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DoomCry
Member
- Mar 5, 2025
- 52
There are moments — or entire phases of life — when everything becomes unbearable. Each day feels like a mountain impossible to climb, and yet, somehow, you face it anyway. You don't really live; you survive. You drag yourself from one hour to the next, from one obligation to another, as if your existence were a script already written, one you keep performing without conviction.
By evening, you're exhausted, drained, often worse off than you were that morning. And then the night brings no peace. Thoughts pile up, growing louder, more cruel. Sleeping becomes difficult, resting impossible. And so the next morning begins the same way. With the same weariness, the same weight on your chest, the same pain that has no name but follows you everywhere.
You want to die, but you don't. Not because the desire is absent, but because of fear. Fear of pain, of failure, of the void that might follow. Fear of leaving those you love, even when you no longer feel them close. Fear, above all, of fear itself — the force that has taken control of your life. So you stay stuck, trapped in a limbo. You're not really living, but you're not dead either. You're suspended.
In this undefined space, you come to know what the "pain of living" truly means. It's not just sadness. It's a silent, constant erosion of the self, an invisible presence that seeps into every thought, every breath. It's the weight of existence when existence has lost its meaning. It's the endless postponement, the inner whisper saying "I'll do it tomorrow," even when you're thinking about your own end.
And you can stay in that state for months, for years. Sometimes, for an entire lifetime. It's a trap made of thoughts, fears, and waiting that leads nowhere. But it's precisely there, in that dark place, that you experience the most genuine kind of suffering, the deepest kind of loneliness, and perhaps, a kind of understanding that goes beyond words: the true essence of the pain of living.
By evening, you're exhausted, drained, often worse off than you were that morning. And then the night brings no peace. Thoughts pile up, growing louder, more cruel. Sleeping becomes difficult, resting impossible. And so the next morning begins the same way. With the same weariness, the same weight on your chest, the same pain that has no name but follows you everywhere.
You want to die, but you don't. Not because the desire is absent, but because of fear. Fear of pain, of failure, of the void that might follow. Fear of leaving those you love, even when you no longer feel them close. Fear, above all, of fear itself — the force that has taken control of your life. So you stay stuck, trapped in a limbo. You're not really living, but you're not dead either. You're suspended.
In this undefined space, you come to know what the "pain of living" truly means. It's not just sadness. It's a silent, constant erosion of the self, an invisible presence that seeps into every thought, every breath. It's the weight of existence when existence has lost its meaning. It's the endless postponement, the inner whisper saying "I'll do it tomorrow," even when you're thinking about your own end.
And you can stay in that state for months, for years. Sometimes, for an entire lifetime. It's a trap made of thoughts, fears, and waiting that leads nowhere. But it's precisely there, in that dark place, that you experience the most genuine kind of suffering, the deepest kind of loneliness, and perhaps, a kind of understanding that goes beyond words: the true essence of the pain of living.