The article challenges the notion that thinking makes one free, suggesting instead that thoughts may move through individuals, akin to possession.
Living fully is portrayed as a process of bearing the world with acute intensity rather than passive existence.
The author emphasizes that presence and mindfulness should not be seen as calm, but as a state of possessing and being seized by the moment.
The act of speaking and writing is framed as a ritualistic process of being spoken by external influences, not composing thoughts.
Madness is depicted as a form of fidelity to reality rather than disorder, contrasting it with the structured expectation of sanity.
The article discusses how individuals are already under various forms of possession, such as by capitalism and societal expectations, leading to a sense of being silenced.
A call is made for creative passivity, emphasizing the need to let go of control and established norms to become a vessel of intensity and action.
Transcendence is presented as a process of remaking the world through pain and intensity, not just as an escape from it.
The reader is urged to stop performing and curating a false sense of self, highlighting the engineered nature of freedom and rebellion.
The article concludes with an invitation to embrace rupture, signaling a continuation in Article II where the concept of optimization and productivity will be explored further.