Why Depression Isn’t Real
“Depression isn’t real” — Andrew Tate.
The three words are provocative.
So much so, that Andrew’s tweet exclaiming the above once held the most amount of engagement he’s ever had for a post on Twitter.
It triggered a lot of people. Celebrities went nuts. Doctors went berserk. And depressed people suddenly became extremely upbeat and angry.
Why? Because people don’t want their consensus view to be threatened. They want their beliefs to be absolutely real and unchallenged because they’re the foundation from which they lead their lives.
They are not ready to be challenged because their ego cannot accept the possibility that they they might be wrong. They’re not prepared to realise that they’ve potentially been manipulated by the mainstream view. They’re not ready to see their old belief-identity crumble.
Where is depression?
Of course, you can feel depressed. But is ‘depression’ something that fundamentally exists?
If you’re talking about being consistently depressed then that’s a different phenomenon. People who are consistently happy don’t have ‘happy-sion’.
It’s ridiculous to even conceptualise such a thing.
But why is it not as ridiculous when we do the same for a consistent negative emotional state?
It’s because people within the network nexus surrounding an individual profit from believing that they have ‘depression’. It legitimises their situation. Pharmaceutical companies can come in with their ‘solution’. Depression dissolves accountability from the individual or the outside world — and instead, we get the pass to point the finger at the invisible ghost.
Legitimising depression is an evasion tactic that makes you believe that you have a psychological disease when what you have is simple: a consistent aversion to the bullshit around you and inside you.
You’re depressed because you have no meaningful hobbies; few meaningful friendships; eat low-quality food and because you consume hours of bullshit entrain-ment.
You’re depressed because you’re exposed to military-grade propaganda and mind-control daily and you don’t even know it. You’re depressed because nearly everything that surrounds you is purposefully engineered to profit from you at your expense.
You’re depressed because your life isn’t as good as you want it to be and you’re not taking enough action. But you can’t take enough action because you feel depressed due to the mind control or poison you’re exposed to. You’re in a catch-22 cycle that you can’t get out of because you haven’t yet identified what it is that’s making you depressed.
You haven’t yet seen the enemy.
Group Identity through belief
Biologically, we’re hard-wired to accept that aligning ourselves with the group consensus is more likely to increase our sense of safety/security/survival. So when millions of people believe something, and a few don’t — we see the minority as wrong by default because it subconsciously threatens our sense of survival.
Today, we have an evolutionary mismatch. While it was perhaps more sensible to believe in what a lot of the herd did thousands of years ago, today that’s no longer the case.
Now, following the herd will only lead to one thing: mediocrity. Mediocrity and debauchery are the average baseline of what’s pushed in our media. It’s what’s promoted in most of our modern movies; music; shows and advertisements.
And since we’re social creatures built to mimic those around us, it’s no wonder that many of us feel depressed consistently. We’re constantly exposed to things that we mimic which then brings us down. Although depression isn’t real; the factors that lead us to feel depressed on an ongoing basis are.
These factors are what need examining.
Telling the truth is now a revolutionary act
In a world filled with lies, you don’t have to say much that’s actually ‘provocative’ to be ‘provocative’.
You just have to say the truth.
A few examples:
- There are only two genders
- Alcohol is poison
- Depression isn’t real
Of course, anyone can argue the nuances behind any statement. But for anyone who’s perspicacious, they can put aside the nuances, and see the baseline truth behind a ‘provocative’ statement.