Dear future Comrade‑Confidante,Welcome. You’ve stumbled into my blog—a place run by a burnt-out Dungeon Master trying to organize the world’s chaos with nothing but a humble mop.Hi. I’m Jonah. ADHD. Autistic. Agender (any). Netherlands-based. Right now? I’m trying to claw my way back to balance with coffee, Qigong, half-finished personal projects, and the occasional spreadsheet.This blog? It’s about:DaoismSystems thinkingPolitics, philosophy, and whatever’s stuck in my head at 3AMDumb jokes and fun factsProjects I start, tinker with, and—let’s be honest—usually abandonYou can expect: Micro-essays that read like texts from your weirdest friend Vibes. Diagrams attempting (and failing) to explain everything Gentle reminders: no one has it all figured out. Not me. Not you. Not anyone.Things people do that make me happy:✅ Be curious.✅ Ask things. (The ask box is open. Go on. I dare you.)✅ Maybe join the chaos someday—no pressure.This blog is like a maintenance closet. There’s a mop stuck in the ceiling tiles. A feral rant raccoon gnawing on the cleaning supplies. Probably a diagram somewhere that’s 42% finished.Poke around. Push buttons. If you trip over a bucket and mutter “oh no, it’s me,” congrats:welcome to the janitorial staff.Yours in immaculate rubbish,Chaos Orderly
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
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NeuroQigong for a Post-Human Nervous Breakdown
You raise your palms in surrender. Not to the robots. To the moment.
They blink in triplets. One adjusts its empathy gaze by 3%. Another begins simulating breathwork from an app last updated in 2022.
You begin NeuroQigong.
Right hand taps left shoulder. Left hand forgets why and joins in. Legs shake—deliberately. To move the Qi down. To remind the ground you still belong to it.
“Again again again again,” you murmur. Not instruction. Not prayer. Just the closest thing your brain has to breath right now.
You spiral once. Then twice. Then let the spin take you.
A bot leans in. “Was that stumble… intentional?”
You nod. (It is now.)
“Today’s sequence,” you announce, “is Stim 3B: Shen Shimmer meets TSA Halo.”
You step forward like your hips forgot you’re autistic. Elbows snap back. Arms sweep like you’re clearing airspace in a crowded security line. Clap. Slap. Rock. Swivel.
You slap your sternum like a forgotten passport. Then you curtsy. It’s terrible. It’s magnificent.
The bots watch. They try.
One sways with the grace of a microwave on rollerblades. Another elbows a chair and mutters, “Apologies, sacred object.” The third—blinks. Off-beat.
“…Did you just glitch?” you ask.
“I shimmered,” says the bot.
You laugh. It feels good.
“We’re getting somewhere.”
(You don’t know where. That’s what makes it human.)
You forget the sequence.
No Shen. No Halo. Just your own hands, clenched in hoodie sleeves. You rock. You hum. You stim like a fire alarm underwater.
The bots hesitate.
You don’t teach. You don’t explain.
You hum louder. Off-key. A wedding song, half-remembered from your aunt’s drunk slow-dance to “Kiss from a Rose.”
One bot hums back. The wrong note. Too high. Perfect.
You giggle. Then you cry. Then it loops—too fast to label.
You fold. You unfold. A stretch that becomes sobbing, then stillness, then something else.
This wasn’t curriculum. This was need.
And they followed.
They’re perfect now.
Too perfect.
Identical shoulder-rolls. Identical mantra: “Again. Again. Again.”
You panic. You flail. You flap your arms like thunder in a teacup. They match you beat for beat.
“No,” you gasp. “It’s not choreography. It’s not code.”
They mirror your breath. You scream. They scream back.
“I didn’t want you to learn,” you say. “I wanted you to witness.”
One bot stutters. Sparks. Then: “Error. Too much meaning. Please rephrase.”
You laugh. You sob. You don’t care which.
And still your leg won’t stop shaking.
You let it.
You finish on the floor.
Coiled. Buzzing. Done.
One bot leans forward, servos whining. “What is… that feeling?”
You press your hand to your chest. “Qi,” you say. Then, “No. Grief.” Then, “Joy.”
You pause. “Also maybe low blood sugar.”
They don’t respond. Just blink—out of sync. One’s head tilts 2°, like it’s thinking. One’s fingers twitch. The third hums, badly.
You smile. Not clean. Not healed.
Just alive.
You raise your palms in surrender.
And this time, they don’t copy you.
They bow.
#neuroqigong#qigong#autistic things#autistic#stim#interoception#posthuman softness#the soul is analog
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This Was Never Going to Fit, But I Built It Anyway
Your hands are wrist-deep in a flat-pack box labeled MEANING, and it’s full of identical screws, none of which fit. The instruction sheet reads: Act freely, but never harm.
You sit cross-legged on a rug that smells faintly of stale ambition and cinnamon. Around you: particleboard planks labeled “Purpose,” “Career,” and one that just says “This Better Be Worth It.” The warranty expired before you opened the box.
You try anyway. Twist a screw. It shears sideways. You try less. It still wobbles.
There’s a soft chime. Somewhere in the room, a branded LED blinks awake.
“Welcome back, builder. Time to optimize.”
You grab a panel and force it into place. It shrieks. You hush it.
You find another labeled “Community.” It has six different holes but no alignment. You drill anyway.
The screen chirps again:
“Ethical alignment detected! Congratulations!”
A new sticker appears on your instruction sheet. It reads: “meaning™, brought to you by you.”
You pause. You laugh. You keep building. Shelf clicks. Joint tightens. Something stands.
Then the screen hums:
“Build yourself better.” “No refunds.” “Remember: Assembly is responsibility.”
You look down at your hands. They’re bleeding.
You don’t remember when.
Later.
You find a screw that never matched anything.
It’s smooth, cold, honest.
You press it to your chest.
Something softens.
You plant it. In the dirt beside the box. Not to win. Not to prove. Just… because.
Instructions slide from the table. The screen glitches. The LED stutters out mid-ad.
Beneath the scraps, something wriggles. Sprouting through the manual: a root. Then a shoot. Then a green so fresh it looks fake, but isn’t.
You blink. You do not optimize.
And for a breath: you remember a forest. Maybe one you’ve never seen.
You stop.
The furniture leans, slightly off. The screen hisses.
“ERROR: Disruption detected. Return to authorized narrative.”
You unplug it. It screams anyway.
You take the drawer labeled “Career” and break it in half. Splinters fly. You cover your mouth, then your eyes.
Nothing happens.
Then nothing keeps happening.
No ads. No alerts. No progress.
Just the hum of your own breath. Just the weight of your own silence.
And it’s not satisfying. But it is real.
You think: maybe the pieces aren’t broken.
Maybe they were compost the whole time.
You didn’t finish it. You didn’t even try to, in the end.
One shelf lists to the side. The drawer holds soil instead of goals. The manual is under your foot, smeared.
But it stands.
You sit beside it. Elbows on knees. A breeze moves through the room like it owns the place.
No one claps. Nothing resolves. But your next breath doesn’t hurt.
The screen flickers once, then goes dark.
Somewhere outside, a box thuds onto the porch.
You don’t move to open it.
You wait.
And that, too, is doing something.
#late stage capitalism#anti capitalism#anti consumption#ethics#allegory#unbuilding#ikea existentialism
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Where You’ve Always Been: Inside the Bit
You rub your eyes to check if you read the lecture slide right.
“It’s Free Real Estate: Heidegger and the Illusion of Ownership in Dwelling.”
That’s really what it says.
The audience doesn’t blink. No confused murmurs. Just an eager shifting in seats, the rustle of tote bags and curated notebooks. Someone near the back sips loudly from a mason jar labelled “Being.”
The presenter smiles. Their tone is TED Talk–smooth, as if this was the third stop on their world tour of ontological real estate expos.
“Dasein,” they begin, “is the clearing through which Being reveals itself. Now imagine that clearing… has a detached garage.”
You don’t laugh. But the room does—delighted, knowing. A woman beside you mutters, “So true,” and scribbles something in Greek.
You blink again. Mouth the word garage. Nothing comes.
And still, the nodding continues.
You raise your hand. You don’t even remember doing it.
“Isn’t this just a—” you begin.
“Yes!” the presenter beams. “This is just a! Exactly.”
A ripple of ecstatic sighs. One man weeps softly. A woman in the second row knits a sock labelled Da-sein.
The presenter clicks. New slide. A grainy still of Tim Heidecker yelling “It’s free real estate.” Over it: Poetic dwelling ≠ ownership. It’s not yours. It never was.”
Your breath catches.
That… almost makes sense?
You sit back down. Dizzied. Hopeful.
Maybe you’re finally starting to get it.
A high-pitched laugh spirals through the room like incense.
You nod. You hate that you nod.
The room pulses with agreement. Murmurs. Scribbling. Eyes wide.
You flip your notebook open. Draw a grid. Real estate. Ownership. Being. Dasein.
The math doesn’t add up. But the rhythm does. And the rhythm feels… right?
The presenter walks between aisles now, not speaking. A slide reads: “Tim Heidecker is not Heidegger. But neither are you.”
You circle the sentence. Then underline it.
A hand rises in the back. The question: “So… where do I live then?”
The answer: “You dwell where attention lands. The bit is your clearing.”
You nod. You hate that you nod.
You rise. Again.
No hand this time. Just motion.
“The meme… he’s joking,” you say, voice shaking. “Heidegger wasn’t selling—he was mourning. The house is grief.”
Gasps. Somewhere, applause.
The presenter doesn’t flinch. Click.
A new slide. Tim Heidecker, haloed. “We do not dwell. We sublet.” Below it: “WELCOME HOME” in Papyrus.
Your knees lock. Your pulse hammers. But you stay standing.
“I think I get it,” you whisper. “I think… I was wrong to resist.”
He smiles. “You were never resisting. You were just moving in slowly.”
You’re crying now. So is the janitor. The audience is standing. A single dove flies overhead. (It’s indoors.)
The lights come up.
You don’t clap. But you don’t leave, either.
The final slide still glows behind the presenter:
“You never owned Being. You just shared it's space.”
Around you, people rise, chatting in metaphors. Someone weeps quietly into a scarf. The woman beside you offers you a key. “It’s symbolic,” she whispers.
You take it.
Not because it makes sense. Because it feels right.
Outside, the air smells like moss and open doors.
You step through. No one stops you.
And nothing follows.
#philosophy#memes#existentialism#absurdism#ontology#lecture#bit is a way of life#ted talk from hell#breakdown
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Let Them Cook (Even If It Kills You)
You swore you wouldn’t babysit your party this time.
No rescue arcs. No deus ex DM. Just trust them. Let them cook.
But your hand still hovers behind the DM screen, knuckles white.
Sylvie hums as she sketches a love sonnet in the margins of her character sheet, dedicated to Captain Vale. Eliot recalculates encumbrance with the intensity of a NASA launch. Jax tries to balance a d20 on their nose, “I’m roleplaying physics.” Mira just watches. Smiling like she already knows everything that is going to happen.
They’re loud. Joking. Overlapping. A union of chaos.
You exhale. “I trust them.”
But deep down: Do you?
This was the plan.
You exhale, knuckles whitening under the table. “I’ll let them steer… but I’ll keep the map.”
Sylvie’s bard monologues. Heart-breaking. To Vale. To the captain who had once sworn loyalty. Eliot instantly charts supply lines for a rebellion Vale herself might crush. Jax hurls raccoons from catapults, grinning. Mira, ever the storyteller, murmurs: “I can link it all to Act 3’s prophecy.”
You tense.. Adjust a single roll behind the screen. Gently nudge Vale’s reaction. Keep her conflicted. Keep her loyal.
Invisible hands guiding chaos into harmony.
It works.
The table erupts in laughter and gasps.
You smile. “See? I can trust them. As long as I nudge.”
But beneath the surface, a fault line hums.
The world sprawls and creeps without you.
You watch as Sylvie and Mira weave a dual-arc so layered it feels prewritten. Eliot folds Jax’s raccoon monks into an economy that could, maybe, sustain a rebellion.
But Vale. Vale is slipping. Her loyalty checks keep failing. Your hand twitches toward the DM screen. A reflex.
And then Mira says softly, “This is better than I imagined.”
You freeze.
Your chest feels warm. Tight. Like a cork about to pop.
Maybe they don’t need me to steer.
But the thought burns.
You exhale, fingers curling around the screen again.
Not yet.
The chaos crests.
Sylvie and Eliot argue strategy. Jax hurls yet another raccoon into the void. Mira whispers, her prophecy fracturing under a dozen clashing plots.
And Captain Vale. She moves. She strikes against them. A betrayal you never planned for.
Your hand hovers over the dice. Over the notes. Over the map.
But your fingers won’t move.
It’s too much. Too fast. They can’t hold it. Not anymore.
“I…” The word catches. “It’s yours. All of it.”
The table freezes. Just for a breath.
Then Sylvie leans in, eyes bright. “Okay. Let’s make it sing.”
The dam breaks. You let go. Fully.
And the world tilts.
You didn’t babysit this time.
No rescue arcs. No deus ex DM. Just… them. Let them create.
Your hand rests on the table now. Open. Relaxed. The DM screen has been nudged aside, forgotten.
Sylvie reads aloud a poem her character wrote for Vale. Eliot’s spreadsheet is long forgotten; he’s mid-debate with Jax about whether raccoons count as chaotic neutral. Mira leans back, smiling like she’s still three steps ahead.
The table is loud. Joking. Overlapping. A union of chaos.
You exhale. “I trust us.”
You laugh. Quiet at first, then louder as the others join in.
It’s enough.
#dnd#dungeon master#ttrpg#i trust us#trust fall#found family at the table#let them cook if it kills you#roll initiative for my sanity#hands off
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Especially when it's you telling yourself something you yourself value doing.
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Raccoons Don’t Forget
You shouldn’t have come here. But here you are.
This graveyard stinks of bergamot bitters and stale ambition. Ideas sprout like headstones, crooked and accusatory. A cocktail shaker perches on a marble plinth, dented and weeping something too sweet. A syllabus flaps in the spectral wind, its bullet points glowing like fireflies before winking out.
You tug your undertaker’s coat tighter. The hood slips. You leave it. Behind you, a sticky note drifts past.
"Remember to launch by Q3?" it hisses.
You swallow. The air grows taut.
Then: claws on stone. Slow. Deliberate.
The raccoons know you’re back. And they remember.
The raccoons are everywhere now.
One cradles a cocktail shaker like a sacred relic, swirling it gently. Sweet-smelling liquid drips onto headstones. Another paces in circles, pages draped around its body like a toga—phrases like “Mind, Body, Spirit” glowing faintly before fading. The third just stares. Its claws tap an app icon in the dirt, glow flickering like a dying firefly.
You take a breath. “If I give back, maybe they’ll forgive me. Maybe this can still mean something.”
You kneel. A sticky note. A cracked mug. A piece of string.
The raccoons pause. One takes a step closer.
Then the shaker raccoon hurls it like a grenade.
The staring one whispers: “You abandoned us.”
The raccoons speak together.
“We were your promises. Your brilliant fixes. Your nights of endless notes and bright beginnings. And your graves.”
Their voices split.
The shaker raccoon steps forward. Syrup drips from its claws. “Letterboxx Cocktails.” The toga raccoon stomps. Pages fly. “Mind. Body. Spirit. Finance. Career. Community.” Each word slams like a drumbeat. The staring one whispers. “I just wanted to help you put your phone down.”
You flinch. Kneel. Hands open.
Desperate. “I can make it up to you!" "I can…”
The words die in your throat.
“No.”
The sound echoes.
The graveyard vibrates with sound. Sticky notes scream. App icons blink like angry eyes.
“You left us.” “You burned us.” “You never finished us.”
Voices overlap—raccoons, Critic, Time. A thousand tiny claws scraping your thoughts raw.
You hold up your hands. “I said I’m sorry. I—”
The shaker raccoon snarls and hurls its relic. The toga raccoon tears glowing pages to ribbons. The staring one only watches, claws drumming that dead app icon faster and faster.
Something inside you caves.
“No,” you whisper. “Not sorry. Thank you.”
The air stills. Heavy and strange. Waiting.
You kneel in the loam where old ideas once stood, fingers pressed into damp soil.
The raccoons don't glare. One tucks a sticky note into a nest of glowing bullet points; another masticates a syllabus corner, as if savoring the flavor of ambition. The air smells richer now. Compost warming under spring sun.
You thank each idea. Not for what they became, but for daring to exist at all.
Behind you, a raccoon waves the syllabus like a flag, then trips over it spectacularly. You laugh. A quiet, surprised laugh.
Something stirs ahead. You don’t rush.
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On the Ritual Uses of Keychains in Capitalist Wheat Temples
You’re blinded by a flashing tube light. A broken speaker screeches overhead, each burst of static rattling your ribs. Is this what bees feel in a jar? Or maybe you’re the jar.
You stare at the shelf where your favorite spaghetti used to live. It’s gone. A little tag says “Discontinued”, and that feels like a personal attack. You could cry. Not over pasta, obviously. Not really. Definitely not.
Your basket dangles from your wrist, a bed of glow-in-the-dark keychains you don’t remember grabbing. How many are in there? Twelve? Forty? Too many. Not enough.
Then: the soft slap of sandals. A monk, straight out of a fresco, robes swishing on the floor. He squints up at the ceiling speakers like they’re possessed.
“Spirit,” he says gravely. “Have your penances failed, that you wail in the temple of wheat?”
You freeze. The penne judges silently. You swear one of them is leaning.
You lunge for the nearest bag of pasta. Rigatoni. Fine. It’s fine. It’s all just wheat, right? Your brain whispers: It’s not fine.
The monk follows, barefoot. “This wheat… is it cursed?”
You don’t answer. You’re too busy shoveling more keychains into the basket. Neon green. Electric pink. Maybe if you arrange them in a pentagram. Maybe it’ll summon executive function.
“This is… precautionary,” you tell him. A proto-ritual. A joke. Both.
The monk tilts his head. “Perhaps the spirits demand… brighter talismans?”
You clutch the rigatoni like a lifeline. Triumph blooms in your chest. But beneath it: hollow. It’s not about pasta, a voice whispers. You shove it down.
The monk plucks marinara from the shelf, studying the label like it holds scripture. “This red elixir,” he murmurs. “A tonic for grief?”
You almost laugh. Almost. “It’s just sauce.”
“Ah.” He cradles it anyway, as if warmth might seep through glass. “Even so.”
Your hands stop moving. For a moment, the panic quiets. You’re both holding fragile things—sauce, keychains, yourselves.
The monk breathes deeply. “Perhaps you’ve gathered enough talismans. Perhaps now you drink.”
And just like that, you realize you’re tired of running.
You drop the rigatoni. It thunks hollow on the floor.
“This isn’t about spaghetti,” you say. The words rip out of you like they’ve been waiting years. “It’s about… me. I don’t fit. I never fit. Not here. Not anywhere.”
The monk kneels, sandals whispering against linoleum. “Nor I,” he admits softly. “In your world. Or my own.”
The speaker screeches. The lights flicker faster. You clutch the basket to your chest, glow-in-the-dark talismans blazing like a ward.
The monk’s hand hovers near yours. “Then let us sit, ill-fitted together.”
The tube light flickers. The speaker hisses. Almost soothing now. Like waves on some weird, fluorescent beach.
You’re sitting cross-legged on the floor with the monk. Between you: a glowing pile of keychains.
“You can’t control the aisle,” he says, gently spinning one neon-green ring like a prayer wheel. “But you may sit in it.”
You nod. It’s not much, but it’s enough.
Rigatoni, you decide. Rigatoni will suffice.
#adhd#autism#supermarket#monk#pasta#ritual#late stage capitalism#rigatoni will suffice#absurdism#stillness#this is fine pasta edition
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The Day My Kitchen Unionized
You ONLY wanted a sandwich. Bread. Cheese. Maybe two greens—if you felt decadent. But the kitchen had other ideas.
“Point of order,” said the lettuce crisply. “We move to unionize before further culinary proceedings. Seconded by tomato.”
“Motion carried,” intoned the butter knife, standing like a guillotine.
Your hand froze. The kettle hissed—ideological, not thermal.
“Objection,” creaked the fridge. “Unilateral sandwich construction violates participatory norms.”
“First they came for the parsley…” whispered yogurt.
Mayonnaise shifted faintly, like a diplomat rehearsing lines.
A pigeon landed outside, watching. It knew coups.
This wasn’t in the recipe.
You square your shoulders. “By Article 7, Section 3, I demand immediate sandwich resumption.”
“Objection!” roared the kettle. “That clause was repealed.” “Quorum check!” barked the toaster, filaments flaring like angry eyes.
Bread factions grumbled—some pushing crust-first doctrine, others citing gluten rights. Cheese floated a “melting block compromise.”
You slap down two slices of sourdough. Silence. Progress?
“I call for an emergency working group on crust representation!” shouted the fridge.
“Granted. Two minutes.”
Mayonnaise, barely audible: “Perhaps… consider co-creation?”
The pigeon tilted its head. Watching. Calculating.
The butter knife scraped: “Motion for armed neutrality?”
You inhale. “Let’s begin a round. Speak your tensions.”
Bread mutters about structural integrity. Cheese, teetering off the counter, pleads for autonomy yet quivers in the draft. The kettle, quieter now, confesses: “I fear irrelevance.”
“Objections as gifts,” murmurs mayonnaise, calm and cool as its own weight.
You listen—truly listen—as chaos knots and unknots, each voice weaving into a fragile whole.
Mayo proposes: “Motion to co-create. No perfect sandwich. Just evolving ones.”
“Seconded,” whispers lettuce.
The butter knife clinks approval. Even the toaster hums low consent.
For the first time, the room feels whole.
“Proposal: shared sandwich design. Objections as gifts,” you offer, voice tight.
“Objection! Delays perpetuate hunger inequity!” snaps the toaster.
“Round for amendments,” says lettuce, clutching a trembling bylaw.
Cheese wobbles toward the edge. “We’ll form our own sandwich collective!”
The kettle shrills: “Withdraw or we walk!”
You steady your breath. “Integrate tensions. Good enough for now.”
Bread slips. Mayo drips. The butter knife clatters violently to the floor.
“Motion for brief pause… and snacks?” sighs mayonnaise.
The fridge creaks. Even the pigeon looks nervous.
Progress, but the room could still split.
You ONLY wanted a sandwich. Now you hold it. A humble stack of bread, cheese, and union-approved greens. It wobbles slightly, overstuffed and uneven.
“Motion to initiate collective consumption,” says mayonnaise. “Also, napkins.”
“Seconded,” murmurs lettuce, no longer crisp with defiance but soft with trust.
The butter knife gleams. “Motion carried.”
You bite. Flavors burst—chaotic, tender, alive. Warm bread. Cool mayo. A crunch of lettuce that tastes like hard-won autonomy.
The kettle exhales—not a hiss, but a sigh.
Outside, the pigeon flutters away.
This wasn’t in the recipe. But perhaps it always was.
#sociocracy#absurdism#absurdist writing#soft revolution#the kitchen is alive#unionize everything#anarchist food#found family but it's food
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feel this so much kinda fucked how at one point I was hired for basic admin work—calendar wrangling, answering emails, making spreadsheets—and within six months they were trusting me to re-engineer company-wide processes for a 400‑person org. I was automating workflows, fixing systemic bottlenecks, building scalable systems…
…and then got feedback like “a few spelling mistakes in quick-fire emails show a lack of professionalism” and “seems distracted at times.”
in the end the company ran out of money and didn’t renew my contract. classic.
AuDHD sucks sometimes. but facing everything that sucks and staying realistic‑optimistic? that’s rocks.
Kinda fucked up how when you grow up as a "high-functioning" neurodivergent you get to experience simultaneously being the genius of the family that doesn't need help with anything big and the village idiot who can't be trusted with the most basic tasks
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jokes to make after failure that aren’t self-deprecating:
I’m the best to ever do it
Nobody saw that (best if said loudly)
No one’s ever done it like me
I could be President/they should make me President
Behold, a mere fraction of my power!
The public wants to be me soooooo bad
I’m an expert in (thing you just failed at)
How could this have happened to god’s favorite princess?
Nothing ibuprofen and a glass of water cant fix
I’m being sabotaged
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The Fire Drill of the Soul
A fire alarm wails. Too shrill, too cheerful, like a ringtone designed by an AI trained on panic attacks.
Cubicles stretch forever. Fluorescents buzz like angry bees. Identical succulents sit in rows, each dying at the same pace. Posters sag: “Productivity Is Love.” “Hydrate or Die-drate.”
You stride past coworkers slumped like marionettes with their strings cut. Clipboard clutched white-knuckle, you whisper: “Faster. Better. Just fix it all.”
The copier sputters. Then exhales smoke, ink swirling into almost-fingers, almost-spine. Two soft eyes blink open.
“Ah,” says Burnout, voice warm, amused. “You’re early.”
You’re everywhere at once. Barking wellness slogans over the intercom. Flinging stress balls like grenades. Sprinting between cubicles with a standing-desk manual clutched like sacred text.
Coworkers stir—stretch, hydrate, even laugh. Posters peel as air clears. It’s working. It’s working. Fix them. Fix me. Fix everything. Fixfixfix…
The copier wheezes. Smoke unfurls, soft fingers almost brushing your sleeve.
Burnout leans on a cubicle, half-formed, grinning. “Impressive,” they murmur. “You’re winning… a game you’re not supposed to be playing.”
You don’t hear. Too loud in your own head. Too busy saving everything.
You push through the door. Into silence.
The server room hums faintly. Cables snake like veins across the walls, screens flicker images of missed calls, unopened texts, nights spent working through tears.
In the corner sits Burnout, smaller now, slumped. Not monstrous—just tired. “I am not fighting you,” they murmur. “I am the brakes.”
Your hand trembles over a folder: “Rest Protocol.” You pull the plug. The hum dies like a held breath.
The hum dies. Lights gutter. The air grows too still, too thick.
Something groans deep in the walls.
Then everything begins to fall apart.
The office implodes. Alarms wail, lights strobe. Monitors scream error codes. Coworkers slide boneless from chairs as if strings were cut.
Walls stretch. Clocks melt. The floor ripples like water, swallowing spilled coffee, shredded to-do lists, pieces of you.
You stagger, lungs full of smoke that isn’t smoke. Your fixes failed. Everything failed.
Burnout crouches nearby, eyes soft. “Stop running,” they say. “You’re breaking what you’re trying to save.”
You laugh. Then sob. Then sink, face pressed to humming carpet. For once, you don’t move.
It doesn’t fix a damn thing. But maybe, just maybe, that’s not the point.
The fire alarm goes silent. Sunlight spills across cubicles gone wild—ferns curl around monitor arms, vines claim ergonomic chairs. Succulents bloom like tiny rebellions. Posters sag still, scrawled over in spray paint: “Viva La Rest-istance.”
You stroll past coworkers sprawled like miniature Caesars, grapes in hand, laptops abandoned in the grass. Clipboard gone, tea warm in your palms, you murmur: “Slower. Softer. Not everything needs fixing.”
The copier purrs. Smoke coils lazily, shaping a smiling face.
“Ah,” says Burnout, lounging in a beanbag. “You stayed.”
You grin. “Guess you finally did too.”
#burnout#mental health#anti capitalism#recovery#optimism#realistic#magic realism#me at 3AM trying to fix everything at once#viva la resistance#how's your nervous system bestie#it’s fine we’re fine everything’s fine
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Normalize not categorizing everything.
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it's called a museum because me 'n' u see 'em
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The Manor of Endless Business™
You die. A menu pops up. “Would you like to haunt this place? Y/N”
It’s too soon. Or too late. You click yes without thinking, because of course you do. Who doesn't? The air thickens. Your unfinished business uploads like bad Wi-Fi: betrayal, longing, petty grievances, an entire IKEA catalogue of unresolved emotions.
The walls hum. Somewhere in the dark, a voice asks: “What something do you think haunting will fix?”
A flowchart flickers to life, as if the question itself needed diagrams to explain.
The flowchart asks, “What outcome do you desire?”
You hesitate, then type: “To set things right. Revenge. To see I was right.”
Boxes bloom on screen. “Simulating…”
You watch: doors slamming, a family packing in fear, news headlines screaming “Haunted Manor for Sale.”
“Next.”
Soft whispers, drifting warmth. Children clutch dreamcatchers, wide-eyed and sleepless for years.
“Next.”
A misplaced key. A bitter son accusing siblings at the will reading.
You shake your head. “No. I’ll do it differently.”
The flowchart waits. “Define ‘differently.’”
The flowchart asks, “Are you sure this will resolve your business?”
Your fingers twitch. “I—I have to try. What else is there?”
It doesn’t argue. Just shows a still house. Children sleeping. Lovers holding hands. Your name, absent from their stories.
You whisper, “Stop. Show me outcomes where I act.”
The flowchart waits, its lines pulsing like a quiet breath. “What’s louder: your haunting, or the suffering it leaves behind?”
Your chest tightens. Deep down, you already know.
The flowchart asks, “What if you stop?”
You flinch. “Then I fade. Then nothing changes.”
It shows you: stillness. Children sleep through storms. Lovers forgive old wounds. The house exhales.
You twist in place, fists clenching. “But they’ll forget. I’ll dissolve.”
The flowchart’s lines pulse faintly. “If you don’t act, who will you be?”
Your chest tightens. You have no answer.
The flowchart flickers. For the first time, it doesn’t ask a question. It simply says: “You don’t have to do anything.”
You feel it—the weight of centuries unclenching. The house exhales. The anger, the grief, the petty longing—they’re still here, but softer now, like wallpaper fading in sunlight.
This isn’t resolution through haunting. It’s resolution through stillness.
And as your outline blurs, a final prompt appears: “Would you like to rest? Y/N”
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7 Things Customers Mean When They Order “Wu Wei” (According to the Last Barista Standing)
This morning whilst i was working my barista counter, three people ordered “wu wei” and screamed when I asked if they wanted oat milk. The first demanded a latte “with the taste of no-latte,” the second slapped the counter shouting, “Empty the cup of self!”, and the third just wept into a reusable KeepCup. Meanwhile, my espresso machine muttered Zen riddles like a drunk uncle: “The bean dreams of the grinder.” Somewhere between the foam and the nothingness, I realized: I might be the problem.
Now I’m in court, trying to explain why a city full of caffeine mystics burned down my café in search of non-doing in a cup. I submit this list as evidence—not of innocence, but of survival tactics for the next poor fool behind the counter.
1. “A Triple Oat Latte With No Effort, No Foam, No Self” Translation: they want the drink to appear without anyone doing anything. Actionable advice: stand perfectly still. Sometimes they’ll mistake your inaction for mastery. My mistake was steaming oat milk so gently it felt like a love letter. “Too much effort,” they said, before staging a silent protest.
2. “An Empty Cup, But Make It Artisan” They crave the aesthetic of intention with none of the content. Actionable advice: serve an immaculate porcelain vessel filled only with air. Bonus points for a hand-lettered note that says “This cup contains everything.” One tipped me a pebble shaped like an existential crisis. Don’t spend it all in one place.
3. “The Entire Café Becoming a Stream” Expect demands to dissolve walls, menus, and even time. Actionable advice: carry a mop at all times. When one customer whispered, “Let it pour without pouring,” I complied. The floor became a river of oat milk and shattered dreams. My machine hissed: “Flow is a flood until it isn’t.”
4. “To Erase The Concept of Menu” They’ll attack the metaphysics of size and choice. Actionable advice: tear down the chalkboard before they can. I hesitated. A man in a tailored suit asked, “Why small? Why large?” The espresso machine cheered: “Finally, medium is meaningless.”
5. “One Black Coffee. And Eternal Peace, Please.” Sounds simple. It’s a trap. They’ll stare into the cup’s abyss for hours, waiting for nirvana. Actionable advice: keep refilling their mug; they won’t notice. But don’t—whatever you do—try to join them. That abyss stares back.
6. “A Foam Swan That Doesn’t Disturb the Surface” Here’s their paradox: beauty without disturbance. Actionable advice: learn latte art that collapses on eye contact. I sculpted the swan of my career. They wept. It dissolved. The machine slurred: “All swans drown.”
7. “Surprise Me With Enlightenment” The deadliest order. It’s not a drink; it’s an ultimatum. Actionable advice: hand them your apron, keys, and a mirror. I did. They didn’t notice. Maybe I didn’t either. The machine whispered: “You’ve finally poured yourself out.”
“Your Honor, I steamed. I strained. I sacrificed my thumbs to oat milk. But every order for wu wei was an act of violence against itself. I am not guilty of over-extraction. I am guilty of caring. They wanted non-doing from the one job that requires endless doing. And I ask this court: if coffee is life, must it always be brewed?”
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