Emil Cioran - The Trouble With Being Born BOOK REVIEW

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 5 янв 2025

Комментарии • 176

  • @mr.knownothing33
    @mr.knownothing33 Год назад +222

    A suicidal misanthrope insomniac nihilist philosopher that lived to be 84-this is very inspiring and motivational 😁

    • @thembamabona9809
      @thembamabona9809 Год назад +7

      yeah, he penned water and lived wine, delicious water! Heights of Despair too is superb 🎉

    • @lepetitchat123
      @lepetitchat123 Год назад

      Poor guy who had to endure misery for so long :(

    • @kevin4680
      @kevin4680 Год назад

      @@lepetitchat123 Right? If I make it to 69 that'll be my limit

    • @incorectulpolitic
      @incorectulpolitic 9 месяцев назад +9

      In another words a non-coward realist living in reality, not a coward NPC busy running away/denying reality 24/7.

    • @mariaradulovic3203
      @mariaradulovic3203 9 месяцев назад +10

      Yes, all humans have something called preservation instinct, otherwise, 50% of us would leave this shit show a long time ago.

  • @NoSoulNoToll
    @NoSoulNoToll Год назад +178

    If Noah had seen into the future, he would have sunk his ship - E.M.Cioran

    • @brendabeamerford4555
      @brendabeamerford4555 Год назад

      Rebel Rebel Rebel..
      No one can think for another no one can forgive for another no one can learn for another..
      We are all created unique complete individual Immaculate conceptions from first light learning the infinite Powerhouse of our mind 369 bodyin spirit..
      Conscious atonement power 3 sets all captives free from all the chains that bind us.
      Luciferian knowledge of what is love what is light what is third eye sight says I am light Never Dies death is our illusion through the terrible twos of childhood in Mercy Mercy Me and our promise rest is real o Israel as we see third eye vision power 3 sets all captives free from all the chains that bind us
      MeTAtron's MAtriX3x3 OM'E...
      "The All is Mind; the Universe is Mental." "As above, so below; as below, so above.”
      "Nothing rests; everything moves; everything vibrates."
      Everything is ALLMIND369 OVEONE IAM=O=QuantuM⚖️ ALLMIND IN 3in1MINDS Body Spirit OVE
      light*3÷7 color*3÷7 sound*3÷7.. infinite all mind in Trinity every thought has an opposite charge of itself.
      ♂️+01=0=-01♀️
      Riding the waves through our moments in equilibrium is A NEW beginning in masteRING3X369 of our OWN each individual unique complete Immaculate conceived MIND
      1IN3💚3IN1 of
      IAM 1LOVES
      Light3
      3 above our heArt
      3 below
      7 sums
      7SUMS CREATION ALLMIND frequency vibration in THOUGHTS charge
      MC² in
      WAVES OVE
      3SOUNDs7
      1Frequency. ...
      Amplitude. ...
      2Timbre. ...
      Envelope. ...
      ***3Velocity. ...
      Wavelength. ...
      Phase =SUM.7
      3
      Lights7:
      1 radio waves,÷
      microwaves,
      2infrared (IR)÷
      visible light,
      ***3ultraviolet ÷
      X-rays
      Sum Gamma rays SUM7x
      6
      COLORs 7
      1 Red÷
      Orange
      2Yellow÷
      Green
      ***3. Blue÷
      Indigo
      SUM Violet
      SUM7
      9
      In seven colors seven notes seven lights in infinite divisions ALL TOGETHER
      Creating all living systems,
      Creating All living bodies,
      Creating all gravity,
      Creating all matter.. IN
      ElectroMAGnetic geometrical symmetrical fractal order
      HerMEs TrisMAjistus
      THOTH
      TimesFaceInEnergy
      Thoth me
      Light Never Dies death is our illusion through the terrible twos of childhood in Mercy Mercy Me and our promise rest is real..
      Prisoners law in three power three sets all captives free 3Consciousness says
      I see you Mirror Mirror I see me wisdoms wisdom's wisdoms unconditional love and forgiveness is key ⚖️ EnKi 🗝

    • @incorectulpolitic
      @incorectulpolitic 9 месяцев назад +1

      but noah did see the future, he was trying to survive the future that was overflown with water

    • @NoSoulNoToll
      @NoSoulNoToll 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@incorectulpolitic he was merely told about the flood. Nobody told him about the details.

    • @Aimlesswanderer27
      @Aimlesswanderer27 8 месяцев назад +2

      That made me laugh out loud

    • @johndelreyb.jansinal8104
      @johndelreyb.jansinal8104 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@Aimlesswanderer27yes!

  • @heeseunglee6605
    @heeseunglee6605 Год назад +98

    I was shocked how simple and easy to read Emil’s book is. It really changed my pov of how simple and fun philosophy can be.

  • @zenape619
    @zenape619 Год назад +38

    Cioran always cheers me up.

  • @thadtuiol1717
    @thadtuiol1717 8 месяцев назад +12

    I once got really nervous before a big presentation at work for an audience of 100+ people, I was even throwing up in the bathroom just 10 minutes before it was due to start...then I remembered Cioran, and I no longer gave a shit cuz none of this shit matters. Breezed it. Thanks Emil!

  • @martindoroty7157
    @martindoroty7157 Год назад +62

    A romanian fan here! Back then there was a famous trio of romanian intelectuals, Cioran, Eliade and Eugen Ionesco. They all lived in Paris, at least for a while and the bar where they were meeting still exists there.
    I would like to hear your review on Ionesco’s plays. He was one of the foremost figures of the French avant-garde theatre in the 20th century.

    • @jcmea13
      @jcmea13 Год назад +1

      What bar did they meet at?

    • @martindoroty7157
      @martindoroty7157 Год назад +7

      Cafe de Flore, 172 Boulevard Saint-Germain

  • @IndolenceIncK
    @IndolenceIncK Год назад +11

    My absolute favorite philosopher who I learned about from your channel. I have everything I can find by him translated into English--he speaks to me like no other writer or philosopher--books I could have written if I'd had the words...

  • @ケイコ-d7w
    @ケイコ-d7w Год назад +10

    I had been subscribed for a while, and it's such a pleasant surprise to see a review of Cioran's, a Romanian author, work on your channel. Thank you for your work!

  • @SamL12345
    @SamL12345 Год назад +7

    I've had this sitting on my shelf for about a year, this review has inspired me to finally begin. Thank you Mr Sargeant.

  • @musa5950
    @musa5950 Год назад +25

    Interesting. In the “Hagakure - The Book of the Samurai“, Yamamoto Tsunetomo also describes how having the mindset of being already dead allows fearlessness and acceptance of death, whenever it comes.

    • @thembamabona9809
      @thembamabona9809 Год назад +1

      ….words only ….when it comes it sucks ….and then one is gone

    • @thadtuiol1717
      @thadtuiol1717 8 месяцев назад

      @@thembamabona9809 Forever

    • @Iyalo-cw7eb
      @Iyalo-cw7eb 6 дней назад

      unfortunately that book was written way after the age of Samurai, and most of the warrior families started making bs up

  • @MyFakeIronTrees
    @MyFakeIronTrees Год назад +6

    5:50 - Nietzsche said something similar in Beyond Good and Evil (aphorism 157): ‘The thought of ____ is a great consolation: by means of it one gets through many a dark night.'

  • @adagietto2523
    @adagietto2523 6 месяцев назад +2

    Reading authors like Cioran cheers me up no end, makes me realize how happy I have reason to be.

  • @Formandformlessness
    @Formandformlessness Год назад +1

    When I’m for a new book channel and the first review I see is Ciroan, that’s an instant subscription. Excellent video! Can’t wait to explore the rest of the channel.

  • @arafatsafin650
    @arafatsafin650 Год назад +5

    This is one of those reviews that comes right from the heart. Keep up the good work.

    • @pendule_de_foucault8967
      @pendule_de_foucault8967 Год назад

      Hey man. We used to talk in G.Cs streams , it makes sense i'd find you here. How is your life , everything good ?

    • @arafatsafin650
      @arafatsafin650 Год назад

      @@pendule_de_foucault8967 Hey, what's up? A lot happened to me. But now I am doing better. How is it going with you?

  • @unboxed609
    @unboxed609 Год назад +5

    This book has been on my to be read list like forever. Now seems the best time. Thanks as always

  • @glizzymcguire7
    @glizzymcguire7 Год назад +7

    Wow what a fantastic reivew. Definitely did this one justice, as always. Thanks for sharing!

  • @marvin_pumpt
    @marvin_pumpt Год назад +2

    Another sweet review Cliff! Thank you for being you and doing these!

  • @bertiemarshall3391
    @bertiemarshall3391 Год назад +5

    I think it’s always valuable to re read your favourite books every decade of your life….read Nabokov in my 20s not much gleamed then reading again now in my 60s👍👍👍👍

  • @RasmusKarlJensen
    @RasmusKarlJensen Год назад +13

    Love having a literary diet of Cioran, Houellebecq, and Ligotti.

  • @aray4031
    @aray4031 Год назад +5

    Hunter Thompson also said something very similar (re: the consolation of self-deletion as a means to live.)

  • @TH3F4LC0Nx
    @TH3F4LC0Nx Год назад +44

    Cioran is great if you're into pessimism and antinatalism, (which I am), although I'm not sure how great a philosopher he actually was. So much of his work just seemed to be his thoughts jotted down and scattered ruminations, without the same foundation of logic that underlies most philosophy. Still, he was a unique voice, and a lot of what he was about really resonates with me. Great review. :)

    • @elbrown9242
      @elbrown9242 Год назад +24

      I think he'd be really pleased to read this comment, given his views on the value of philosophy and the futility of systematic and organised thought. He's more of an anti philosopher really. Relevant aphorism might actually be in this book.

    • @JohnChant0045
      @JohnChant0045 Год назад +11

      Cioran never wrote because he wanted to disseminate a message, he wrote purely for himself

    • @joshuajackson530
      @joshuajackson530 Год назад +2

      I would say that "On The Heights of Despair" and "A Short History of Decay" are more in line with the idea of "typical" philosophical essays. Imo in those works his understanding of philosophy is really good and his expressions of his ideas are excellent as well. He's more of a philosopher in the sense that Pascal and Nietzsche were then say Kant or Hume.

    • @tangerinesarebetterthanora7060
      @tangerinesarebetterthanora7060 Год назад +6

      ​@@elbrown9242antiphilosophy is the best type of philosophy because these philosophers don't pretend like they don't have biases, individual preferences, and an innately unique perspective that could never come to an objective principle.

    • @incorectulpolitic
      @incorectulpolitic 9 месяцев назад +5

      pessimism and antinatalsim .. in other words being into reality

  • @AnticitizenOneC17
    @AnticitizenOneC17 Год назад +3

    I believe the quote you were searching for is actually in "The Trouble with Being Born" at the top of page 77 in your edition:
    "We dread the future only when we are not sure we can kill ourselves when we want to."
    Huge fan of Cioran and I just found your channel today (thank you algorithm 🥳). Your tastes and mine seem to overlap significantly so I look forward to more of your recommendations!

  • @marclowther3823
    @marclowther3823 Год назад +2

    Great review. Love Cioran's work. Got 10 of his books that are in English translation that are all wonderful reads. He has a 1000 page book of notebooks that I would love to see translated into a new English version but have only seen it in French.

  • @kyleforde8424
    @kyleforde8424 Год назад

    I was considering reading it a couple years back. I'm not very active in following the channel but that video you mentioned was what got me here. Don't regret the read after watching.

  • @elbrown9242
    @elbrown9242 Год назад +7

    It's a wonderful book, very much concur on the surprisingly relaxing nature of much of Cioran's writing. It is just a relief to see these things on the page sometimes. Eugene Thacker is worth reading in this vein, although he is much more aphoristic in Cosmic Pessimism (if you can find it) and Infinite Resignation, which is something of an extension to the former.

  • @prabhupati
    @prabhupati Год назад +1

    05:50
    This quote from roberto bolano is from the book 2666.

  • @mathewtoll6780
    @mathewtoll6780 Год назад +4

    I think Nietzsche wrote something similar about how thoughts of suicide are a great consolation. And they can get you through a long night. I think it is in Beyond Good and Evil but I might be wrong about that

  • @Capthowdy098
    @Capthowdy098 10 месяцев назад

    Your intro already sold me on this book 😂.

  • @Therealistrantman
    @Therealistrantman 17 дней назад

    As a pessimist myself i became a antinatalist a year ago and recently got into philosophy especially antinatalism so looking at cioran,schopenhuer,mainlander as a few others and recently bought the book your doing a review on in thia video and enjoying the book so far im not the biggest fan of poetics but im enjoying some of the quotes in this book so far and he is a unique one for sure

  • @MrUndersolo
    @MrUndersolo Год назад +2

    I think he may be one of the greatest humourists I have ever read! And I want more!

  • @RasmusKarlJensen
    @RasmusKarlJensen Год назад +6

    Oh by the way, have you read “Better Never to Have Been” by David Benatar?

  • @higorbrunieri9199
    @higorbrunieri9199 Год назад +5

    Loved that you mentioned Lydia Lunch, for I too discovered Cioran through that same interview! Also highly recomended by her, I always wondered if you read 'The demon flower' by Jo Imog? (as a fan of Bataille, that might be your cup of tea). It would be lovely to have a review of yours on that masterpiece.

  • @kevinkrochak2546
    @kevinkrochak2546 Год назад +1

    Hey! Sorry it took me so long to find your channel. Been a fan of Cioran's dark humor for years and enjoyed your review. You do a great job. Liked and subbed!

  • @banjogyro
    @banjogyro 9 месяцев назад

    5:50 This idea is very prominent in Herman Hesse's novel Steppenwolf, I found that interesting as fan of both Cioran and Hesse

  • @danmartinazzi
    @danmartinazzi 7 месяцев назад

    Totally agree with you! Cioran is one of my hero!

  • @reaganwiles_art
    @reaganwiles_art Год назад +2

    Thank you. Perfect timing.

  • @brightmooninthenight2111
    @brightmooninthenight2111 Год назад +5

    I know Cioran through the Temptations to Exist, resonated deeply with his struggle between the wordless and unsymbolic present moment and the allure of the mind and its endless labyrinth of thought and signs and the illusory nature and emptiness of these words and signs.
    I felt he was needlessly negative but as Cliff says it is often funny, in a dry absurd way, uncalculated, like channelling the raving and flailing of a preposterous man into a highly articulated philosophy.
    I think nevertheless that the nihilism of the material challenges the reader to think for themselves and confront what lurks beneath the mask of positivity to what is sincere or not,
    An exercise in empathy and as well a relief
    Because sometimes optimism becomes exhausting. There can be no empathy in it, even further there can be judgement in optimism, a dismissal of authenticity.
    Optimism is good and is needed. But balance. Cioran balances it out.
    Ultimately his writing proves that philosophy does not contain the answers. How do we become more loving despite ourselves?

  • @Melnokina.-.
    @Melnokina.-. 9 месяцев назад

    I love Emil, he helped me get through my darkest times

  • @MrGrimlocke
    @MrGrimlocke Год назад +3

    After watching this review, I immediately downloaded the book on my Kindle. This sounds like it'll be a good read

  • @jcmea13
    @jcmea13 Год назад +6

    I’m currently reading Threshold because you reviewed it on this channel and in that book he mentions The Trouble with Being Born so this review couldn’t have come at a better time! Thanks as always for your great recommendations

  • @joejs7659
    @joejs7659 Год назад +2

    Great review.

  • @trashlyfe69420
    @trashlyfe69420 11 месяцев назад +2

    I brought a copy of this on my last camping trip out in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area and my friend yelled at me…
    …the other book I brought for the 7 day trip was Technological Slavery 😏

  • @taddybear4244
    @taddybear4244 Год назад +4

    I fucking love Cioran's work. Excellent and interesting writer.

  • @netram2000
    @netram2000 Год назад

    There's a 2022 novel called "Emil" by German-Afghan writer Mariam Kühsel-Hussaini which is a fictional story on Cioran's time in Berlin. Not sure if an English edition has been published yet.

  • @randallowen9350
    @randallowen9350 Год назад +2

    Brilliant Clifford. Just read a book from I think 2009 I missed at the time. Would you like to be in the mind of a monster? This book left me stunned. It is The Kindly Ones by Jonathan Littell. Extraordinary!

  • @michaelshannon9169
    @michaelshannon9169 Год назад +16

    Reading Cioran is a sacrifice - what you gain in truth you lose in life. You come out wiser but still somehow worse off.

    • @arze868
      @arze868 Год назад +7

      Those who want to know the truth must pay a big price to get there.

    • @Petros_Michalakopoulos
      @Petros_Michalakopoulos Год назад +2

      Try to understand Nietzsche to gain your life back

  • @Ianjames1066
    @Ianjames1066 5 месяцев назад +1

    I image Rustin Cohle from True Detective reading Cioran on the job!

  • @donaldmcronald8989
    @donaldmcronald8989 10 месяцев назад +1

    His book 'A Fall Into Time' is a goddamn masterpiece.

  • @ashleylamont7687
    @ashleylamont7687 Год назад +2

    Me thinks your channel is better than food...

  • @preethivlogs7
    @preethivlogs7 4 месяца назад

    awesome review!

  • @sunsetguy37
    @sunsetguy37 Год назад

    Happy to find your channel. I am a fan of Cioran's power of suicide living, and I am inspired with more fuel to step closer to the edge. Maybe I heard some of his work in my early years, because I quietly hid my thoughts that man was a virus that was devouring earth. Fernando Paseo to Emil Cioran- time to stop cheerleading my dismal excuses for banal living. I only feel alive when I am challenged to un-think what I accepted as my thought, waking up to suffer the evaporated facade of culture that I mistook for my own. MTC with Meta/W

  • @thomaskember4628
    @thomaskember4628 Год назад +5

    I think Shakespeare summed it up more briefly with MacBeth's speech beginning "Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow " and ending with "It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury signifying nothing "

  • @tenguyubs1919
    @tenguyubs1919 Год назад +2

    I keep this book on my nightstand, underneath a copy of "Mathematics for economists" and on top of "Inferno".

  • @Birmanncat
    @Birmanncat Год назад +2

    If (if, yeah!) you are suffering, read Cioran, he is a great soul to commiserate with.

  • @Ambermarie13
    @Ambermarie13 Год назад +4

    This book is my Bible. It means so much to me

    • @thadtuiol1717
      @thadtuiol1717 8 месяцев назад +2

      The actual Bible should be your Bible.

    • @ruaheloah
      @ruaheloah 29 дней назад

      "A Short History of Decay" does it for me - my favorite of Cioran's books, but I'd say that "On the Heights of Despair" is closest to what I would call a Bible. This one has everything.

  • @JohnChant0045
    @JohnChant0045 Год назад +2

    I can highly recommend the 'philosophize this!' podcast about Cioran and his relationship to failiure.

  • @MagnumInnominandum
    @MagnumInnominandum Год назад

    I had never hoped to know the source of my pain and ennui. Happily learning this i am extremely disappointed, for which i am grateful.

  • @TribuneAquila
    @TribuneAquila 11 месяцев назад +1

    "Were it not for the idea of suicide, I would have surely killed myself."

  • @kekobahama224
    @kekobahama224 Год назад +4

    The pattern in cliffs life is that he gets most of his favorite book recommendations from Lidia lunch interviews 🤣

  • @marqpsmythe228
    @marqpsmythe228 Год назад +3

    “I live only because it is in my power to die when I choose to: without the idea of suicide, I’d have killed myself right away.”
    All Gall Is Divided

  • @and_such
    @and_such Год назад +2

    I love cioran and this review
    could you do some music recommendations or post some link to your playlist?

  • @PatchyTheFox
    @PatchyTheFox Год назад +1

    What tier of your Patreon is it that gets you access to the Discord channel?

  • @randomotaku5500
    @randomotaku5500 Год назад +1

    Hey man I read story of the eye a year ago and you were about the only person talking about it so I kinda found your videos and ignored it. Now im currious if you still have that love for george battalie. Also are you willing to reveiw Tomb for 500,000 soldiers and Eden, Eden, Eden?

  • @playermartin286
    @playermartin286 Год назад +9

    This book’s certainly on Rustin Cohle’s reading list

    • @nycrsny3406
      @nycrsny3406 Год назад

      Lol 100%

    • @milkbottle4u
      @milkbottle4u Год назад

      At some point Rust says something like “I was relieved of the sin of being a father,” which is similar to Cioran’s words in The Trouble with Being Born: “to have committed every crime but that of being a father”, so I think Rust would find a lot of agreeable stuff in there 😅

    • @ПавелДёмин-щ9ц
      @ПавелДёмин-щ9ц Год назад +1

      Ник Пиццилато составлял сценарий настоящего детектива и сказал что Чоран его любимый писатель

  • @noheroespublishing1907
    @noheroespublishing1907 5 месяцев назад

    Considering that the first volume of Philipp Mainlander's "The Philosophy of Redemption" has finally been translated into English for the first time; Coran went out of his way to read and find people who knew him before his suicide.

  • @christopherviggiano9367
    @christopherviggiano9367 Год назад +2

    15:04
    “Oh yea” 😂

  • @nicdelmundo5687
    @nicdelmundo5687 Год назад +1

    great video

  • @robinblack9
    @robinblack9 Год назад +1

    I hope one day you review The Gray House by Mariam Petrosyan. It’s amazing.

  • @madworld1962
    @madworld1962 9 месяцев назад +1

    It would have been more accurate to translate the title as, "The Inconvenience of Being Born". I don't know what was gained by substituting "trouble" instead. Title in French is, De L'Incovenient D'etre Ne (sorry, I don't know how to put the accents).

  • @mkraulis
    @mkraulis Год назад

    Not sure if you've done a review of any Churchland books, but if you haven't delved into eliminative materialism, I would be interested in your take.

  • @CarlosHigg
    @CarlosHigg Год назад

    Either this or world as will must be my favourite book of all time

  • @wheresmyeyebrow1608
    @wheresmyeyebrow1608 Год назад +1

    12:16 IT MOVED!!!

  • @rahulbaidh
    @rahulbaidh Год назад

    Does anyone have a copy of Cioran's Notebooks translated by Richard Howard for Arcade Publishing?

  • @bn8418
    @bn8418 Год назад

    Like the white shelves better. Great content.

  • @markantrobus8782
    @markantrobus8782 8 месяцев назад

    Cioran was a worker. He contributed enormously.

  • @mariaradulovic3203
    @mariaradulovic3203 Год назад +1

    Thank u for pronouncing his name correctly.

  • @sangyedorje
    @sangyedorje Год назад

    An awesome and funny review of an incredibly good book. Just finished Ligotti's conspiracy against the human race and Cioran is definitely an OG pessimist.

  • @moesypittounikos
    @moesypittounikos Год назад

    The funniest bit in Trouble is when he writes about stopping thoughts. He says something like what an idiot is always in the natural state (no thoughts) but the rest of us fall in fits and starts and its not possible to stop thoughts when you're an intellectual! I must order the book again to check if my memory is write!

  • @kalki0273
    @kalki0273 Год назад +1

    Optimists are the ones that depress me.

  • @iqiwq
    @iqiwq Год назад

    Would be awesome if you do a review on "The Journal of a Disappointed Man" (by W.N.P. Barbellion). A gem, too!

  • @Skyjacker_
    @Skyjacker_ Год назад

    Hunter S. Thompson also told Ralph Steadman that, "I would feel real trapped in this life if I didn't know I could commit suicide at any time".

  • @TribuneAquila
    @TribuneAquila 11 месяцев назад

    In fact, of everyone in the Criterion group (which included Cioran) that advocated for facism, he was the only one who lamented his association in his youth.

  • @hikikomori-verlag
    @hikikomori-verlag Год назад

    Haha the Elon Musk vizualication 😅 and yes! You are absolutely right Cioran is funny to read. Even in his interview he showed a lot of humor. Thanks for the review! And yes its great to re-read a good book after a period of time.

  • @_blue_vision_
    @_blue_vision_ Год назад +1

    I need to read this and the man's other work. Pessimist literature is, despite being up my alley, often hard to actually read because of how devastating it can be, Thomas Ligotti being my favorite example. It'd be nice to read a pessimist author with a sense of humor for once lol.

  • @philipmcgee6869
    @philipmcgee6869 Год назад +1

    Better than Food reviews Cioran - the planets have aligned....

  • @johnscott7195
    @johnscott7195 17 дней назад

    When I lived in Vermont I was reading "The Trouble with Being Born" at my kitchen table.the door was open and a bat flew in..I thought..well he said he'd prefer to be any other being than man..I thought maybe he became a bat..after all he was from Transylvania..

  • @Theolddaysaregone
    @Theolddaysaregone Год назад +2

    The last aphorism you read is also one of my favorites! "... I endure myself. " This is so hilariously funny when you think about all that 'Learn to self-love' crap that is around in the self-help community. The truth is you will never be able to love yourself, you won't even be able to accept yourself, no my friend, you will endure yourself until your very last breath. And admitting this will paradoxically make things much easier, because you won't have to worry about all the negative thoughts about yourself. You won't have to struggle to win the impossible battle of loving yourself. You will just accept that you are going to hate yourself until death and then keep going with your day xD

    • @amorfati4096
      @amorfati4096 Год назад

      Only one thing matters learning to be the looser!. and majority of cliques will told you though out life that there is a success after every failure, l😅

  • @mattmackane
    @mattmackane Год назад

    “Once upon a time, in some out of the way corner of that universe which is dispersed into numberless twinkling solar systems, there was a star upon which clever beasts invented knowing. That was the most arrogant and mendacious minute of "world history," but nevertheless, it was only a minute. After nature had drawn a few breaths, the star cooled and congealed, and the clever beasts had to die. One might invent such a fable, and yet he still would not have adequately illustrated how miserable, how shadowy and transient, how aimless and arbitrary the human intellect looks within nature. There were eternities during which it did not exist. And when it is all over with the human intellect, nothing will have happened.” - Nietzsche

  • @rociomiranda5684
    @rociomiranda5684 Год назад +1

    I'm 60. It's true.

  • @Vibe_Enjoyer
    @Vibe_Enjoyer Год назад

    everything matters, because nothing matters.

  • @Rapterr15
    @Rapterr15 Год назад +2

    Fans of Thomas Bernhard should also enjoy Cioran

  • @Snafuski
    @Snafuski Год назад

    In a strange dialiectic, Cioran gives hope, even though there is none...
    He did say If you are considering suicide, it's already too late... (That is an approximate quote)...
    "Our only choice is between unbearable truths and wholesome cheating."

  • @raleighsmalls4653
    @raleighsmalls4653 Год назад

    I think this is the first time I've seen him almost truly laugh....

  • @intravenousradio
    @intravenousradio Год назад +1

    i'm trying to identify as many books on clifford's bookshelf as I can. right now I can identify under the volcano and savage detectives and borge's collected fiction

  • @khadeeja90s
    @khadeeja90s Год назад

    why did you delete your review on lolita !!!!! please get it back!

  • @bart-v
    @bart-v Год назад

    If you can you should read it in French. Cioran deliberately used a 19th century French, which sounds a little artificial, but it matches his idea of not writing in his mother tongue perfectly.

  • @antherthalmhersser7239
    @antherthalmhersser7239 Год назад +1

    Are there any antinatalists who didn't start off as literate melancholics?

  • @RuthTirusew
    @RuthTirusew 10 месяцев назад

    The interview "Cioran on Suicide": ruclips.net/video/eF3B28hGVAk/видео.html

  • @Amir-mk8tx
    @Amir-mk8tx Год назад

    Cheers

  • @brianw.5230
    @brianw.5230 Год назад

    I can't beliece Cioran and other pessimists didn't fear Hell.
    I do!