The Fiendish Tragedy Of An Imprisoned And Impre... -

Because the true horror is not that the spirit is imprisoned and impoverished. The true horror is that it could remain so, unseen and unchosen, when the door was unlocked all along. Author’s note: If you or someone you know is experiencing severe depression, isolation, or thoughts of self-harm, please reach out to a mental health professional or crisis hotline. No spirit is beyond help.

These literary examples show that the tragedy is not one event but a process — a grinding down of the soul until nothing but a fiendish residue remains. Modern psychology confirms what poets sensed. Two concepts are central: learned helplessness and scarcity mindset . Learned Helplessness Martin Seligman’s famous experiments with dogs showed that after repeated inescapable shocks, animals stop trying to escape even when the door is opened. They lie down and whimper. The Fiendish Tragedy Of An Imprisoned And Impre...

If you recognize some part of yourself in this article — a cage, a poverty of hope — then consider this your turning point. Name the prison. Seek one small wealth. Reach toward one voice. Because the true horror is not that the

But tragedies, even fiendish ones, have a turning point. In Greek drama, the peripeteia is the reversal of fortune. For the imprisoned spirit, that reversal begins with one tiny act of recognition — either from another or, hardest of all, from the self. No spirit is beyond help