
TAW122
Emissary of the right to die.
- Aug 30, 2018
- 7,153
This is a short story when I was growing up and the watershed moments in which I had realized that sentience (life itself) was a 'scam' when growing up. This ranges from dating, relationships, working hard, realizing the grind was a scam, and just the overall rip-off of sentience (life/existence) itself. I decided it just wasn't good enough for me to fight for something that I may not be guaranteed to get and hence in my life I've kind of just coped and bid my time throughout adulthood and wanted to CTB even in my early 20's. I never really got serious about the act of CTB until late 20's and have been wanting to go ever since. Of course, with such a monumental and extremely important decision, I want ensure that things are as close to 100% ready and as failsafe as possible before I go because I cannot (and will not) risk failure over it and such.
One major moment I had was when I realized that my peers or others (upon observation and referencing my peers) had much less or even similar background (of course, there are more variables to it but for the sake of the story I'm keeping it simple) and still managed to get by (Also note: Not going off on a tangent about the don't compare yourself to others situation bs) and that things just didn't math or equate out to logic. This is not limited to relationships and dating (which I've officially swore off in my 20's or so), financial successes, and of course fantasies and other goals. The most key aspect is that when I realized I was "working harder and suffering more for half (or sometimes less to none) of the rewards that I was hoping to get", then the illusion of meritocracy broke for me and my whole interpretation that sentience before has changed. After that realization, I came to the conclusion that sentience was a 'scam'. This was when I stopped caring about societal expectations and simply just bid my time until the inevitable comes. While I maintained facades not because I wanted to, but out of necessity, I was essentially suffering and just maintaining the bare minimum of appearances in order to not draw unwanted attention to myself or make things anymore difficult than it is.
When did you realize that sentience was a scam and life inherently was unfair and not worth living?
One major moment I had was when I realized that my peers or others (upon observation and referencing my peers) had much less or even similar background (of course, there are more variables to it but for the sake of the story I'm keeping it simple) and still managed to get by (Also note: Not going off on a tangent about the don't compare yourself to others situation bs) and that things just didn't math or equate out to logic. This is not limited to relationships and dating (which I've officially swore off in my 20's or so), financial successes, and of course fantasies and other goals. The most key aspect is that when I realized I was "working harder and suffering more for half (or sometimes less to none) of the rewards that I was hoping to get", then the illusion of meritocracy broke for me and my whole interpretation that sentience before has changed. After that realization, I came to the conclusion that sentience was a 'scam'. This was when I stopped caring about societal expectations and simply just bid my time until the inevitable comes. While I maintained facades not because I wanted to, but out of necessity, I was essentially suffering and just maintaining the bare minimum of appearances in order to not draw unwanted attention to myself or make things anymore difficult than it is.
When did you realize that sentience was a scam and life inherently was unfair and not worth living?