It’s about engaging in you vs. you spiritual/psychological warfare without pulling any punches. It’s about freeing yourself from being a copy of a copy of a copy. It’s not about self improvement, it’s about utter annihilation of the person you’ve been conned into being. “You must be ready to burn yourself in your own flame; how could you rise anew if you have not first become ashes?” Friedrich Nietzsche - Thus Spoke Zarathustra
I did not completely get your point, how this movie helped you to become better yourself if you know it's (probably) just an illusion of the amazing person you wanna become (I am the same) how is this helpful at all? I only think about beating myself after seeing this movie, however I know it hurts and there is no point in it afterwards. Just like with improving yourself - there is "an idea" that might never come true, and probably won't, but all you gotta do is try, right? Otherwise you will never find out and that's certain. So we rather take a shot into the unknown, than to accept something certain.
@@jakupmarek The point is to still try. Let me give you a real example of myself. My “Tyler Durden” (my idealized version of myself) would to be 6’5 with model facial features, with more confidence and charisma. But I can’t change my current height at 6’0 (i know being 6’0 is already tall, but that’s just the unfortunate idea I put in my head that i THINK i NEED to be taller) or change my entire facial bone structure, I can only try to become it by enhancing what God has already given me. By trying to slim down my face to create the illusion of better bone structure (aka dieting down) Which then truly helps me become comfortable within my own skin knowing that I can only change the things that are changeable naturally.
Fight Club changed the world.
Had Fight Club never been made, the world would be completely different today.
It’s about engaging in you vs. you spiritual/psychological warfare without pulling any punches. It’s about freeing yourself from being a copy of a copy of a copy. It’s not about self improvement, it’s about utter annihilation of the person you’ve been conned into being.
“You must be ready to burn yourself in your own flame; how could you rise anew if you have not first become ashes?”
Friedrich Nietzsche - Thus Spoke Zarathustra
I'd say I'm more like the narrator or Jack than Tyler Durden
nice video man
I did not completely get your point, how this movie helped you to become better yourself if you know it's (probably) just an illusion of the amazing person you wanna become (I am the same) how is this helpful at all? I only think about beating myself after seeing this movie, however I know it hurts and there is no point in it afterwards. Just like with improving yourself - there is "an idea" that might never come true, and probably won't, but all you gotta do is try, right? Otherwise you will never find out and that's certain. So we rather take a shot into the unknown, than to accept something certain.
@@jakupmarek The point is to still try. Let me give you a real example of myself. My “Tyler Durden” (my idealized version of myself) would to be 6’5 with model facial features, with more confidence and charisma. But I can’t change my current height at 6’0 (i know being 6’0 is already tall, but that’s just the unfortunate idea I put in my head that i THINK i NEED to be taller) or change my entire facial bone structure, I can only try to become it by enhancing what God has already given me. By trying to slim down my face to create the illusion of better bone structure (aka dieting down) Which then truly helps me become comfortable within my own skin knowing that I can only change the things that are changeable naturally.