You know what's interesting about habits? They're not things you do. They're things that happen to you.
Sometimes I remember thinking that a certain lifestyle was just temporary. Transitional. I'd find something better, change, learn, grow. All those sentences people hear from people who never changed themselves. But I believed it. I believed change was a matter of will. That wanting was enough.
Then I noticed that the smallest habits are the most insidious. They're not the big ones—smoking, drinking, relationships that fall apart. Those you can see. You fight them, you're aware of them. No, the insidious ones are invisible. The way you talk to someone. The times you wake up. What you think about a person when you see them making money, speaking English, doing things differently.
A habit is a thing you stop noticing. That's its nature. While you're living it, it's not a habit—it's reality. It's your world.
So when you see someone climbing out of this world—which you see from your perspective as the only possibility—it's like they're denying existence itself. It's not just criticism of their lifestyle. It's an attack on yours. Because if they can be outside it, then you're just a coward and lazy.
But that's not what's happening.
What's happening is much more visceral. It's biological. It's your brain defending itself against something that would force you to reconsider decisions you've made for years. And reconsidering decisions you've made for years hurts. More precisely—it threatens.
Threatens what? Not just your comfort. That's the lie you tell yourself. It threatens your self-image. Your sense that you know what you're doing, why you're doing it, and that it's not just passivity. That it's a choice. A conscious choice.
Because if it wasn't a choice—if it was just a habit you created and then forgot it was a habit—then you're not free. You're just something that happened to itself.
That's the fear. It's not condemnation. It's fear so powerful it has to dress itself in words. It has to put on all those justifications—"that person is an idiot," "that's not normal," "that makes no sense"—so that for a moment the insane silent question disappears: Am I what I chose to be? Or am I just what happened to me?
You can endure almost anything. You can get used to almost anything. You can live in a comfort that isn't comfort—it's just a state where you no longer see your chains. And that's okay. The truth is, certain comforts—certain limitations accepted as necessity—give you a sense of safety. Stillness. Connection to something larger than yourself.
But when another person looks through this window and says "no"? When they take their chains and say "they're not mine"?
Then it's not about condemnation. It's about bonds that touch. Their movement is your question. Their freedom is your unfinished task. And that's too personal to ignore.
© DarkMirax