# Beyond the boundaries ... of the human being
## The Act of Writing as Self-Therapy
- Writing as a Daily Practice
- A ritualistic act of self-expression
- Writing day by day, week by week, month by month
- No visible improvement despite persistence
- Writing Without Purpose
- Expressing "nothing" as a form of therapy
- The paradox of having "nothing to say" but saying it anyway
- Writing as an abstract attempt to connect with inner self
## The Nonsense of Existence
- Life as Nonsense
- Existence dominated by absurdity and lack of control
- The monotony of life continuing without change
- Acceptance of being an "ordinary human being"
- The Search for Meaning
- Illusory hope of receiving messages from the inner soul
- Attempting to transcend the boundaries of the self
- The futility of seeking meaning in a nonsensical existence
## Disconnection from the Inner Self
- The Inner Disconnect
- Feeling disconnected from one's own inner being
- Attempts to bridge the gap through expression
- The failure to achieve meaningful connection
- The Persistence of Disconnection
- Despite continuous effort, no real change occurs
- The acceptance of disconnection as a normal state
- Continuing to write and express despite this disconnect
## The Abstract Tendency to Transcend
- Going Beyond Boundaries
- The desire to transcend the limitations of the human condition
- Writing as an act of reaching beyond oneself
- The struggle to move past the confines of the self
- The Futility of Transcendence
- The difficulty of achieving true transcendence
- The ongoing cycle of expressing without saying anything
- The realization that transcendence may be unattainable
## The Continuation of Life and Expression
- Life Goes On
- The inevitability of life continuing regardless of personal struggles
- The persistence of writing as a coping mechanism
- The acceptance of life's continuity despite its nonsensical nature
- Expression as Therapy
- Writing as a form of self-therapy and treatment
- The repetitive nature of expressing "nothing"
- The acknowledgment of the uselessness of the act, yet its necessity for the writer