ceaseless existence.
Magazine publication dedicated to the social, mental, and physical woes of American society. Everyone wants a quick fix, an easy answer, a roadmap of instructions. Why should we have to think for ourselves when other companies seem to have us all figured out? Ceaseless Existence capitalizes on these woes of modern human interaction and motivation by bringing to light three major threads: declining physical health in view of the opioid epidemic records, over-reliance and comparison to others through the empty attachments perpetrated by social media, and dystopian widespread acceptance of cancel culture.
The part that we shall never escape is having new issues weekly.
sample issue covers.
article inspired by the opioid epidemic and its lack of perceived seriousness.
In the U.S., it’s always healthcare this and obesity that. Public health issue conversations turn stale as quickly as Ritz crackers. Everyone’s heard there’s an opioid epidemic in America, yet no one wants to have any of the actual underlying conversations. No one has any sympathy for an addict: they’re irredeemable people that can’t control their impulses. The young adults (19-25) demographic is suffering the most in the fight on opioids. Accidental death and overdose rates are at record highs for this age range due to the growing prevalence of fentanyl. Fentanyl is 80-100 times stronger than morphine making the threshold for life-threatening amounts terrifyingly lower. But these people fighting to survive aren’t worth worrying about because they found themselves addicted to a pharmaceutical? Go one day without a cup of coffee and see how quickly you get a withdrawal migraine, but yeah I totally understand that you’re different.
article criticizing the societal blunder of cancel culture.
If you’ve managed to avoid cancel culture this far, I envy you. You haven’t had to witness the declining autonomy and brain cells of the greater world community - not just the U.S. Instead of being granted the opportunity to recognize your mistake, learn from your mistake, and ultimately grow as an individual, you are publicly shamed and ostracized for whatever intentional or unintentional thought you shared or action you took. It’s become a whistle-blowing game of appearances. Performative social justice for the masses. If you truly cared about the action or word spoken because of the harm it may inflict on the receiving group, you would take the time to educate the person who said or did it so that they could learn exactly why what they did was perceived wrongly so they can actually learn from it. But fine, go ahead. Blast everyone on social media and get those followers, friend.
read the full articles below…