The core

  • 312.

    If I disappear,
    let it be in your eyes


  • 311.

    Hands and knees
    on the harsh and raw stone
    Dripping black from my eyes
    and red from my mouth
    I hear suffocation’s footsteps behind me

    The crowd around me stares
    doesn’t understand
    And says I’m
    crazy


  • 310.

    He smelled of smoke masked by perfume

    And had a death wish masked by a smile


  • 307.

    You are the explosion
    that tears my skin apart
    and my bleeding body parts are scattered
    on the streets to your house
    And still my heart aches
    as it lies there upon the pavement
    And my mind is nothing but
    pieces of flesh now

    But you never exploded
    only I experienced that burst
    as if you and I live
    in parallel worlds
    In my world I experience
    you as an explosion
    In your world I don’t even
    really exist


  • 304.

    Art is the communication of (indescribable) feelings without using the human theatre


  • 301.

    I stare at you
    wordlessly
    because there are no
    words to describe
    this


  • 296.

    The small and unreaching man-made order, man-made language


  • 289.

    And in this nothingness
    this beautiful nothingness
    this is where we live
    where we love


  • 288.

    To play and feel
    and feel and write
    and write and yearn
    and yearn and scream
    and scream and die

    And yet that is to live


  • 287.

    To break language
    down to its core
    and then shake that core


  • 286.

    You will never touch this ground. Never. You have been taught to walk and to find it strange to bring your body close to the outside tiles. And because you have been taught to do so, all else is strange and all else is to be looked down upon. You say I am mad and you walk past me with your snout held high. And so you will never touch this ground. Never. But you do not even realize that you are stuck in your stuck up ways. That is the saddest part; your unawareness.


  • 285.

    Our appearances are not something we should be reduced to as humans. To then call someone beautiful or ugly has no real significance. It should then not be a significant topic for any speaker nor one for any receiver. When someone calls someone ugly, they have made the mistake of focusing on this. And when the receiver is hurt by this, they have made the mistake of making their appearances part of their identity.


  • 284.

    You ask me if perhaps I am thinking too much and you say that it does not bring much. I ask you then if you work too much and what it brings you. You say it is your job and that it brings you money and helps the people around you in some way. So also, is it my job to think; to observe and contemplate everything. The job that I have chosen out of the passion of my entire being and a belief in a โ€˜betterโ€™ society. 

    The mistake you make is in thinking that the thinkings of a philosopher are the same as your own. You think to yourself; I could have thought of that and now that it has been thought and brought to me, I understand it. Of course you understand it, for it has been taught to you: you are a product of the past and so also of the thoughts that were introduced there. โ€˜It comes naturally to me that the world is meaningless,โ€™ you say. Of course you say this, for you have been raised to believe it and to be prone to experiencing that. Also those who raised you were raised in a place that was already sown with the seeds of these thoughts.  

    So must we say no original thought exists? Of course not, but their origin is not to be found in anyone’s upbringing alone. Their origin is found in philosophy; the source of original thoughts. And as I have said these original thoughts then (sometimes) become conventional ones. Telling me that you understand some conventional thought is no impressive feat.


  • 283.

    We shower our children with these thoughts that we have received when we were children. We tell them that they are special and that we as humans are special; that we are the main characters. And so our children grow up to believe this. But this belief is contradicted in the real world; there we are merely another part and not a main character at all. And so we are confused when what we have learned as children does not add up with the real world. And since we do not like to be confused, we avoid it and lull ourselves back into the illusion that we are indeed main characters. And then we teach this to our children and the cycle of deceit and illusion continues. And we stray further from realness.


  • 282.

    Certainly, my life will once again fall into โ€˜decayโ€™, as we like to call it. But precisely this falling into decay and rising up from it again is what it means to have a life. It is inevitable that we sometimes return to our base; โ€˜the state of decayโ€™ or better said, emptiness, nothingness. It is inevitable because what we build has no ground and therefore it should not be surprising or shocking that it will come crashing down. Now you may think, oh no, my life is doomed to crash down. But this is not a terrible thought, for it is normal for our lives to โ€˜decayโ€™ (which I hope is clear now, is not at all a decay) and therefore we should not fear it. Only be aware of it and accept whatever decay or non-decay our life receives.

    Do not worry about emptiness; it is not something to fear or to avoid. It is our base, our neutral standard. 


  • 281.

    This human experience, how laughable it may be, is still some beautiful thing. How privileged I feel to exist and how uncanny it feels to leave existence after some time. I try now to understand human existence and existence as a whole, while in a few moments I will no longer be part of it. How absurd.


  • 279.

    I refuse to act! I can do that no longer! What disgust has come over me! How have I lived this way for so long and never understood? I will not act! I will strive to achieve realness! 

    But this is no simple task, for if all others act, how can I respond only with realness? And if I have been acting my whole life, how then will I never act again? If I am not even sure what this realness is in daily life, how then will I adopt it in my heart and life? Nonetheless , I must try; this is what life is, try. And it is what being human means; to try to change, largely fail but slightly progress. I urge all who read and understand this to try also; try to live in realness and not on the stage of the social theatre. The social theatre is not where life truly happens, it is only a practical place and to make it more practical we have started acting, because realness is harder for us. And so realness was lost and with it a part of a true life. 


  • 278.

    It is very human to have suicidal thoughts. It seems to me a fundamental thought and one that all persons will or should at some point consider. Why should we live? Why does that make any sense? If we brush this off and ridicule this as an absurd question, then truly we are disrespecting life itself. In doing this we say that we should not fully consider the meaning of life. And so we avoid the meaning of life by escaping into it; how cowardly. But understandable, for humans seem prone to fear that which is the most real. They would much rather live in their stories and structures that they have made for themselves. And so we deny life itself.

    And in our stories, we have truly become insane to the real world. 


  • 276.

    Sit down, close your eyes. Let all the eyes in your mind drift away; they matter not. What some person thinks of you tomorrow is not a worry for now and perhaps not a worry at all. When these eyes have gone, you can see life itself more clearly. And sit there and observe it, feel it.  

    And feel that nothing has a base, nothing has a fundament, nothing has a true structure. Think to yourself why am I doing this and realise that no satisfying answer will ever come to you. โ€˜Why do I work?โ€™ And you realise life is a series of โ€˜next stepsโ€™ and no true ground. This โ€˜having no groundโ€™ is fundamental to the human life, it is its essence. Bask in the uncertainty that overwhelms you: you are home! Can you not laugh because you know that you belong here, in this nothingness? Do you not recognise it? Or has your fragile mind forgotten its own existence? Or perhaps it has never known, and has lived in illusion since birth. Then this realization is the stripping of illusion. All persons break when the illusion is stripped but all are more real for it. Those who live still in illusion are cursed to be but actors, to live in fakeness and delight in delusion for they do not know it is delusion. So I say to you: break! All those who hear me: break yourself! Break yourself and so rid yourself of illusion; become at least aware of it.ย 

    For awareness is but the first step, as it always is. Yet even in awareness, the illusion is not easily avoided. It is perhaps even impossible to live truly without it, since it is somehow essential to human life, as I have said. 


  • 275.

    Hindsight makes fools of us all 

    (said also by John French) 

    Yet we do not seem to realise that this very moment is the moment of hindsight. This very moment is the moment you will look back on and say โ€˜I was but a foolโ€™. 

    We grow out of this moment and it will be some part of an ancient past. Do you not look back upon yourself and see that you were still a child, even when your mind and body had matured? You think you are not a child now, that you know things and even understand them. I laugh heartly at you, for you are a child, like I am a child. And in many years you will laugh at yourself also. And many years more you will be dead and unable to laugh at yourself. But if we were to believe in some sort of life beyond life then surely you will laugh at yourself there. 

    We laugh when we see a fool, but hindsight tells us that we are all the fool, that we all should laugh at all of us. 


  • 274.

    How much did they pay you, tell me, to sell your soul to this puppet master? Or is it not money that they offered you? Did you give yourself voluntarily over to be controlled?  

    And when you feel the wire on the metal flesh hook raise your arms in the sky, do you not regret your life? Do you not wish to be free of this when you look in the mirror and see not yourself but some shadow in the distance? 


  • 273.

    Are we doomed under the watch of eyes when we share something? Perhaps there will be eyes yes but that does not mean they should govern you


  • 272.

    ‘I don’t know’ is perhaps the wisest utterance


  • 264.

    How I present myself here is not how I truly am, because that is impossible to present.


  • 262.

    Those who are sure, are small minded


  • 255.

    If we are to progress in our societies as humans, it shall be in this ‘realness’.


  • 254.

    We are on our way, but we must continue to approach the age of realness. The age of saying truthfully what is on our mind


  • 253.

    When the world is ‘perfect’ there is no more need for revolutions. A world without revolutions seems simply not possible and perhaps even not desirable


  • 243.

    If you find something ridiculous, there is a big chance you don’t understand it


  • 242.

    Those who long for power have sunk too deep into the social theatre


  • 241.

    Age is the stupidest way to measure maturity, yet because it is the easiest way, that is the one we put most significance in. Stereotypes and labels are the stupidest way to understand someone, yet because it is the easiest, we put most significance in that one. This is how we as humans work: efficiency over reality


  • 240.

    In the social theatre, we reduce ourselves because we are considerate of others. There are things we ‘can’t’ say, things we ‘can’t’ do. I hold myself back when I am with others, I do not say all that I wish


  • 239.

    In some possible world, you are in the same position as this person in front of you


  • 238.

    The world is not unjust, it merely seems unjust to us


  • 234.

    It is okay to let time pass. Accepting that is perhaps the hardest thing


  • 231.

    It is uncomfortable to have our foundations shaken


  • 229.

    Are my ideas only worth something if I communicate them clearly?


  • 228.

    The basis of the social theatre (which is within the human story): communication is limited; we can never fully express ourselves to others. To fill this void, we tend to act; saying not really something to satisfy some sort of expectation of communication


  • 227.

    The basis of the human story: we can only understand and observe things in a human way. So the way we give structure to the world is merely human.


  • 217.

    How arbitrary it is that we don’t treat a 17-year old as an adult and we do for an 18-year old. How arbitrary it is anyway that we focus so much on age


  • 214.

    The cruel paradox; by structuring life and making it more efficient, we also reduce it


  • 212.

    I must be human. I have to be. And if I must be that, then I wish to be real in my being human. I shall not act


  • 210.

    An anthropocentric life is a life stuck in the human theatre


  • 208.

    Through art we can transcend the human theatre. Art captures a feeling and releases it to its receiver. No theatre needed


  • 207.

    We say that as adults we become independent yet we dread being alone


  • 206.

    Are humans able to do something unnatural? There is nothing unnatural in this world


  • 205.

    You are a different person when there are eyes on you (real as well as self-made eyes)


  • 200.

    This pride is because of and the cause of inequality


  • 197.

    We (want to) build on something on which we cannot build


  • 195.

    We can’t know how much we can’t know


  • 192.

    We see a difference between night and day but we do not have an absolute point or thing we can use to distinguish between these. There is not one moment that day turns into night. Yet this is how we make structures as humans.


  • 189.

    We are all doomed to play out this absurd story


  • 186.

    Emptiness and chaos is our standard which we clothe with structure and ‘things’. Just like nakedness is our standard and we clothe ourselves to hide this


  • 184.

    With everything that we say, write, express about the world, we bring something human into it. Therefore, we see that we can never truly understand the world, because the world is not human and we are. Understanding the real world goes beyond our human capabilities.


  • 183.

    Don’t ever think that you understand ‘the whole’ of something


  • 178.

    Having no basis as a basis


  • 176.

    There is no gradual knowledge of something incomprehensible


  • 175.

    The same thing that makes our societies function, restricts us


  • 172.

    If even my own expression of myself does not adequately describe me, how much more will the description of others about me not be adequate


  • 171.

    ‘Order’ is the name we have for the least chaotic parts of life. Life is a scale of chaos


  • 170.

    Life is fighting against the much more logical option of not existing


  • 168.

    The human story of course makes it easier. Like colouring by number; we don’t have to think for ourselves anymore


  • 164.

    The human story is like an advertisement; everything is made to seem more appealing, to seem better than it is in reality. The human advertisement says there is order when actually there is chaos. It says there is stability when there is actually nothing to hold onto.


  • 156.

    Love is not part of the human theatre, it is not made up. We have taken it and twisted it to fit the human story though.


  • 155.

    For some people, the human theatre might be enough, even though I doubt they understand that they are in it then. Some people are intoxicated by their role in the human story, they love playing their part and telling people about it.


  • 153.

    The fundamental emptiness of the human life


  • 150.

    Every interaction has a certain fakeness. Right? Or does the most intimate relationship not have that? Only a person by themself seems real.


  • 149.

    Composure. We want some sort of composure when we are in public. Why? Why are the eyes of others always on our minds?


  • 148.

    ‘Crazy’ is refusing to play along with the theatre show of humanity. It’s crazy how that works


  • 144.

    Language itself has silenced me

    [The limitations of human communication struck me so hard, I realized I could never say anything again]


  • 141.

    Reality is never how you picture reality


  • 138.

    On what do you build? Do you build on the words of others? The words of friends? The words of your parents? Do you build on the words of a book? The words of a person who says they understand a certain book? Where are you, if you build on other things than yourself?


  • 137.

    If you expect poetry to be a certain way; you have greatly misunderstood it


  • 133.

    We are held captive by our ideas of how things should be


  • 129.

    We place a system atop reality and then choose to live in that system


  • 128.

    Forever trying to understand that which we cannot understand


  • 126.

    If something is the norm, you’re not really going to think critically about it anymore


  • 123.

    Real philosophy is wordless


  • 121.

    It is not wisdom to repeat another’s words


  • 120.

    You are not the labels attributed to you


  • 117.

    The thing about change is, it never stops


  • 114.

    Self-deceit is essential for humanity


  • 108.

    Dare to try something new


  • 107.

    Everyone asks themselves; who do I have to be? Society gives certain suggestions for that. The problem is that people take that as an answer in stead of suggestion. You don’t have to be anyone.


  • 106.

    When you don’t understand anything, it is a consolation to realize nothing can be understood


  • 105.

    We have divided everything, to understand it better. We have done this to humans; we made (labeled) many groups. We have done this in science; we have made many different disciplines. But now we should again realize that the world is actually one, and that dividing it up can never lead to true, complete understanding. We see that some of the philosophy of this age is bringing together again what was once divided.


  • 102.

    We’re all scared of uncertainty, so we create a fake certainty and pretend it is real


  • 100.

    Measuring maturity in communication, awareness and wisdom


  • 98.

    The value of conflicted living

    [If there was no conflict in your mind, there would be no searching or questions. And without that there is only a life stuck in dogma.]


  • 92.

    There is no hierarchy in our differences


  • 83.

    Every system limits us in a certain way


  • 80.

    ‘Human’ is our only significant label. Yet we judge others using insignificant labels, and so we dehumanize them. We treat them as ‘a woman’ or ‘a man’ instead of a human. We treat them as ‘a black person’ or ‘a white person’ instead of as a human. We treat them as ‘straight’ or ‘queer’ in stead of as a human. And so we divide and restrict our humanity.


  • 73.

    But the academy didn’t grasp life


  • 65.

    Being certain that what you believe is truth, is no longer believing


  • 60.

    Earth has no countries


  • 56.

    Loneliness is not knowing how to be alone
    Loneliness appears when you think being alone is negative

    [487]


  • 53.

    It is not about whom I love, it is about that I love. People love people, other factors are pretty much insignificant.


  • 52.

    Human is our only label


  • 41.

    Dare not to hide any part of you


  • 39.

    Your work is not your worth


  • 26.

    Dignity needs to go

    [Dignity makes us act; ‘I must be this or that way. I must not dance in public or be too loud.’ And so dignity silences many personalities and possibilities.]