D
dogemn
Student
- May 30, 2023
- 115
If you've failed at the usual social markers of success (career, money, partner, kids, achievements) and you carry a lot of shame around it, how are you supposed to go on living without dying by suicide?
Being a "failure" or "loser" can be deeply isolating. Conversations start to feel awkward. Invitations slowly stop coming. Family gatherings turn into subtle interrogations disguised as concern. People stop seeing you as an equal and start seeing you as someone to pity, manage, or fix. At some point you're no longer treated like a peer or a full participant in social life. You're reduced to a problem. That kind of social exclusion feels annihilating, like you're being erased while still alive.
I sometimes wonder whether humans are even wired to survive this kind of experience. Is it actually possible to live through that level of humiliation and isolation without eventually giving up? Have people managed to do it? And if so, how?
Being a "failure" or "loser" can be deeply isolating. Conversations start to feel awkward. Invitations slowly stop coming. Family gatherings turn into subtle interrogations disguised as concern. People stop seeing you as an equal and start seeing you as someone to pity, manage, or fix. At some point you're no longer treated like a peer or a full participant in social life. You're reduced to a problem. That kind of social exclusion feels annihilating, like you're being erased while still alive.
I sometimes wonder whether humans are even wired to survive this kind of experience. Is it actually possible to live through that level of humiliation and isolation without eventually giving up? Have people managed to do it? And if so, how?