I will forever be a NEET. I take pride in being a NEET, it feels like rebelling against the systsem (...)
I love that. me too, I take pride in it.
this way of life also resembles some social movements like the "slow living" movement, the "tang ping" (lie down) chinese movement, or the "herbs" in Japan.
I've been a NEET for 10 years, and hikikomori for 2-3 years. it's okay.
it's great having time to play videogames all day, exercise, walk, do cycling, or simply look at the moon.
it's bad to have to ask for my mom every time I want to buy food or anything, though.
in theory I can become homeless at any second, if my parents decide it. I know them, they won't do that, but it's a possibility. if it happens I'll just CTB instantly, as my quality of life is already low as it is.
my country, Brazil, doesn't have the kind of disability system that USA have, for mental health problems.
being a hikikomori, it's also bad to not have enough money to do things that are sometimes necessary. removing mold from my room, moving to another city, buying high-quality food, paying private doctors... many things would be better if I had more money at my disposal (I don't have any, I just get food, free housing and free internet).
in the past, all the "friends" I thought I had were not friends, were just people who wanted to party, drink and look for girls, the only deep connection I had with a human being, was my ex-girlfriend, who dumped me. all my relationships were a failure, to the point that I gave up trying again, the suffering the relationships caused were greater than any benefits, their cost:benefit ratio was so bad that I just realised I would actually be better alone.
after realising how I superficial, selfish and narcisistic most "friends" are, and after giving up on romantic relationships, I stopped having social contact with people, deleted all my social media, and that was coincidentally more or less when the covid-19 pandemic begun, so there it is, almost 3 years of hikikomori, spending time alone with my games and my other hobbies, just being by myself. I'm so lucky that I got used to it, loneliness can be extremely painful, I'm lucky that I never felt lonely anymore, despite being alone.
I almost never worked in three decades. the only few times I tried, I fired myself within the first 90 days. I can't function in a high stress environment, it overwhelms me, and I feel resentment for being a wage slave (rightly so, it's indeed unfair), for having little time to live my life and be myself, and for making the boss richer as I get only enough to buy cheap food and dish soap.
my mental state overall feels lighter with a low-stress, peaceful and slow life so I naturally gravitate towards that.
I'm incredibly proud of my choice being a NEET, because most jobs indeed suck. if you're gonna work indefinitely at typical minimum wage job, then I firmly believe you'd be better being a beggar/vagrant, a gutter punk, some kind of modern hippie ("maluco de estrada", as we call in Brazil, which roughly translates to something like crazy guy from the road, someone who is a homeless nomad who sells cheap products made of stones, wire and other materials that they find in the street).
Those wage slaveries who spend most of their time at their job or sleeping, use their free time to eat, shower, cook and wash the dishes, then the clock says "it's time to go back to the job!" and they can't even have 1 hour to do slow down and look at the rain, do something spontaneous they enjoy etc... I don't get how they don't go full mad or how they don't see that they're being abused and slaved. it's so obvious. some say "oh, if I don't work, there will be no food", I don't know, I'd find another way, not this, as wage slavery is depressing. ops, I digress.
I could be more proud if, instead, I had perhaps learned programming and then found a way to work just ~4 hours per day and get good money for it. that would be optimal. I wouldn't work more than 5 hours a day, though. life is too short. most people who work too much, regret that in their death bed. I won't be one of those.
on the other hand, one can think that should be amazing having all the free time in the world and free food, but I think I have to admit that we, humans, still have other needs... like meaning, purpose, relationships, social contact, even high-intensity orgasms (yes, I think we
need them - it's a necessity to not go crazy, to not descend into madness and despair...).
hikikomoris like me are rejected by women for many reasons. nowadays I could label myself as an incel, as I have zero social life, lost my social skills due to disuse (use it or lose it) and wouldn't be able to get laid even if I wanted to (not even in Tinder).
many of us tend to be chronic lonely and have insomnia or poor quality sleep, all this is not fun.
yes we can survive, even for decades, while being lonely and deprived of human contact, sleeping during the day and staring at screens at night, with zero real life friends, playing videogames and smoking pot, but this is not peak happiness - I had potential for more. in fact I remember how it is, not long ago, to love someone and feel loved, to have a sense of meaning (through loving someone), which is something I don't have any hope of feeling in this life again, even while this being theorically possible, I myself choose to discard that possibility of love, as I don't wanna be rejected and abandoned again, nevermore.
anyways, if we're chronic lonely, in poor physical health, living with insomnia and with no financial freedom, then we're not in our peak state... the positive aspects of NEET/hikikomori are real, but I have to admit the negative ones too...
I know the perks I have, being able to look at the moon, breathe slowly, listen to music all day, do whatever I want, enjoying a peaceful and low-stress life, but I also have to admit the downsides...
make your choices wisely, people. we pay for them later.