Submitted by whocaresfuckthisshit t3_yhv94v in books
This will sound stupid I’m sure but I wonder if anyone else has the same problem.
I love fantasy/fiction. I’ve read Harry Potter and LOTR many times. They hold a dear place in my heart.
However, as I get older, the fact that they’re made up stories is bothering me more and more. They are actually incredible stories but they’re not real. So the impact they’re having on me is lessening with time.
I try to say things to myself like, “they come alive in your brain,” or, “they make you feel emotions and that’s good enough.”
But still I can’t shake the feeling that none of this stuff has happened so it’s meaningless.
Anyone want to chime in on how they feel about this?
Petal_Chatoyance t1_iug08cy wrote
You are losing the most precious function of the brain - the ability to Suspend Disbelief.
Suspending Disbelief is the very capacity that makes it possible to enjoy any story, movie, radio play, song, legend, myth, tale, or even joke. Within that ability is all humor, song, poetry, play and joy. It means going gray and dull and dead inside, because you are taking life too seriously.
And that is dysfunctional, because life is essentially absurd. You exist in a meaningless cosmos within which nothing you ever do will truly matter, and you will die and be forgotten within three generations. What was your great-great grandmother's favorite color? Did she like sweet or savory? What was her favorite dream? That will be you - forgotten.
Get silly. It is your only hope. If life is so serious that you cannot enjoy fiction, your soul dies. Souls themselves are fiction. Keep what is left of your childlike wonder, because once that is lost, it is very, very hard to get back.
Be amazed at little things. Give up the notion that anything is truly meaningful. Embrace the absurdity and acknowledge it - and you may yet save yourself, and the fun of life and stories.
Play like a child, purposefully. As therapy.