"You spend your whole life pushing through, you forget there's supposed to be something on the other side. That's what I'd done. For forty years, I'd gotten up, gone to work, come home tired, and done it again."
"The thing about always pushing through is that it becomes who you are. You're the guy who handles things. The guy who doesn't need much. The guy who's fine. Except you're not fine. You're numb."
"I'd turned myself into a machine. A reliable, functional, joyless machine. I could wire a house, run a business, provide for my family. But feel actual happiness? That wasn't in my programming."
A man reflects on his life at sixty, realizing he cannot recall the last time he felt true joy. He acknowledges a pattern of pushing through life without experiencing genuine happiness, mirroring his father's stoic existence. Despite being a reliable provider, he recognizes that he has become numb to joy. His wife notices his emotional absence, prompting him to search his memories for moments of real joy, indicating a desire for change and a deeper connection to life.
Read at Silicon Canals
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