Breaking Free from Self-Criticism 💡
In this Wednesday Reality Check, we explore why self-compassion is often harder than it sounds and how it can support emotional healing, resilience, and personal growth.
What makes consistency difficult here?
seen from Japan
seen from United States
seen from South Korea

seen from Australia

seen from New Zealand
seen from United States

seen from Argentina

seen from Denmark
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from Singapore
seen from France
seen from Germany
seen from Romania

seen from Japan
seen from China

seen from Russia

seen from Australia
seen from United States
Breaking Free from Self-Criticism 💡
In this Wednesday Reality Check, we explore why self-compassion is often harder than it sounds and how it can support emotional healing, resilience, and personal growth.
What makes consistency difficult here?
Forgetting Is a Function
✦A Dark Reflection: This text explores the dangers of false memory recovery, questions the ethics of practitioners, and offers a cynical perspective from within. It contains graphic metaphors and explores harmful intent. Read it as a work of psychological horror and ethical critique.✦
✦ ᚺ ᚢ ᚲ ᚺ ✦
You say forgetting is a function, not a failure. And you’re right.
Whoever wrote about “computer memory” has never lived through real trauma. Or if they did, their so-called “subconscious” did its job well and swallowed it whole.
Trying to “recover files” is like digging up a corpse without knowing what kind of rot you’ll find.
Sometimes it’s dust. Sometimes it’s gangrene.
And the client is the one left holding the gangrene.
Anyone who promises “perfect memory” is a charlatan with a manual.
Sometimes I wonder whether people actually want to help others, or if they just want to sell courses wrapped in sweet, comforting language.
And sometimes I wonder something darker: whether some of them are genuine villains, people who don’t want healed minds but broken ones.
A piece of advice from one villain to another: if you truly break the subject, you lose the toy.
In the end, it’s worth remembering that many speeches are performative. They sound good. They repeat well.
But sometimes I can’t help asking: do they ever think about what they’re writing— or are they just repeating it like a hypnotic mantra?
✦ᛉJuliusᛇ✦
Wednesday Reality Check: Honest Reflection
What truth felt hardest to sit with today?
Healing Doesn’t Mean Never Getting Triggered