unwishwax
New Member
- Apr 14, 2024
- 3
There's an essay on the Iliad the describes a set of people as a "compromise between a man and a corpse."
I'm living, but I'm not really. I work, eat, exercise, take care of my parents' dogs, and sleep. I do the things I'm supposed to. But I feel as though I may as well be dead.
Also in the essay, the same people's days are said to "hold no pastimes, no free spaces, no room in them for any impulse of their own." I have become impulse-less. I have everything I could want--love (though not an SO), money, a job, a full fridge. But I can't feel any of it. I don't see how this is any different from being dead?
Are you a compromise between a man and a corpse, too?
I'm living, but I'm not really. I work, eat, exercise, take care of my parents' dogs, and sleep. I do the things I'm supposed to. But I feel as though I may as well be dead.
Also in the essay, the same people's days are said to "hold no pastimes, no free spaces, no room in them for any impulse of their own." I have become impulse-less. I have everything I could want--love (though not an SO), money, a job, a full fridge. But I can't feel any of it. I don't see how this is any different from being dead?
Are you a compromise between a man and a corpse, too?