And yet, fundamentally unlived.
Yeah. There's this version of us that is walking around and breathing, and like, anti-shower eating, and like, Rami's voice is scrolling through the room in the air, existing, you know, showing up, but you're not actually showing up to the life that was actually meant for you.
You're not living it free. You're not, you know, getting all the experiences. I know that you guys said this piece is about me.
Me not believing in love. It's actually me living my life the fullest. I know, I won't have to explain that concept, but one day we are going to dissect that concept.
And I feel like this title alone, actually pertains to you people who believe in love. I feel like it's a diagnosis, and I'm going to get to that part. Yeah.
And also like a thesis as well. And also like an accusation. Yeah.
Because I feel accused. Yeah. But I think the part that actually stood out to me was, let me get that part where you were talking about, not because the world is cruel, not because life is unkind, but because they have betrayed their own inner possibilities.
I was thinking, you know, we have this thing where even me, I do it where I feel like I'm not reaching my fullest potential, but then I do it with so much sentimentality and self-pity, and shift comforts where I'm just telling myself, you're not the problem here. But you wrote this piece, and you're not blaming the world. You're not blaming system.
You're not blaming circumstance or fate. But you turned the lens inward, and you said, the source of this particular thing is self-betrayal.
You talked about inner possibilities, you know, your potential, and your talent, and your intelligence, and you know, it's really, I think that framing for me, it's really remarkable, because I don't want to personally be the one who is creating this thing where I'm carrying the weight of, I'm making other people carry the weight of my own shortcomings here.