Chapter 82 - Blogger

I kept a blog that became a reflection of my mind—chaotic, fragmented, yet brutally honest. It wasn’t just a collection of thoughts; it was a lifeline, a desperate attempt to make sense of a world that felt like it was crumbling around me. Writing was the only way I knew to process the noise in my head. Page after page, I poured out my fears, my suspicions, my heartbreak.
But the hardest part? It wasn’t writing those words; it was looking back at them later.
The blog grew with an intensity that mirrored my psychosis. Every entry was a snapshot of my spiralling thoughts, each one more fragmented than the last. I wrote about the people in the office next door, convinced they were part of some grand conspiracy. I dissected every lyric from the songs I heard, convinced they were messages meant for me. And I wrote about my belief that the world was watching me, that I was somehow the centre of this dark, twisted performance.
There were moments of clarity, too—fleeting glimpses where I begged the universe to just let me find peace, to stop the overwhelming noise. Those posts were the hardest to reread because they weren’t laced with delusion; they were raw, unfiltered pain.
And then there were the final entries, the ones I can barely bring myself to think about. They weren’t written for an audience—they were written for an ending. They were heartbreakingly practical, detailing what I thought would happen next, what I wanted to leave behind, and why I thought this was the only way out. I can’t read those posts without feeling the weight of just how close I came to letting go.
Looking back now, it’s almost surreal to think that blog exists—a real-time chronicle of my descent into psychosis. It’s 300,000 words of my darkest moments, captured in the kind of detail that only someone desperate to be understood could produce.
But here’s the thing: that blog will never see the light of day. Not because I’m ashamed of it—I’ve come to terms with what it represents—but because it’s mine. It’s a testament to what I survived, a reminder of how far I’ve come. Sharing it would feel like reopening wounds that have finally started to heal.
Still, I can’t deny its importance. In its own strange way, the blog saved me. Writing became an outlet, a way to cope when it felt like the walls were closing in. And now, even though it remains locked away, it stands as proof that I’ve lived through something that could have destroyed me.
It’s a strange feeling to carry something so deeply personal, so raw, knowing that no one else will ever see it. But maybe that’s okay. The blog isn’t a story for the world; it’s a story for me—a reminder that even in the darkest moments, there’s a part of you fighting to survive. Sometimes, that’s all you need to hold on.
Here’s a taste:
“Hello, it’s me from the afterlife. The stress on my brain was too much to handle. I had lost my job, my house and was riddled with debt. I had decided that I was going to take my life after quickly coming out of my psychosis.
I wrote a few suicide notes and ventured off into London to find somewhere to do it. I was so dead set on it that failure was not an option. First I looked for some high roofs but they were all protected. It was getting late, I sent some final messages, turned my phone off and jumped in front of a tube train.”