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Living the Absurd: How It Shapes My Life

An absurd experience in my life was being diagnosed with bipolar disorder. At first, I thought I was simply dealing with anxiety and insomnia, but the diagnosis came out of nowhere, completely unexpected. It felt random, almost surreal, and itโs had a profound impact on my life ever since.
In absurdist philosophy, something is absurd when it lacks inherent meaning. The world itself, in its chaos and randomness, isnโt rational and doesnโt provide any transcendent purpose. Yet, as human beings, weโre driven to seek that meaning, to impose some kind of order on our lives. In facing the absurd, we have a few possible responses: suicide, religious belief, seeking power (as portrayed in Albert Camusโ play Caligula), or accepting the absurd without trying to resolve it.
For me, I would choose religious belief, because it offers meaning to things we feel should have meaning. Even without hard proof, religion provides answers and a sense of order that comforts us in a world that otherwise might seem purposeless. It’s the closest solution to satisfying our deep need for meaning.
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Eternal Expressions
Hieroglyphics and statues were not mere artifactsโthey were Egyptโs testimony against time. From rigid depictions of divine order to individualized portraits of wisdom, these forms carried memory and spirit. On Poetic Bipolar Mind, I see writing as a similar practice: a modern hieroglyph, preserving lived experience against silence and forgetting.
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Bound by Time and Memory
Dave Whiteโs Forgotten Soul and Kiana Jimenezโs poem intertwine in a meditation on eternal love, memory, and entrapment. Chains, locks, and flickering candles mirror verses of clocks and longing, creating a haunting narrative of two damned souls bound together beyond timeโs reach, refusing to fade even as shadows close in.

