, hope I don't sound too psychotic. Does anyone else experience this? And if so, do you think there's something philosophically significant going on here, or is it just a psychiatric 'symptom' you might say, a manifestation of extreme anxiety? — dukkha
So life is strange, but compared to what? What's it bizarre in relation to? There's no non-strange thing to compare your existence to. — dukkha
I feel there is a deep connection between philosophy and the mindset characterized by 'anxiety, depression/hopelessness, angst, apathy... etc.' — Question
It's like normally you're 'in' life, doing things as your body within the world, but then you're sucked backwards and you're watching yourself as if you aren't your body at all, you're observing your body as a non-embodied perspective, for the first time.
Psychiatrists call something like this "derealization", and "depersonalization". But personally I see this as a philosophical thing. Life really is incomprehensibly bizarre, and it makes perfect sense to have this response of sheer terror. — dukkha
I think there's something of real philosophical significance here
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.