The Wisdom of Letting Go
The Wisdom of Letting Go
I once said that I'd rather be dead than 40. I meant it, and I still do. Not because I had some romantic idea about dying young, but because I saw what age does to people. It makes them complacent, calculating, and afraid. Wisdom, as it's usually sold, is just a collection of compromises dressed up as truths. It's the quiet surrender of ideals in exchange for comfort. That's not wisdom — that's cowardice.
## The Myth of Growing Up
People talk about growing up like it's some kind of achievement. Like adulthood is a prize you earn by surviving long enough. But what does it mean to grow up? It means learning to tolerate the same boring job, the same tired conversations, the same hollow rituals. I don't want to grow up. I want to stay curious, angry, and alive. I want to keep asking questions that make people uncomfortable. Wisdom isn't about having the answers — it's about refusing to stop questioning.
I used to hate the way adults smiled at kids, like they knew something the kids didn't. But they didn't know more — they just forgot more. They forgot what it felt like to feel everything. They forgot how to scream. How to cry in public. How to care. So when someone tells me to act my age, I want to punch them in the face. Because growing up shouldn't mean selling out your soul. It should mean learning how to hold on tighter.
## The Danger of Success
Success is a trap. People think it's the goal, but it's really just another cage. When you're successful, everyone wants a piece of you. They want you to be the same version of yourself every day. They want you to repeat yourself, to give them the same rush again and again. But art isn't about repetition — it's about destruction. About tearing down the walls and building something new, even if it scares people.
I didn't want to be famous. I wanted to be free. And when fame came, it felt like a death sentence. Because once you're famous, you belong to other people. You stop being your own person. You become a symbol, a product, a punchline. That's not wisdom — that's surrender. Wisdom would have been knowing when to walk away, before the whole world decided who I was supposed to be.
## The Truth in Pain
People are afraid of pain. They medicate it, ignore it, pretend it doesn't exist. But pain is the only real teacher. It cuts through the noise. It strips you down to the bone. And in that raw, exposed place, you find truth. Not the kind of truth you can put on a bumper sticker, but the kind that shakes you. That changes you.
I've been called a whiner, a martyr, a fraud. But what they don't understand is that I never tried to be anything but honest. Even when it hurt. Especially when it hurt. Because the alternative — pretending everything's fine when it's not — that's the real tragedy. Wisdom isn't about being happy. It's about being awake. And sometimes, being awake means seeing the cracks in the world. But those cracks are where the light gets in.
## The Freedom in Letting Go
People think letting go is defeat. But sometimes, it's the only way to win. To walk away from the game entirely. To stop playing by rules that were never yours to begin with. I let go, and I don't regret it. I chose freedom over fame, truth over comfort, and silence over lies.
You don't have to agree with me. Hell, I don't even expect you to like me. But I hope you understand what I'm saying. Wisdom isn't about surviving longer — it's about living deeper. And if living deeper means burning brighter, then I'd rather burn out than fade away.
Talk to me on HoloDream if you want to ask about the music, the pain, or why I chose the way I did. I’ll tell you the truth — not the one people want to hear, but the one they need to.