00:00:13
Do you want to know something that
00:00:14
nobody has ever confessed to
00:00:17
you? You are
00:00:19
trapped. Yes, you.
00:00:23
You are trapped in a jail that you
00:00:25
yourself built brick by brick. With
00:00:28
every decision made thinking about what
00:00:30
others might say, with every action that
00:00:33
you stopped doing for fear of failing.
00:00:36
With every fake smile that hid your true
00:00:39
desire to scream. Do you feel that
00:00:42
oppression in your chest? It's not
00:00:44
anxiety. It's not stress. It's the
00:00:47
unbearable weight of a life lived for
00:00:49
others. A life designed to please
00:00:52
spectators who don't even pay admission
00:00:54
to see you act. Do you know what is the
00:00:57
crulest thing? Nobody asked you to make
00:01:00
that sacrifice. Nobody asked you to give
00:01:02
up your freedom, your essence, your
00:01:05
authenticity. But you did it
00:01:07
voluntarily. You chained yourself to
00:01:09
others expectations, selling your
00:01:12
identity in exchange for ephemeral
00:01:14
applause for momentary approval. And
00:01:17
now, now that you look inside, what
00:01:20
remains of you? What part is
00:01:22
authentically yours? And what part was
00:01:25
shaped by fear, by insecurity, by the
00:01:29
sick need to fit in? They made you
00:01:32
believe that control was the key. They
00:01:35
sold you the illusion that if you
00:01:36
managed every aspect of your life,
00:01:39
everything would turn out well.
00:01:41
Everything would be perfect. Do you want
00:01:44
to know the truth that nobody dares to
00:01:45
tell you?
00:01:47
Absolute control is a lie, a mental trap
00:01:51
designed to keep you busy, distracted,
00:01:54
disconnected from what really matters.
00:01:56
The more you obsess over having control,
00:01:59
the more you slide towards anxiety,
00:02:02
towards silent desperation, towards a
00:02:05
life that you never finish living
00:02:08
because you're always busy preparing for
00:02:10
something that never
00:02:11
arrives. Have you ever wondered why you
00:02:14
feel that inexplicable void despite
00:02:17
apparently having it
00:02:18
all? It's because what you have isn't
00:02:21
really yours. Your success, your
00:02:24
relationships, even your thoughts are
00:02:26
contaminated by the constant worry about
00:02:28
how they will be perceived by others.
00:02:31
And the more you seek external
00:02:33
validation, the further you drift from
00:02:36
your center, from that true essence that
00:02:39
you once knew how to recognize, but that
00:02:43
now you barely remember. Michelle de
00:02:46
Montene from his silent tower in the
00:02:48
16th century saw clearly what today you
00:02:52
don't want to accept. That detachment is
00:02:55
not indifference but the only path
00:02:57
towards true freedom. He understood that
00:03:00
we live trapped not by external
00:03:03
circumstances but by our sick attempt to
00:03:05
control the uncontrollable, by our
00:03:08
obsession to please, to fit in, to avoid
00:03:12
criticism at all costs. But what if I
00:03:15
told you that the detachment you so fear
00:03:17
is precisely the key that opens the door
00:03:20
to your
00:03:21
freedom? What would happen if for a
00:03:24
moment you dared to let go of that rope
00:03:26
you hold so tightly? that rope that you
00:03:29
believe saves you, but that in reality
00:03:31
is slowly suffocating you. Because
00:03:34
here's the paradox. The more you try to
00:03:37
control, the less control you actually
00:03:40
have. The more you seek to please, the
00:03:43
less authentic you are. And the more you
00:03:46
resist change, the stronger it hits you
00:03:49
when it inevitably
00:03:51
comes. The world does not function under
00:03:54
your control, and it never will.
00:03:57
Accepting this is not weakness. It is
00:04:00
wisdom. Life in its chaos and
00:04:03
unpredictability demands something very
00:04:05
simple but
00:04:07
terrifying to let go. Let go of your
00:04:10
need for approval. Let go of your fear
00:04:13
of failing. Let go of that false
00:04:15
identity you've created to protect
00:04:17
yourself from others
00:04:19
judgment. Imagine for a second what
00:04:22
would happen if you stopped worrying so
00:04:24
much about others opinions. Who would
00:04:26
you be without that constant fear? What
00:04:29
would you do if you knew nobody would
00:04:31
ever judge you? That person you see in
00:04:33
your mind right now, that version of
00:04:36
yourself who lives without mental
00:04:37
chains, is who you really are. But
00:04:40
there's something darker, something
00:04:42
deeper behind this uncomfortable
00:04:45
reality. And it's that you fear letting
00:04:47
go of control because deep down you
00:04:50
don't know who you are without those
00:04:52
chains. You're afraid to discover that
00:04:54
your identity has been so diluted, so
00:04:57
mixed with the external that upon
00:04:59
letting go of all that, maybe nothing
00:05:01
would remain. But here's the liberating
00:05:04
and brutal truth that Montaigne
00:05:06
whispered from his tower centuries ago.
00:05:09
By letting go of what you are not, for
00:05:12
the first time, you can clearly see what
00:05:14
you
00:05:15
are. The freedom you seek is just on the
00:05:18
other side of the fear that now
00:05:20
paralyzes you. It's not in a self-help
00:05:23
book, nor in motivational advice, nor in
00:05:26
any mystical secret. It's here in this
00:05:30
precise moment, waiting for you to have
00:05:32
enough courage to face your life and
00:05:35
say, "I no longer need anyone's
00:05:37
approval. I no longer need to control
00:05:40
the unpredictable. I no longer need to
00:05:43
pretend who I am not." Now tell me, are
00:05:46
you ready to let go? Or will you
00:05:49
continue clinging to control? Knowing
00:05:51
that each day that passes takes you
00:05:53
further from your true essence. This is
00:05:57
just the beginning of a journey that you
00:05:58
may not want to make but desperately
00:06:01
need. And the decision is solely in your
00:06:05
hands. Will you live trapped in a golden
00:06:08
cage built by yourself? Or will you
00:06:11
accept the risk of jumping into the
00:06:13
unknown, into a freedom that may terrify
00:06:16
you, but that ultimately makes you feel
00:06:19
alive?
00:06:21
Welcome to the philosophy of detachment,
00:06:24
to the pursuit of an inner freedom that
00:06:26
will change absolutely everything you
00:06:29
thought you knew about
00:06:30
yourself. The path is unsettling, but I
00:06:34
assure you, the only thing more
00:06:36
terrifying than moving towards that
00:06:39
freedom is staying exactly where you are
00:06:41
now. You have been convinced that
00:06:44
pursuing goals is the most important
00:06:46
thing. But what would happen if you
00:06:49
discovered that most of those goals were
00:06:51
never really
00:06:53
yours? All your life you have been
00:06:55
striving to climb ladders that others
00:06:58
built without ever questioning whether
00:07:00
you really wanted to get there. And now
00:07:02
that you are so high up, what do you
00:07:05
see? The panorama you dreamed of or just
00:07:09
the distorted reflection of what someone
00:07:11
else wanted you to be? We are obsessed
00:07:14
with the idea of success. believing that
00:07:18
achieving certain goals will finally
00:07:20
give us
00:07:21
peace. But have you ever wondered what
00:07:23
exactly success is? And more
00:07:27
importantly, whose
00:07:29
success? Perhaps you have already
00:07:31
achieved several of those goals that
00:07:33
were supposed to make you happy.
00:07:35
Studying the right thing, working where
00:07:38
it corresponds, relating with the right
00:07:41
people. And yet you feel that something
00:07:44
is missing. That feeling, that
00:07:48
uncomfortable truth that wakes you up at
00:07:50
night is the voice you've ignored for
00:07:52
too long. Your authentic essence
00:07:55
demanding to be heard. Monteni
00:07:58
discovered in his voluntary confinement
00:08:01
away from the noise of the world,
00:08:03
something revealing and dangerous. That
00:08:06
true success looks nothing like what
00:08:08
they sold you. It is not a social
00:08:11
position, not an accumulation of goods,
00:08:14
not even external
00:08:16
recognition. True success, the one few
00:08:19
dare to pursue, is living fully aligned
00:08:22
with your own nature. But of course, for
00:08:26
that you have to know who you really are
00:08:29
beyond the mask, beyond the
00:08:32
expectations, and beyond that false
00:08:35
version of yourself that you present to
00:08:37
the world every day. You have become so
00:08:40
accustomed to pretending that you don't
00:08:42
even notice the immense effort you make
00:08:44
daily to sustain an image that doesn't
00:08:47
represent you. But the mind is
00:08:50
relentless. Even if you try to ignore
00:08:52
it, there will always be something
00:08:54
within you that rebels. Something that
00:08:57
sooner or later breaks the
00:08:59
facade. Want an uncomfortable but
00:09:02
liberating truth?
00:09:04
As long as you continue hiding behind
00:09:07
characters, you will never know true
00:09:10
tranquility. The stress, the anxiety,
00:09:13
and the constant feeling of emptiness
00:09:15
are simply the logical consequence of a
00:09:18
life lived for others. But here comes
00:09:21
the tricky part, and Montana had it
00:09:24
clear. Most people prefer the security
00:09:27
of an uncomfortable life before the risk
00:09:30
of facing the uncertainty of being
00:09:32
themselves.
00:09:34
They prefer to continue with a
00:09:36
half-life, settling for crumbs of
00:09:38
happiness rather than facing the risk of
00:09:41
discovering who they really
00:09:43
are. And you, which group are you in?
00:09:47
Are you one of those who assume the risk
00:09:49
of finding themselves or one of those
00:09:52
who prefer to remain comfortably numbed
00:09:54
by
00:09:55
routine? Because yes, routine is a very
00:09:59
effective anesthetic. It keeps you busy,
00:10:02
distracted, trapped in a repetitive
00:10:04
circle that slowly numbs your will. But
00:10:08
what you don't see is that this apparent
00:10:10
security comes at a very high price. The
00:10:14
total loss of your inner freedom. And
00:10:17
freedom, although many confuse it with
00:10:19
doing whatever they want at any moment,
00:10:22
is actually something much deeper.
00:10:24
Freedom is having the courage to be true
00:10:27
to yourself, even if that means
00:10:29
challenging expectations, breaking
00:10:32
patterns, and sometimes disappointing
00:10:34
those you love the
00:10:36
most. Perhaps at this point, you think,
00:10:39
what if by being authentic, I lose
00:10:41
everything I've achieved so
00:10:43
far. And here's where another paradox
00:10:46
appears. If you really need to pretend
00:10:49
to maintain what you
00:10:51
have, then it was never yours in the
00:10:54
first
00:10:55
place. True relationships, the projects
00:10:58
that really matter, the achievements
00:11:01
worth keeping, survive perfectly well
00:11:04
with
00:11:05
authenticity. On the contrary, only by
00:11:08
being authentic do you discover what
00:11:10
really matters and what was simply
00:11:12
taking up space.
00:11:14
In reality, you have much less to lose
00:11:17
than you imagine and much more to gain
00:11:19
than you believe. But of course, you
00:11:22
must first take the leap, that leap into
00:11:25
the unknown, into a life you do not
00:11:28
fully control, but that at least will
00:11:30
truly be yours.
00:11:33
And here again comes the central idea of
00:11:36
Montenia reminding us that detachment
00:11:39
does not mean abandoning what you love
00:11:42
but understanding that only from
00:11:44
absolute freedom can you love and build
00:11:47
genuinely. Everything you possess from
00:11:50
anxiety and attachment ends up
00:11:52
possessing you. Here's the message no
00:11:56
one tells you. Most live in fear of
00:11:59
losing what they have because they've
00:12:01
never allowed themselves to discover
00:12:03
what would happen if they lost it. They
00:12:05
cling desperately to relationships,
00:12:07
jobs, prefabricated
00:12:10
identities, and in that effort, they
00:12:13
forget that real life begins right when
00:12:15
you stop clinging to what doesn't
00:12:17
represent you. So, what are you going to
00:12:21
do now? Will you continue living by
00:12:23
inertia, afraid to discover who you are?
00:12:27
Or will you finally have enough courage
00:12:29
to let go of the known and launch
00:12:31
yourself into the uncertainty that
00:12:33
terrifies you but holds the possibility
00:12:36
of discovering something much more
00:12:38
valuable. Who you really are away from
00:12:41
control, approval, and fear. This is the
00:12:44
path Montana walked from his silent
00:12:47
tower. and it is the same path that now
00:12:50
lies before you. Will you dare to walk
00:12:53
it or will you settle for continuing to
00:12:55
be a spectator of your own existence?
00:12:58
The answer is yours alone. Following
00:13:00
that line, we can explore how the act of
00:13:03
storytelling is not only a vehicle for
00:13:05
conveying knowledge or emotions, but
00:13:08
also a deep mirror of our search for
00:13:11
identity. When we narrate, whether
00:13:14
consciously or unconsciously, we
00:13:17
position ourselves in front of the
00:13:18
reflection of what we are or what we
00:13:21
long to be. The narrative then becomes a
00:13:25
powerful tool for
00:13:27
self-exloration where each character or
00:13:30
situation projects our deepest desires
00:13:33
or our most hidden fears. We often
00:13:36
forget that fiction is also a way of
00:13:38
rehearsing life. A kind of emotional
00:13:41
simulator in which we can live multiple
00:13:44
destinies without taking real risks.
00:13:47
Therefore, in times of collective
00:13:49
uncertainty or crisis like the times we
00:13:52
live in, stories become even more
00:13:55
relevant. They offer refuge and
00:13:57
catharsis simultaneously.
00:14:00
But beyond comfort, they also allow a
00:14:02
boldness that we seldom dare to show in
00:14:05
our everyday reality, inviting us to
00:14:08
transgress imaginary limits and explore
00:14:11
radically different
00:14:13
perspectives. And here comes a
00:14:15
fascinating point. How much do the
00:14:18
stories we tell ourselves influence our
00:14:21
daily decisions? Perhaps the narrative
00:14:24
we cultivate internally determines how
00:14:26
we interpret external reality. filtering
00:14:30
our experiences and invisibly but
00:14:33
constantly shaping the course of our
00:14:35
lives. Thus, the power of storytelling
00:14:38
is not only social or cultural but
00:14:41
intimately personal, capable of
00:14:43
transforming our present and future from
00:14:46
the words we choose to tell ourselves
00:14:49
who we
00:14:50
are. This leads us to an even more
00:14:53
provocative question. What if changing
00:14:56
the story we tell ourselves internally
00:14:58
was a way to rewrite our destiny? It's
00:15:01
not far-fetched to think that many
00:15:03
people live trapped in inherited
00:15:05
narratives that don't entirely belong to
00:15:08
them. Stories of failure, limitations,
00:15:11
imposed roles and yet accept them as
00:15:14
unmovable
00:15:16
truths. In this sense, reclaiming one's
00:15:19
own narrative can be a profoundly
00:15:21
revolutionary act. rewriting ourselves
00:15:24
not just as victims but as protagonists
00:15:27
with agency capable of reignifying the
00:15:29
past and projecting different
00:15:31
futures. Moreover, there is an
00:15:34
intriguing phenomenon. The stories we
00:15:37
tell not only affect how we act but also
00:15:40
how others perceive us.
00:15:43
A well articulated narrative about who
00:15:45
we believe we are can become a kind of
00:15:48
self-fulfilling prophecy influencing our
00:15:51
relationships, our opportunities and the
00:15:54
way the world responds to us as if the
00:15:57
internal narrative were a silent script
00:15:59
that we all unknowingly help to perform.
00:16:04
Thus, consciously building our personal
00:16:06
story is not just a matter of
00:16:09
introspection but also a life
00:16:12
strategy. On the other hand, we must
00:16:14
consider the role of contradiction
00:16:16
within the personal narrative. We are
00:16:20
not linear beings, nor should our
00:16:22
stories be. Embracing that a rich
00:16:25
narrative includes dark zones, changes
00:16:28
of course, contradictions, and
00:16:31
ambiguities is embracing the human in
00:16:34
its entirety. Indeed, the best stories
00:16:37
are not those where everything fits
00:16:39
perfectly, but those that leave us with
00:16:42
open questions, moments of discomfort,
00:16:45
and flashes of truth among the
00:16:47
confusion. It is in that imperfection
00:16:51
where the beauty of the narrated and
00:16:53
therefore of life itself lies. And
00:16:56
perhaps the most poetic of all this is
00:16:59
that we never stop rewriting ourselves.
00:17:01
Every conversation, every encounter,
00:17:04
every silence even adds a line to the
00:17:07
narrative. We are perpetual writers of
00:17:10
an unfinished text. Sometimes conscious,
00:17:13
sometimes not. that every decision, no
00:17:16
matter how small, is sculpting a new
00:17:19
version of our story. And if you've read
00:17:22
this far, you may have already realized
00:17:25
something powerful. We are not secondary
00:17:28
characters in a story written by others.
00:17:31
We are authors in the midst of a
00:17:33
creative process. And the fascinating
00:17:36
thing is that there are no final drafts.
00:17:39
Every day can be a new page. Yes. but
00:17:43
also a page that rewrites the previous
00:17:46
ones. What yesterday seemed like a sad
00:17:49
chapter today can be read as the turning
00:17:52
point before
00:17:53
rebirth. And that perhaps is the great
00:17:56
alchemy of the human narrative. Turning
00:17:59
scars into symbols, mistakes into plot
00:18:03
twists, silences into
00:18:06
suspense. But beware, because here comes
00:18:08
the final twist. What if the true art of
00:18:12
living was not knowing exactly what
00:18:14
story we are telling? Because in
00:18:17
uncertainty, there is also beauty. In
00:18:21
not knowing whether you are in a comedy,
00:18:23
a tragedy, or an epic, there is an
00:18:26
almost magical
00:18:28
freedom. Sometimes the most powerful
00:18:31
stories are not those that close with a
00:18:33
big applause, but those that leave you
00:18:35
wanting to keep writing because it's not
00:18:38
over yet.
00:18:39
And now we have come to the end.
00:18:42
Although you know that endings are also
00:18:44
disguised beginnings. If any of this
00:18:47
resonated with you, subscribe and
00:18:49
activate the bell so you don't miss the
00:18:51
next chapter. And leave me this phrase
00:18:54
in the comments. I rewrite my
00:18:57
story. That way I'll know you made it
00:19:00
here and that you are part of this
00:19:02
community of conscious, curious, and
00:19:05
brave narrators.
00:19:07
See you in the next episode where you
00:19:09
might not have the answers, but you will
00:19:12
definitely come out with better
00:19:14
questions. Until then, close the book,
00:19:17
but don't put it away because the next
00:19:20
paragraph could change everything.
00:19:24
[Music]
00:19:32
[Music]