Donโt Try
Charles Bukowski was an alcoholic, a womanizer, a chronic gambler, a lout, a cheapskate, a deadbeat, and on his worst days, a poet. Heโs probably the last person on earth you would ever look to for life advice or expect to see in any sort of self-help book.
Which is why heโs the perfect place to start.
Bukowski wanted to be a writer. But for decades his work was rejected by almost every magazine, newspaper, journal, agent, and publisher he submitted to. His work was horrible, they said. Crude. Disgusting. Depraved. And as the stacks of rejection slips piled up, the weight of his failures pushed him deep into an alcohol-fueled depression that would follow him for most of his life.
Bukowski had a day job as a letter-filer at a post office. He got paid shit money and spent most of it on booze. He gambled away the rest at the racetrack. At night, he would drink alone and sometimes hammer out poetry on his beat-up old typewriter. Often, heโd wake up on the floor, having passed out the night before.
Thirty years went by like this, most of it a meaningless blur of alcohol, drugs, gambling, and prostitutes. Then, when Bukowski was fifty, after a lifetime of failure and self-loathing, an editor at a small independent publishing house took a strange interest in him. The editor couldnโt offer Bukowski much money or much promise of sales. But he had a weird affection for the drunk loser, so he decided to take a chance on him. It was the first real shot Bukowski had ever gotten, and, he realized, probably the only one he would ever get. Bukowski wrote back to the editor: โI have one of two choicesโstay in the post office and go crazy . . . or stay out here and play at writer and starve. I have decided to starve.โ
Upon signing the contract, Bukowski wrote his first novel in three weeks. It was called simplyย Post Office.ย In the dedication, he wrote, โDedicated to nobody.โ
Bukowski would make it as a novelist and poet. He would go on and publish six novels and hundreds of poems, selling over two million copies of his books. His popularity defied everyoneโs expectations, particularly his own.
Stories like Bukowskiโs are the bread and butter of our cultural narrative. Bukowskiโs life embodies the American Dream: a man fights for what he wants, never gives up, and eventually achieves his wildest dreams. Itโs practically a movie waiting to happen. We all look at stories like Bukowskiโs and say, โSee? He never gave up. He never stopped trying. He always believed in himself. He persisted against all the odds and made something of himself!โ
It is then strange that on Bukowskiโs tombstone, the epitaph reads: โDonโt try.โ
See, despite the book sales and the fame, Bukowski was a loser. He knew it. And his success stemmed not from some determination to be a winner, but from the fact that heย knewย he was a loser, accepted it, and then wrote honestly about it. He never tried to be anything other than what he was. The genius in Bukowskiโs work was not in overcoming unbelievable odds or developing himself into a shining literary light. It was the opposite. It was his simple ability to be completely, unflinchingly honest with himself
โespecially the worst parts of himselfโand to share his failings without hesitation or doubt.
This is the real story of Bukowskiโs success: his comfort with himself as a failure. Bukowski didnโt give a fuck about success. Even after his fame, he still showed up to poetry readings hammered and verbally abused people in his audience. He still exposed himself in public and tried to sleep with every woman he could find. Fame and success didnโt make him a better person. Nor was it by becoming a better person that he became famous and successful.
Self-improvement and success often occur together. But that doesnโt necessarily mean theyโre the same thing.
Our culture today is obsessively focused on unrealistically positive expectations: Be happier. Be healthier. Be the best, better than the rest. Be
smarter, faster, richer, sexier, more popular, more productive, more envied, and more admired. Be perfect and amazing and crap out twelve-karat-gold nuggets before breakfast each morning while kissing your selfie-ready spouse and two and a half kids goodbye. Then fly your helicopter to your wonderfully fulfilling job, where you spend your days doing incredibly meaningful work thatโs likely to save the planet one day.
But when you stop and really think about it, conventional life adviceโ all the positive and happy self-help stuff we hear all the timeโis actually fixating on what youย lack. It lasers in onย what you perceive your personal shortcomings and failures to already be,ย and then emphasizes them for you. You learn about the best ways to make moneyย becauseย you feel you donโt have enough money already. You stand in front of the mirror and repeat affirmations saying that youโre beautifulย becauseย you feel as though youโre not beautiful already. You follow dating and relationship adviceย becauseย you feel that youโre unlovable already. You try goofy visualization exercises about being more successfulย becauseย you feel as though you arenโt successful enough already.
Ironically, this fixation on the positiveโon whatโs better, whatโs superiorโonly serves to remind us over and over again of what we are not, of what we lack, of what we should have been but failed to be. After all, no truly happy person feels the need to stand in front of a mirror and recite that sheโs happy. She justย is.
Thereโs a saying in Texas: โThe smallest dog barks the loudest.โ A confident man doesnโt feel a need to prove that heโs confident. A rich woman doesnโt feel a need to convince anybody that sheโs rich. Either you are or you are not. And if youโre dreaming of something all the time, then youโre reinforcing the same unconscious reality over and over: that you areย not that.
Everyone and their TV commercial wants you to believe that the key to a good life is a nicer job, or a more rugged car, or a prettier girlfriend, or a hot tub with an inflatable pool for the kids. The world is constantly telling you that the path to a better life is more, more, moreโbuy more, own more, make more, fuck more,ย beย more. You are constantly bombarded with messages to give a fuck about everything, all the time. Give a fuck about a new TV. Give a fuck about having a better vacation than your coworkers.
Give a fuck about buying that new lawn ornament. Give a fuck about having the right kind of selfie stick.
Why? My guess: because giving a fuck about more stuff is good for business.
And while thereโs nothing wrong with good business, the problem is that giving too many fucks is bad for your mental health. It causes you to become overly attached to the superficial and fake, to dedicate your life to chasing a mirage of happiness and satisfaction. The key to a good life is not giving a fuck about more; itโs giving a fuck about less, giving a fuck about only what is true and immediate and important.โ
The Feedback Loop from Hell
Thereโs an insidious quirk to your brain that, if you let it, can drive you absolutely batty. Tell me if this sounds familiar to you:
You get anxious about confronting somebody in your life. That anxiety cripples you and you start wondering why youโre so anxious. Now youโre becomingย anxious about being anxious.ย Oh no! Doubly anxious! Now youโre anxious about your anxiety, which is causingย moreย anxiety. Quick, whereโs the whiskey?
Or letโs say you have an anger problem. You get pissed off at the stupidest, most inane stuff, and you have no idea why. And the fact that you get pissed off so easily starts to piss you off even more. And then, in your petty rage, you realize that being angry all the time makes you a shallow and mean person, and you hate this; you hate it so much that you get angry at yourself. Now look at you: youโre angry at yourself getting angry about being angry. Fuck you, wall. Here, have a fist.
Or youโre so worried about doing the right thing all the time that you become worried about how much youโre worrying. Or you feel so guilty for every mistake you make that you begin to feel guilty about how guilty youโre feeling. Or you get sad and alone so often that it makes you feel even more sad and alone just thinking about it.
Welcome to the Feedback Loop from Hell. Chances are youโve engaged in it more than a few times. Maybe youโre engaging in it right now: โGod, I do the Feedback Loop all the timeโIโm such a loser for doing it. I should stop. Oh my God, I feel like such a loser for calling myself a loser. I should
stop calling myself a loser. Ah, fuck! Iโm doing it again! See? Iโm a loser! Argh!โ
Calm down, amigo. Believe it or not, this is part of the beauty of being human. Very few animals on earth have the ability to think cogent thoughts to begin with, but we humans have the luxury of being able to have thoughtsย aboutย our thoughts. So I can think about watching Miley Cyrus videos on YouTube, and then immediately think about what a sicko I am for wanting to watch Miley Cyrus videos on YouTube. Ah, the miracle of consciousness!
Now hereโs the problem: Our society today, through the wonders of consumer culture and hey-look-my-life-is-cooler-than-yours social media, has bred a whole generation of people who believe that having these negative experiencesโanxiety, fear, guilt, etc.โis totally not okay. I mean, if you look at your Facebook feed, everybody there is having a fucking grand old time. Look, eight people got married this week! And some sixteen-year-old on TV got a Ferrari for her birthday. And another kid just made two billion dollars inventing an app that automatically delivers you more toilet paper when you run out.
Meanwhile, youโre stuck at home flossing your cat. And you canโt help but think your life sucks even more than you thought.
The Feedback Loop from Hell has become a borderline epidemic, making many of us overly stressed, overly neurotic, and overly self- loathing.
Back in Grandpaโs day, he would feel like shit and think to himself, โGee whiz, I sure do feel like a cow turd today. But hey, I guess thatโs just life. Back to shoveling hay.โ
But now? Now if you feel like shit for even five minutes, youโre bombarded with 350 images of peopleย totally happy and having amazing fucking lives,ย and itโs impossible to not feel like thereโs something wrong with you.
Itโs this last part that gets us into trouble. We feel bad about feeling bad. We feel guilty for feeling guilty. We get angry about getting angry. We get anxious about feeling anxious.ย What is wrong with me?
This is why not giving a fuck is so key. This is why itโs going to save the world. And itโs going to save it by accepting that the world is totally
fucked and thatโs all right, because itโs always been that way, and always will be.
By not giving a fuck that you feel bad, you short-circuit the Feedback Loop from Hell; you say to yourself, โI feel like shit, but who gives a fuck?โ And then, as if sprinkled by magic fuck-giving fairy dust, you stop hating yourself for feeling so bad.
George Orwell said that to see whatโs in front of oneโs nose requires a constant struggle. Well, the solution to our stress and anxiety is right there in front of our noses, and weโre too busy watching porn and advertisements for ab machines that donโt work, wondering why weโre not banging a hot blonde with a rocking six-pack, to notice.
We joke online about โfirst-world problems,โ but we really have become victims of our own success. Stress-related health issues, anxiety disorders, and cases of depression have skyrocketed over the past thirty years, despite the fact that everyone has a flat-screen TV and can have their groceries delivered. Our crisis is no longer material; itโs existential, itโs spiritual. We have so much fucking stuff and so many opportunities that we donโt even know what to give a fuck about anymore.
Because thereโs an infinite amount of things we can now see or know, there are also an infinite number of ways we can discover that we donโt measure up, that weโre not good enough, that things arenโt as great as they could be. And this rips us apart inside.
Because hereโs the thing thatโs wrong with all of the โHow to Be Happyโ shit thatโs been shared eight million times on Facebook in the past few yearsโhereโs what nobody realizes about all of this crap:
The desire for more positive experience is itself a negative experience. And, paradoxically, the acceptance of oneโs negative experience is itself a positive experience.
This is a total mind-fuck. So Iโll give you a minute to unpretzel your brain and maybe read that again:ย Wanting positive experience is a negative experience; accepting negative experience is a positive experience.ย Itโs what the philosopher Alan Watts used to refer to as โthe backwards lawโโ the idea that the more you pursue feeling better all the time, the less satisfied you become, as pursuing something only reinforces the fact that
you lack it in the first place. The more you desperately want to be rich, the more poor and unworthy you feel, regardless of how much money you actually make. The more you desperately want to be sexy and desired, the uglier you come to see yourself, regardless of your actual physical appearance. The more you desperately want to be happy and loved, the lonelier and more afraid you become, regardless of those who surround you. The more you want to be spiritually enlightened, the more self-centered and shallow you become in trying to get there.
Itโs like this one time I tripped on acid and it felt like the more I walked toward a house, the farther away the house got from me. And yes, I just used my LSD hallucinations to make a philosophical point about happiness. No fucks given.
As the existential philosopher Albert Camus said (and Iโm pretty sure he wasnโt on LSD at the time): โYou will never be happy if you continue to search for what happiness consists of. You will never live if you are looking for the meaning of life.โ
Or put more simply:
Donโt try.
Now, I know what youโre saying: โMark, this is making my nipples all hard, but what about the Camaro Iโve been saving up for? What about the beach body Iโve been starving myself for? After all, I paid a lot of money for that ab machine! What about the big house on the lake Iโve been dreaming of? If I stop giving a fuck about those thingsโwell, then Iโll never achieveย anything. I donโt want that to happen, do I?โ
So glad you asked.
Ever notice that sometimes when you careย lessย about something, you do better at it? Notice how itโs often the person who is the least invested in the success of something that actually ends up achieving it? Notice how sometimes when you stop giving a fuck, everything seems to fall into place?
Whatโs with that?
Whatโs interesting about the backwards law is that itโs called โbackwardsโ for a reason: not giving a fuck works in reverse. If pursuing the positiveย isย a negative, then pursuing the negative generates the positive. The pain you pursue in the gym results in better all-around health and energy. The failures in business are what lead to a better understanding of
whatโs necessary to be successful. Being open with your insecurities paradoxically makes you more confident and charismatic around others. The pain of honest confrontation is what generates the greatest trust and respect in your relationships. Suffering through your fears and anxieties is what allows you to build courage and perseverance.
Seriously, I could keep going, but you get the point.ย Everything worthwhile in life is won through surmounting the associated negative experience.ย Any attempt to escape the negative, to avoid it or quash it or silence it, only backfires. The avoidance of sufferingย isย a form of suffering. The avoidance of struggleย isย a struggle. The denial of failureย isย a failure. Hiding what is shamefulย isย itself a form of shame.
Pain is an inextricable thread in the fabric of life, and to tear it out is not only impossible, but destructive: attempting to tear it out unravels everything else with it. To try to avoid pain is to give too many fucks about pain. In contrast, if youโre able to not give a fuck about the pain, you become unstoppable.
In my life, I have given a fuck about many things. I have alsoย notย given a fuck about many things. And like the road not taken, it was the fucks not given that made all the difference.
Chances are you know somebody in your life who, at one time or another, did not give a fuck and then went on to accomplish amazing feats. Perhaps there was a time in your own life when you simply did not give a fuck and excelled to some extraordinary height. For myself, quitting my day job in finance after only six weeks to start an Internet business ranks pretty high up there in my own โdidnโt give a fuckโ hall of fame. Same with deciding to sell most of my possessions and move to South America. Fucks given? None. Just went and did it.
These moments of non-fuckery are the moments that most define our lives. The major switch in careers; the spontaneous choice to drop out of college and join a rock band; the decision to finally dump that deadbeat boyfriend whom you caught wearing your pantyhose a few too many times.
To not give a fuck is to stare down lifeโs most terrifying and difficult challenges and still take action.
While not giving a fuck may seem simple on the surface, itโs a whole new bag of burritos under the hood. I donโt even know what that sentence
means, but I donโt give a fuck. A bag of burritos sounds awesome, so letโs just go with it.
Most of us struggle throughout our lives by giving too many fucks in situations where fucks do not deserve to be given. We give too many fucks about the rude gas station attendant who gave us our change in nickels. We give too many fucks when a show we liked was canceled on TV. We give too many fucks when our coworkers donโt bother asking us about our awesome weekend.
Meanwhile, our credit cards are maxed out, our dog hates us, and Junior is snorting meth in the bathroom, yet weโre getting pissed off about nickels andย Everybody Loves Raymond.
Look, this is how it works. Youโre going to die one day. I know thatโs kind of obvious, but I just wanted to remind you in case youโd forgotten. You and everyone you know are going to be dead soon. And in the short amount of time between here and there, you have a limited amount of fucks to give. Very few, in fact. And if you go around giving a fuck about everything and everyone without conscious thought or choiceโwell, then youโre going to get fucked.
There is a subtle art to not giving a fuck. And though the concept may sound ridiculous and I may sound like an asshole, what Iโm talking about here is essentially learning how to focus and prioritize your thoughts effectivelyโhow to pick and choose what matters to you and what does not matter to you based on finely honed personal values. This is incredibly difficult. It takes a lifetime of practice and discipline to achieve. And you will regularly fail. But it is perhaps the most worthy struggle one can undertake in oneโs life. It is perhaps theย onlyย struggle in oneโs life.
Because when you give too many fucksโwhen you give a fuck about everyone and everythingโyou will feel that youโre perpetually entitled to be comfortable and happy at all times, that everything is supposed to be just exactly the fucking wayย youย want it to be. This is a sickness. And it will eat you alive. You will see every adversity as an injustice, every challenge as a failure, every inconvenience as a personal slight, every disagreement as a betrayal. You will be confined to your own petty, skull-sized hell, burning with entitlement and bluster, running circles around your very own personal Feedback Loop from Hell, in constant motion yet arriving nowhere.โ
The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuck
When most people envision giving no fucks whatsoever, they imagine a kind of serene indifference to everything, a calm that weathers all storms. They imagine and aspire to be a person who is shaken by nothing and caves in to no one.
Thereโs a name for a person who finds no emotion or meaning in anything: a psychopath. Why you would want to emulate a psychopath, I have no fucking clue.
So whatย doesย not giving a fuck mean? Letโs look at three โsubtletiesโ that should help clarify the matter.
Subtlety #1: Not giving a fuck does not mean being indifferent; it means being comfortable with being different.
Letโs be clear. Thereโs absolutely nothing admirable or confident about indifference. People who are indifferent are lame and scared. Theyโre couch potatoes and Internet trolls. In fact, indifferent people often attempt to be indifferent because in reality they give way too many fucks. They give a fuck about what everyone thinks of their hair, so they never bother washing or combing it. They give a fuck about what everyone thinks of their ideas, so they hide behind sarcasm and self-righteous snark. Theyโre afraid to let anyone get close to them, so they imagine themselves as some special, unique snowflake who has problems that nobody else would ever understand.
Indifferent people are afraid of the world and the repercussions of their own choices. Thatโs why they donโt make any meaningful choices. They hide in a gray, emotionless pit of their own making, self-absorbed and self- pitying, perpetually distracting themselves from this unfortunate thing demanding their time and energy called life.
Because hereโs a sneaky truth about life. Thereโs no such thing as not giving a fuck.ย You must give a fuck about something.ย Itโs part of our biology to always care about something and therefore to always give a fuck.
The question, then, is,ย Whatย do we give a fuck about? What are weย choosingย to give a fuck about? And how can we not give a fuck about what ultimately does not matter?
My mother was recently screwed out of a large chunk of money by a close friend of hers. Had I been indifferent, I would have shrugged my
shoulders, sipped my mocha, and downloaded another season ofย The Wire.
Sorry, Mom.
But instead, I was indignant. I was pissed off. I said, โNo, screw that, Mom. Weโre going to lawyer the fuck up and go after this asshole. Why? Because I donโt give a fuck. I will ruin this guyโs life if I have to.โ
This illustrates the first subtlety of not giving a fuck. When we say, โDamn, watch out, Mark Manson just donโt give a fuck,โ we donโt mean that Mark Manson doesnโt care aboutย anything;ย on the contrary, we mean that Mark Manson doesnโt care about adversity in the face of his goals, he doesnโt care about pissing some people off to do what he feels is right or important or noble. We mean that Mark Manson is the type of guy who would write about himself in third person just because he thought it was the right thing to do. He just doesnโt give a fuck.
This is what is so admirable. No, not me, dumbassโthe overcoming adversity stuff, the willingness to be different, an outcast, a pariah, all for the sake of oneโs own values. The willingness to stare failure in the face and shove your middle finger back at it. The people who donโt give a fuck about adversity or failure or embarrassing themselves or shitting the bed a few times. The people who just laugh and then do what they believe in anyway. Because they know itโs right. They know itโs more important than they are, more important than their own feelings and their own pride and their own ego. They say, โFuck it,โ not to everything in life, but rather to everythingย unimportantย in life. They reserve their fucks for what truly matters. Friends. Family. Purpose. Burritos. And an occasional lawsuit or two. And because of that, because they reserve their fucks for only the big things that matter, people give a fuck about them in return.
Because hereโs another sneaky little truth about life. You canโt be an important and life-changing presence for some people without also being a joke and an embarrassment to others. You just canโt. Because thereโs no such thing as a lack of adversity. It doesnโt exist. The old saying goes that no matter where you go, there you are. Well, the same is true for adversity and failure. No matter where you go, thereโs a five-hundred-pound load of shit waiting for you. And thatโs perfectly fine. The point isnโt to get away from the shit. The point is to find the shit you enjoy dealing with.
Subtlety #2: To not give a fuck about adversity, you must first give a fuck about something more important than adversity.
Imagine youโre at a grocery store, and you watch an elderly lady scream at the cashier, berating him for not accepting her thirty-cent coupon. Why does this lady give a fuck? Itโs just thirty cents.
Iโll tell you why: That lady probably doesnโt have anything better to do with her days than to sit at home cutting out coupons. Sheโs old and lonely. Her kids are dickheads and never visit. She hasnโt had sex in over thirty years. She canโt fart without extreme lower-back pain. Her pension is on its last legs, and sheโs probably going to die in a diaper thinking sheโs in Candy Land.
So she snips coupons. Thatโs all sheโs got. Itโs her and her damn coupons. Itโs all she can give a fuck about because thereย isย nothing else to give a fuck about. And so when that pimply-faced seventeen-year-old cashier refuses to accept one of them, when he defends his cash registerโs purity the way knights used to defend maidensโ virginity, you can bet Granny is going to erupt. Eighty years of fucks will rain down all at once, like a fiery hailstorm of โBack in my dayโ and โPeople used to show more respectโ stories.
The problem with people who hand out fucks like ice cream at a goddamn summer camp is that they donโt have anything more fuck-worthy to dedicate their fucks to.
If you find yourself consistently giving too many fucks about trivial shit that bothers youโyour ex-boyfriendโs new Facebook picture, how quickly the batteries die in the TV remote, missing out on yet another two-for-one sale on hand sanitizerโchances are you donโt have much going on in your life to give a legitimate fuck about. And thatโs your real problem. Not the hand sanitizer. Not the TV remote.
I once heard an artist say that when a person has no problems, the mind automatically finds a way to invent some. I think what most peopleโ especially educated, pampered middle-class white peopleโconsider โlife problemsโ are really just side effects of not having anything more important to worry about.
It then follows that finding something important and meaningful in your life is perhaps the most productive use of your time and energy. Because if
you donโt find that meaningful something, your fucks will be given to meaningless and frivolous causes.
Subtlety #3: Whether you realize it or not, you are always choosing what to give a fuck about.
People arenโt just born not giving a fuck. In fact, weโre born giving way too many fucks. Ever watch a kid cry his eyes out because his hat is the wrong shade of blue? Exactly. Fuck that kid.
When weโre young, everything is new and exciting, and everything seems to matter so much. Therefore, we give tons of fucks. We give a fuck about everything and everyoneโabout what people are saying about us, about whether that cute boy/girl called us back or not, about whether our socks match or not, or what color our birthday balloon is.
As we get older, with the benefit of experience (and having seen so much time slip by), we begin to notice that most of these sorts of things have little lasting impact on our lives. Those people whose opinions we cared about so much before are no longer present in our lives. Rejections that were painful in the moment have actually worked out for the best. We realize how little attention people pay to the superficial details about us, and we choose not to obsess so much over them.
Essentially, we become more selective about the fucks weโre willing to give. This is something called maturity. Itโs nice; you should try it sometime. Maturity is what happens when one learns to only give a fuck about whatโs truly fuckworthy. As Bunk Moreland said to his partner Detective McNulty inย The Wireย (which, fuck you, I still downloaded): โThatโs what you get for giving a fuck when it wasnโt your turn to give a fuck.โ
Then, as we grow older and enter middle age, something else begins to change. Our energy level drops. Our identity solidifies. We know who we are and we accept ourselves, including some of the parts we arenโt thrilled about.
And, in a strange way, this is liberating. We no longer need to give a fuck about everything. Life is just what it is. We accept it, warts and all. We realize that weโre never going to cure cancer or go to the moon or feel Jennifer Anistonโs tits. And thatโs okay. Life goes on. We now reserve our ever-dwindling fucks for the most truly fuck-worthy parts of our lives: our
families, our best friends, our golf swing. And, to our astonishment,ย this is enough. This simplification actually makes us really fucking happy on a consistent basis. And we start to think, Maybe that crazy alcoholic Bukowski was onto something.ย Donโt try.
So Mark, Mhat the Fuck Is the Point of This Bookย Anyway?ย This book will help you think a little bit more clearly about what youโre choosing to find important in life and what youโre choosing to find unimportant.โ
I believe that today weโre facing a psychological epidemic, one in which people no longer realize itโs okay for things to suck sometimes. I know that sounds intellectually lazy on the surface, but I promise you, itโs a life/death sort of issue.
Because when we believe that itโs not okay for things to suck sometimes, then we unconsciously start blaming ourselves. We start to feel as though something is inherently wrong with us, which drives us to all sorts of overcompensation, like buying forty pairs of shoes or downing Xanax with a vodka chaser on a Tuesday night or shooting up a school bus full of kids.
This belief that itโs not okay to be inadequate sometimes is the source of the growing Feedback Loop from Hell that is coming to dominate our culture.
The idea of not giving a fuck is a simple way of reorienting our expectations for life and choosing what is important and what is not. Developing this ability leads to something I like to think of as a kind of โpractical enlightenment.โ
No, not that airy-fairy, eternal bliss, end-of-all-suffering, bullshitty kind of enlightenment. On the contrary, I see practical enlightenment as becoming comfortable with the idea that some suffering is always inevitable
โthat no matter what you do, life is comprised of failures, loss, regrets, and even death. Because once you become comfortable with all the shit that life throws at you (and it will throw a lot of shit, trust me), you become invincible in a sort of low-level spiritual way. After all, the only way to overcome pain is to first learn how to bear it.
This book doesnโt give a fuck about alleviating your problems or your pain. And that is precisely why you will know itโs being honest. This book is not some guide to greatnessโit couldnโt be, because greatness is merely an illusion in our minds, a made-up destination that we obligate ourselves to pursue, our own psychological Atlantis.
Instead, this book will turn your pain into a tool, your trauma into power, and your problems into slightly better problems. That is real progress. Think of it as a guide to suffering and how to do it better, more meaningfully, with more compassion and more humility. Itโs a book about moving lightly despite your heavy burdens, resting easier with your greatest fears, laughing at your tears as you cry them.
This book will not teach you how to gain or achieve, but rather how to lose and let go. It will teach you to take inventory of your life and scrub out all but the most important items. It will teach you to close your eyes and trust that you can fall backwards and still be okay. It will teach you to give fewer fucks. It will teach you to not try.