9.88K subscribers
6.89K photos
303 videos
31 files
780 links
0/0 = undefined

A labyrinth of ideas,
A diary of curiosities

Bot: @contactzero_bot
Download Telegram
— Laughing at Nothing
The world view of the nihilist suggests that we must despair of ever attaining ultimate and final satisfaction with ourselves or our place in the world. Life is a vain and unending struggle culminating in nothing, and all that seems beautiful and worthy is mere illusion, subject to decline and decay.
The pain of longing for what will be is chronically replaced by the pain of mourning for what was, and our lives are lived in a tense and unsettled state of unending desire for the ideal, which does not, and never will, exist in our here and now reality. The nihilist desires perfection but realizes that perfection is beyond reach. This incongruity between what is desired and what is actually possible lies at the heart of the problem of nihilism. Because it emphasizes frustration, pain, the vanity of struggle, and the hopelessness of attaining perfection, the philosophy of nihilism has traditionally been criticized as a doctrine advocating despair and depression.

— Laughing at Nothing
— Hannibal Rising
Existential psychotherapy says that all humans must quarrel with "four elemental anxieties":
Death (the realization that your existence will eventually end).
Isolation (the fundamental loneliness at the heart of human existence).
Freedom and what it entails: being fully free makes us fully responsible for our existence.
Meaninglessness (all our actions and beliefs have an inherent "absurdity" in them).
Psychological dysfunction results from the individual's refusal or inability to deal with these normal existential anxieties.
In this sense, depression, loneliness, and anxiety are not "diseases" in themselves, but normal responses to basic—irremovable—anxieties about life and being. They become pathological only when they cause dysfunction to the individual's way of life.
Forwarded from The Shire (Tetania)
The Garden of Death,
By Hugo Simberg
The Wounded Angel,
By Hugo Simberg
Prague Castle in 1595