SoverignDreamer97
I am never alone.
- Mar 29, 2026
- 118
Suppose you are given a 6-month notice, which you have until June 19th to find a job and a place to live before you are kicked to the curb, which in the end of suffering all the uncontrollable variables, you die.
Though you can strive to prevent being on the street, the fact is, people are grass, which is to say, whether you land and keep a job is dependent on uncontrollable variables.
Suppose you've prepared for this in advance, which instead of resisting, you choose to surrender to the outcome, that being death.
Though the world is willing to allow you to end up on the street, perhaps in hopes of scaring you into performing, or that you'd die quietly, upon learning that you intend to die, they panic.
What gives? Isn't death supposed to be a natural consequence for lack of compliance? Why are they flipping out? You didn't make these rules.
Whatever the case, you aren't exactly counting on your death, but rather... a miracle.
Everyone's out here playing Old Maid, where they do their best to avoid being handed a losing card, to the point of having to choose a scapegoat to be their sacrifice; "let someone else be a liability," they say. But after enduring enough suffering, and realizing the game is rigged, the scapegoat says, "so be it", and embraces that card, for "we don't play Old Maid; we play only Old Geezer".
Though you can strive to prevent being on the street, the fact is, people are grass, which is to say, whether you land and keep a job is dependent on uncontrollable variables.
Suppose you've prepared for this in advance, which instead of resisting, you choose to surrender to the outcome, that being death.
Though the world is willing to allow you to end up on the street, perhaps in hopes of scaring you into performing, or that you'd die quietly, upon learning that you intend to die, they panic.
What gives? Isn't death supposed to be a natural consequence for lack of compliance? Why are they flipping out? You didn't make these rules.
Whatever the case, you aren't exactly counting on your death, but rather... a miracle.
Everyone's out here playing Old Maid, where they do their best to avoid being handed a losing card, to the point of having to choose a scapegoat to be their sacrifice; "let someone else be a liability," they say. But after enduring enough suffering, and realizing the game is rigged, the scapegoat says, "so be it", and embraces that card, for "we don't play Old Maid; we play only Old Geezer".