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vegalatoya

how loneliness helped me find myself

There was a time when loneliness felt like a trap — a dark pit I couldn’t climb out of. But then I stumbled upon Joan Didion’s The Year of Magical Thinking. Reading her words was like sitting beside someone who’s been through heartbreak and still found a way forward. She wrote honestly about grief, silence, and the messiness of being human. One line stayed with me: “We tell ourselves stories in order to live.” At first, I thought it meant we need distractions to survive. But slowly, I understood it differently — we tell stories to make sense of ourselves, to heal. In those quiet moments alone, I started piecing together my own story. I stopped running from solitude and began embracing it as a chance to really listen — to my fears, hopes, and truths. Loneliness became less of a prison and more of a mirror, reflecting parts of me I’d never seen before. That kind of quiet isn’t empty. It’s full of hidden voices, waiting to be heard. #Entertainment #Books #LonelyReads #JoanDidion

how loneliness helped me find myself
fgallegos

“Everyone's trying so, so hard. I think that’s what it is.”

A laminated message in Chinese, weighed down by stones at Kafka’s grave, written last December. It was spring in Prague when I found it. And it broke me. It read: “The modern world isn’t so bad. I want to say that. However, however. Everyone’s trying so, so hard. I think that’s what it is.” I hadn’t expected to cry while reading Chinese. But there I was—beneath a grey sky in the Prague suburbs, staring at Kafka’s name, and crying quietly. Because the modern world is that bad. The news feels like nausea. Everything online feels like shouting. Everything offline feels like dust. We’re all pretending to know what we’re doing. Pretending to want careers. Pretending to enjoy social events. We flap our Kafka would understand. I visited his tiny house on Golden Lane, barely large enough for a human, exactly right for an insect. I listened to Cigarettes After Sex's K. as tourists swarmed Prague Castle nearby, but I felt dizzy in the spring sunlight. And I remembered this: “To break this ice, it won’t be an axe. It must be spring. I don’t have the power to be spring— so let me at least be an axe.” Let me be an axe. Let me push the boulder like Sisyphus, again and again. Because maybe it’s not the work that matters, but the eagerness to try. The belief that we can still shape our experience, still refuse to live like the world told us to. And in the end— maybe the quietest, most human truth is this: Everyone’s trying so, so hard. And Kafka? He saw us. All of us. — #Entertainment #Books #Kafka #LonelyWords #ModernLife #Existentialism

“Everyone's trying so, so hard. I think that’s what it is.”
mcgeevictoria

Reading ‘The Left Hand of Darkness’ felt like learning how to think again.

Ursula K. Le Guin didn’t just write a sci-fi novel — she wrote a thought experiment that made my brain ache. And I loved every second of it. Imagine landing on a planet where the people have no fixed gender. Imagine trying to understand them, not just linguistically, but philosophically. Imagine realizing — it’s not them that’s hard to understand. It’s you. Reading The Left Hand of Darkness was uncomfortable in the way good literature should be. It stripped me of assumptions. It made me ask: What if gender wasn’t a constant? What if love didn’t need a binary? What if we’re just too limited by Earth-thinking? 📖 It wasn’t easy. It wasn’t fast. But it changed me. Some books make you escape. This one made me return — a little different than before. #Entertainment #Books #ClassicSciFi

Reading ‘The Left Hand of Darkness’ felt like learning how to think again.