"Stress is caused by being ‘here’ but wanting to be ‘there’" that's how a German author defines stress.
I read this quote and write it down in that tab I open secretly at work to avoid being seen by my boss.
That tab, that lives like a refugee, like everything I like.
Buddha whispers to my ear, -Attachment is the root of suffering- with his funny accent -The richest man is not he who has the most, but he who needs the least.-
I call into question my arms race against myself. That cold war that started years ago and never ended.
Yahve sets a bush on fire on the park and talks to me. He talks about the promised land. The same land he once promised to Abraham, to Isaac, to Jacob, to Moises, to my grandparent, to my parents.
And I then remember, I am also a part of this exodus.
-the end justifies the means- I repeat this to myself, like a mantra, trying to convince myself as I see the parts of me being left in the path. The goal blends into the horizon like a mirage.
I see how other boys come closer. They are younger, and run faster, and better.
And I once was one of those boys, ready to run for days. Privileged. My parents ensure my path has less rocks and that my wall (that wall people who run long distances know) was lower and softer.
I see the corpses in the path of the persons who weren't even able to see the end.
My life is a constant wanting to reach those lands while I hate the desert under my feet.