Ah, life. A cruel, mischievous entity, always ready to tighten its suffocating grip, to make you believe the pain will never end… but the moment you finally summon the courage to say "enough," it pulls out its final trick: fear. It lets you suffer for years, drains every ounce of energy from you, convinces you there's nothing left to be done—and then, at the decisive moment, the moment it should simply let you go, it clings to you with its nails, pins you there at the edge of the bridge, staring down at the freezing water, reminding you that no matter how much you want to leave, it is the one that decides when you're ready. And, as always, it decides no.
There's a perverse irony in all of this. A whole existence spent chasing something—happiness, peace, even just a shred of meaning—and when you finally stop searching and just want to close the curtain, you discover that the last door is the hardest of all to walk through. Not because of doubt, not because of second thoughts, but because life, in its infinite absurdity, has designed everything so that in the moment you decide to leave, it gets the last laugh.
You walked the path, you saw the exit, you even placed your hand on the handle, and yet here you are, still trapped in the labyrinth. Why? Because life is the worst kind of jailer—the one that keeps you imprisoned without chains, the one that ensures every escape attempt fails not by external intervention, but by some absurd law of the universe that prevents human beings from leaving as easily as they were brought here.
And so, the cycle continues, day after day, carrying the weight of an existence with no escape and the cruel joke of an exit that always seems within reach but never truly accessible. Maybe this is the grand cosmic joke: no one asked to enter, no one can choose to leave easily, and in the meantime, time drags on like an unwelcome guest that refuses to leave. But don't worry, life is patient. It will keep playing with you, placing new illusions, new locked doors, new perfectly positioned obstacles in your way. After all, it would be too simple to grant you the luxury of an end when you want it. Life loves a spectacle, and the grand finale, when it finally arrives, will only come when it decides it has had enough.