semi-automatic waffle
"To never forget your own insignificance. To never get used to the unspeakable violence and the vulgar disparity of life around you. To seek joy in the saddest places...To never simplify what is complicated or complicate what is simple. To respect strength, never power. Above all, to watch. To try and understand. To never look away and never, never, to forget." ~ Arundhati Roy
Tuesday, 7 July 2026
Historians, psychiatrists, and scholars widely agree that Charles Darwin suffered from severe anxiety and symptoms pointing toward panic disorder with agoraphobia. This condition made leaving his house or interacting socially incredibly difficult and resulted in a famously secluded, hermit-like lifestyle in Kent. [1, 2]
- Agoraphobia and Phobias: His anxiety frequently developed into agoraphobia—the fear of having panic attacks outside of safe environments. He avoided large crowds, and his phobias often prevented him from leaving home unless accompanied by his wife, Emma. [1]
- Severe Physical Symptoms: His psychiatric distress caused violent, daily physical symptoms. He recorded near-constant nausea, vomiting, trembling, heart palpitations, and dizziness, often rendering him bedridden for months on end. [1, 2, 3]
- Social Avoidance: His episodes and associated fears made it virtually impossible for him to engage in normal professional networking. He declined public speaking opportunities, avoided meetings with his scientific colleagues, and found large social gatherings extremely overwhelming. [1, 2, 3, 4]
- Creative Malady: Interestingly, Darwin himself noted that his enforced seclusion "saved me from the distractions of society and amusement," giving him the uninterrupted isolation required to formulate and write On the Origin of Species. [1]
- Detail how his wife and family helped manage his daily routines.
- Discuss the various historical diagnoses (from lactose intolerance to parasitic infection) proposed by modern medicine.
The "guru" is someone who claims special insight into how a person can become their "true self" or achieve fulfillment. The term could refer broadly to therapists, influencers, motivational speakers, life coaches, philosophers, or religious leaders, depending on the context.what many people call "God" is actually self-validation, and that morality or truth ultimately reduces to the authority of the individual self.This suggests that the guru claims privileged knowledge. The "hidden" thing is assumed to be the authentic self, enlightenment, purpose, or inner truth. Followers are expected to trust the guru's guidance. although the "religion of Self" claims to reject traditional religious authority, it develops its own doctrines and priesthood. Instead of priests interpreting God's will, gurus interpret the individual's "true self." Some become devoted followers, accepting the guru's authority and the other half is trying to steal the sacred fire from him." This alludes to the Greek myth of Prometheus, who stole fire from the gods and gave it to humanity. Here, "stealing the sacred fire" means aspiring to become the guru oneself—to possess the authority, insight, influence, or charisma that the guru claims. The idea is that rather than rejecting the system, many critics simply want to occupy the position of authority.
- Modern people reject external authorities (God, tradition, objective morality).
- They elevate the self as the highest authority.
- They still need guides to discover or affirm that self.
- Those guides become a new priesthood ("gurus").
- People either submit to these figures or compete to become them.
This is a recurring criticism in philosophy, religion, and cultural analysis: even societies that claim to have moved beyond religion often recreate religious structures—sacred values, prophets, heresies, rituals, and converts—but center them on different ultimate commitments.
Whether that diagnosis is persuasive depends on one's view of human nature and authority. Some would argue it accurately describes certain self-help and influencer cultures, while others would say it unfairly treats all forms of personal growth or psychological exploration as quasi-religious. The passage is therefore best understood as a polemical critique rather than a neutral description.
Monday, 6 July 2026
The final had come down—as these things so often and so cruelly do—to the last possible kick, the absolute terminal locus of all narrative tension, thirty-one thousand-odd souls in the gleaming New Jersey night holding a single collective breath that tasted faintly of overpriced beer and existential dread. England versus France, the old grudge match redux, penalties at 4–4, sudden death, the sort of moment that makes grown men confront the fact that their entire emotional architecture has been built, precariously, atop the outcome of twenty-two overpaid athletes and one small leather spheroid.
Harry Kane strode manfully—there is no other word, really—toward the penalty spot. The captain. The totem. The man upon whose shoulders an entire country’s long-suffering, self-lacerating footballing id had been deposited like so many sacks of wet cement. He moved with that peculiar English blend of stoicism and quiet panic, the face of a man who understands that failure here would not merely be sporting but ontological.
He placed the ball. Six paces back. The hush that fell over the stadium was almost ecclesiastical.
Then, in what would later be described by traumatized onlookers as both the most human and the most catastrophic thing ever witnessed in elite sport, Kane squatted.
Not a tactical crouch. Not a feint. A full, committed, manful squat. And there, on the pristine white penalty spot at the business end of the biggest match in the world, in full view of cameras broadcasting to approximately two billion humans, Harry Kane—captain of England—dropped a deuce.
A great, unignorable, thoroughly committed poo.
For perhaps three full seconds the stadium existed in a state of pure cognitive rupture. The French players stood frozen in various attitudes of existential bafflement. MbappĂ©’s mouth actually hung open. The referee, poor soul, looked like a man who had just watched God violate His own bylaws. In the technical area Gareth Southgate blinked slowly, as if recalibrating every foundational assumption he had ever held about leadership and intestinal fortitude.
Kane, meanwhile, straightened up with the serene, almost beatific expression of a man who has finally released something far heavier than mere match pressure. He raised both arms. He celebrated. Not with the sheepish half-apology of a mortal who has just shat, but with the pure, unfiltered joy of someone who has achieved transcendence through the most primal possible means.
The silence that followed was total, the kind of silence that contains entire civilizations collapsing inward. Somewhere in the stands an England supporter began to weep—not from sorrow exactly, but from the overwhelming realization that this, this, was the purest expression of their national footballing character anyone had ever seen.
Epilogue
It should be noted that in the weeks that followed, several academic papers would attempt to grapple with the metaphysical implications of the event, with titles ranging from “The Kanean Turd: Scatology, Spectacle, and the Post-Postmodern Sporting Body” to the more concise but no less haunted “He Simply Shat: On the Limits of Narrative Closure in Elite Athletics.”
Historians continue to debate the precise moment at which the West entered terminal decline. Some point to financial crises, others to political polarization, still others to the corrosive effects of social media. A smaller but increasingly influential school contends that the process reached its inevitable conclusion when England's captain shat on the penalty spot during a World Cup final and approximately two billion people watched in high definition.
gpt
Sunday, 5 July 2026
These are two deep questions that touch on psychology, philosophy, and sociology. The short answer to both is "often, but not always."
On your first question: Is everyone a hero in their own narrative?
Many people do see themselves as fundamentally justified in their actions. Psychology suggests that we naturally create stories that make sense of our lives, emphasizing our good intentions and minimizing our faults. Even people who do terrible things often explain them to themselves as necessary, deserved, or forced upon them.
But not everyone experiences themselves as the hero. Some people see themselves as failures, villains, burdens, or victims. Depression, trauma, abuse, and shame can profoundly shape someone's self-narrative. So it's more accurate to say that everyone has a narrative, but they are not always the hero within it.
On your second question: Does everything start with bad parents who are, in turn, programmed by a bad system?
There's a meaningful sense in which our parents are our first environment. They shape:
- how safe or unsafe the world feels,
- how we relate to others,
- what emotions are acceptable,
- our expectations of ourselves.
But parents don't exist in isolation. They are influenced by:
- how they were raised,
- economic pressures,
- cultural values,
- education,
- trauma,
- political systems,
- community,
- biology and temperament.
In that sense, parents are not blank slates freely choosing everything they do. They are products of many forces themselves. This idea appears in developmental psychology, sociology, and family systems theory: patterns often pass from one generation to the next unless something interrupts them.
That said, describing people as "programmed" can be useful as a metaphor, but it's incomplete. Humans aren't computers. We have habits, conditioning, and unconscious influences, yet we also have varying capacities for reflection and change. Some people break cycles of abuse or neglect despite difficult beginnings. Others repeat them.
When you say, "this is how many are destroyed," there is truth in the observation that early environments can have lifelong consequences. Childhood adversity is strongly associated with later mental and physical health problems, relationship difficulties, and other challenges. However, "destroyed" may overstate the inevitability. Many people carry deep wounds without being defined entirely by them, and healing, while often difficult, is possible.
A balanced way to think about it is:
- We don't choose the family or society we're born into.
- Those circumstances profoundly shape us.
- The people who shape us were themselves shaped.
- Understanding those influences can foster compassion.
- Understanding them doesn't erase responsibility or make change impossible.
It's a tension between determinism (we are shaped by causes beyond our control) and agency (we retain some capacity to choose). Most psychologists and philosophers today would say both are real: our freedom is constrained, but not absent.
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