Existentialquestions Stories

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existentialquestions

9 Stories

  • WHY? by TMWhibzzy
    TMWhibzzy
    • WpView
      Reads 23
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      Parts 1
    I'm just feeling a bit depressed so I wanted to blow some steam...
  • Unfortunately It's All About Presence by abitweird
    abitweird
    • WpView
      Reads 19
    • WpPart
      Parts 2
    A girl writes everything she thinks about down in a diary, because she got told to do so. Why? Because she doesn't talk about the things she thinks about. Her mind works a bit different and that's why she is different to others...
  • Is it all my fault? by unwanted_z
    unwanted_z
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      Reads 6
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      Parts 1
    I just decided to finally let it all out. This poem is a raw and emotional piece that explores the depths of loneliness, self-doubt, and inner turmoil. It paints a vivid picture of someone grappling with their identity and place in the world, while wrestling with feelings of isolation and despair. Through its heartfelt lines, the poem conveys a longing for connection, understanding, and relief from pain. It's a deeply personal cry for help, layered with reflections on pride, vulnerability, and the struggle to hold onto hope. The imagery of extinguished light and fading happiness underscores the weight of the speaker's emotional burden, making the poem both powerful and relatable.
  • NAVIGATING PREJUDICE  by jill900
    jill900
    • WpView
      Reads 82
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      Parts 1
    Navigating Prejudice is a raw, unfiltered journey through the life of a woman shaped by struggle, societal expectations, and the weight of her past. Told with humor, wit, and unapologetic honesty, the story peels back layers of classism, mental health stigma, family betrayal, and cultural hypocrisy. Through sharp observations and darkly comedic reflections, the narrator-both her younger, naive self and her wiser, awakened self-exposes the contradictions of a world that punishes survival while pretending to uphold virtue. From the confines of a single-room childhood home to the stark contrasts of privilege and power, she navigates love, loss, and self-discovery in a society quick to judge but slow to understand. With every chapter, Navigating Prejudice challenges the reader to confront uncomfortable truths while finding humor in life's absurdities. It's not just a personal story-it's a mirror held up to a world that fears the truth but desperately needs it.
  • LOST IN THE LABYRINTH OF MY OWN BECOMING by delilahdoyleaa
    delilahdoyleaa
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      Reads 6
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      Parts 1
    Lost in the Labyrinth of My Own Becoming is a heartfelt struggle to find oneself amidst doubts, fears, and uncertainty. A relatable exploration of the human experience.
  • Our story by Tuti-onlive
    Tuti-onlive
    • WpView
      Reads 4
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      Parts 2
    Probably, you like love stories. But have you ever red a real love story? If not or if yes and you like them. Today 06-11-23, I'm starting to tell you mine. I hope you enjoy it, and I will give my best.
  • Loon by billharlai
    billharlai
    • WpView
      Reads 48
    • WpPart
      Parts 16
    The main motif of the book is the emerging extreme ideology and its proponents (Memento Mori), as well as society's extreme and misguided response to it. The social division and civil war-like conditions revolve around a relatively simple question: does a person have the right to die the way and when they choose? Such a simple question divides society in a way that the country falls into a civil war. In this world, Josh Revemil, a police detective, tries to navigate, seemingly focusing solely on the safety of his family, not wanting to align with either side.
  • Prompted Poems by MalignantDucks
    MalignantDucks
    • WpView
      Reads 21
    • WpPart
      Parts 4
    Taking prompts that are either a single word or a phrase, I see what I can make out of it.
  • I FINALLY UNDERSTOOD WHY I AM... by Clement-Payet
    Clement-Payet
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      Reads 1
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      Parts 1
    Author's Note At first, this text was meant for me alone. I wrote it so I wouldn't forget what I had understood, what I had felt, what I had touched with the tip of my consciousness. I needed to leave a trace. Because once words are written down, they allow us to remember more clearly. And because I know that doubt, forgetfulness, or the noise of the world can sometimes cover everything up. But the more I wrote, the more I realized how difficult it is to put this kind of reflection into words-and how much this journey requires staying both lucid, honest, and open. So I thought: maybe others are going through the same questioning. Maybe some people, somewhere, are trying to connect what they deeply feel with what they've been taught. Maybe they, too, are trying to let spirituality, science, intuition, and doubt coexist. This text does not try to teach a lesson. It doesn't claim to be right. But if it can support a reflection, or express in words what someone hadn't yet been able to say, then it will have meant something beyond me.