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Why our generation doesn’t care about anything anymore

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Our

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generation does not care about anything

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anymore. We've grown exhausted to the

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point of almost learned helplessness.

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And so that's why we pretty much don't

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care. Nothing feels worth caring about

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anymore. It's not that we're lazy. It's

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just that we've been disillusioned

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because you're pretty much told from a

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young age if you work hard and you do

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honest work, you're going to have a good

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life. But reality is starting to kick in

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for a lot of us where it's like if you

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work hard often times you can barely

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stay afloat.

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When effort doesn't match the reward,

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motivation dies.

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And now you couple that with constant

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stimulation with, you know, your phone,

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you can just have social media, you can

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get dopamine hits from pretty much

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anything at your fingertips nowadays. It

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makes real life feel so dull.

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We're in this sort of hazy state as a

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whole gener as a whole generation,

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excuse me.

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And ultimately, nothing is fulfilling

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anymore. Everything feels temporary. So,

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jobs, relationships, trends,

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nothing lasts.

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Uh, people like to chase quick hits,

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right? They want they want the six-pack

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now. They want money, fast, fastest way

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to get rich. Um, they want attention

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clicks instead of actual meaning. The

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system tends to reward surface level

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success, not depth. If you can appear

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successful, that's the ultimate goal,

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not actually being successful. And so

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this takes a toll on the psyche of

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individuals. It

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when everything becomes a performance

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and when that performance is inherently

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unfulfilling,

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you're kind of left wondering what it

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what is there to life. And so you just

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you stop caring. You either turn into a

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niist or an absurdist. Either, you know,

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nothing makes sense and that sucks or

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nothing makes sense so who cares? But

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either way, nothing makes sense. It's

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like it doesn't it doesn't inher nothing

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inherently has meaning is what it feels

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like. If you do what you're told, if you

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go to school, if you put in honest,

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respectable work, you know, get an

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internship, put your name out there,

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network, get a job, there's a very

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there's like a 98% chance you're just

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not going to enjoy what you do. Like I I

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I'm going to be honest with you guys. I

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don't know I mean I don't know a lot of

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people in general, but I in I don't know

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anybody that actually truly enjoys what

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they do.

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There is a death of the American dream.

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The traditional formula is broken,

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right? Like there there's some statistic

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and I'm going to botch this, but it's

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like the um for the minimum wage to

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equate um the purchasing power um that

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they had in the I believe it was the

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'60s or the '7s, you'd have to be

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earning $77. And by the way, that was

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from this statistic is from like two

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years ago. So it's probably like in the

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80s, potentially 90s now. Um you but

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yeah, you'd have to earn $77 an hour for

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minimum wage to be able to afford a

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home. That's like, bro, and every time

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I'm I'm If you're watching this video,

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you're probably you're likely somewhere

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around my age. You know how it is. You

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talk to older people and it's just one

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like they're just like, "Oh, your

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generation's not working hard enough."

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or like you're all just distracted on

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your phones, you're doing this or that,

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you're lazy. They ain't they don't have

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a clue, bro. It would take like three

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humans to equate like nowadays to equate

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what it took just one of them back then,

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you know? And it's not like they're

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competing with AI. I'm I'm going against

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a machine that can operate a thousand

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times faster than me and significantly

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more efficiently and likely better than

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me, you know, right when I'm entering

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the job market. And a lot of people feel

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this way.

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Owning a home, raising a family,

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building some sort of stability, it

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feels out of reach. Back in the day, if

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you had a roommate, people were like,

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"You're gay." Nowadays, if you have one

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roommate, they're like, "Wow, I'm

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surprised you don't have more." Like

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that's where we're at.

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Older generations, a whole household

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could survive off of one income.

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Nowadays, that's not true.

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Nowadays, you need the wife and the kids

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to be working to afford anything,

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you know, and all of that is taxed. The

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government, you know, loves it.

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The dream didn't evolve, but the world

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evolved. And that's the problem.

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There is certainly consideration

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about whether or not the older

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generations have failed us. They built

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systems that worked for their time, but

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they never adapted them. They didn't

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care enough because it wasn't going to

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affect them personally. Advice like just

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work harder. It It's so out of touch,

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right? policies and economic decisions

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that have been created

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essentially are promoting a wealth gap,

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rising cost, fewer opportunities.

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Uh there is a growing disconnect between

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generations.

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One thinks we're entitled, the other

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thinks we're abandoned. It's it's just

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it's absurd. What we're go working

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towards is a two-faction system. You

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used to have the upper class, the middle

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working class, and the lower class. And

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now it's like 1% upper class and they

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own like 60% of the wealth and then it's

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just like

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2 to 3% middle class and even those

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people it's it's really just like the

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vast majority is the working class.

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You know like everybody's just just

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slaving away just to get by. You know,

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the economy is breaking people mentally.

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Constant financial stress.

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Um, it it pretty much just leads to a

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burnout before life even starts.

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People deny milestones like moving out,

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marriage, kids. There are reports coming

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out that are saying

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that

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um I think it's like in 40 years from

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now the average household will have

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three generations in it. So grandparents

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and their children and their children's

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children, right? That's going to be a

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household. And

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when you think about it, this is just it

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when all of this just negative

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um human experience

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or like this dull future in mind is so

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prevalent and it's so in your face,

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especially when you're working towards

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something, you start to yet you're like,

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I don't care about anything anymore, you

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know?

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I I can't win. It's like it's a it's a

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losing game is what it feels like. And

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so, yeah, we're we're sitting here and

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we're kind of pissed off as a as a

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generation because it's like when we

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raise our kids, our kids aren't even

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going to have the

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um

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neighborhood experience.

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They're not going to be able to like go

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out and trick-or-treat a neighborhood

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because everybody's going to be living

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in in an apartment complex probably in

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the freaking projects cuz nobody could

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afford, you know,

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survival mode has replaced ambition and

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with it we've destroyed the joys of

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life. And when you destroy the pleasures

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that God has, you know, gifted us, such

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as spending time with friends and

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family, um, such as, you know, being

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able to, you know, buy things that that

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make you feel good, um,

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you know, that are like fruitful to the

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soul. When you can't do these things

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anymore,

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you're left with nothing but despair,

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and you stop to care as as a sort of

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defense against the irrational nature of

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your reality.

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It's hard to care about a purpose when

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you're just trying to survive.

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