Surviving In A Fake World (Without Hyperventilating About the Title)
Surviving in a Fake World
A long-term human nonsense survival report disguised as a memoir.

This is not a polished self-help book written by someone who drinks cucumber water at 5 AM while emotionally bonding with a Himalayan sunrise.
This is the survival documentation of a woman who spent nearly 60 years trying to understand why she was dumped on earth and why humanity keeps voluntarily turning life into an overstimulated administrative fever dream with passwords, parking garages, emotionally unstable group dynamics and at least 46 invisible rules nobody explained beforehand.
Inside this memoir you will find:
- bizarre real-life observations
- nervous system warfare
- confusing humans
- family chaos
- existential exhaustion
- accidental comedy
- emotionally concerning situations
- ridiculous modern society behavior
- tiny moments of unexpected beauty hidden underneath the nonsense
It starts off in the sixties (1966) and slowly descends into the technologically possessed fake-world dimension we all somehow agreed to participate in without reading the terms and conditions.
At some point you may realize:
“Wait… I ALSO feel like this.”
Exactly.
This memoir is basically for people who:
- feel too aware for modern life
- secretly suspect society is held together with duct tape
- are exhausted by fake behavior
- laugh during stress because otherwise they would evaporate
- feel emotionally homeless inside modern culture
- keep questioning reality in supermarkets
- accidentally become philosophers during household tasks
- still try to remain kind despite humanity testing them professionally every day
What can you learn from it?
Probably more than from 94% of motivational Instagram posts combined.
You’ll learn:
- how absurd life actually is when you stop pretending it’s normal
- why overstimulation slowly turns people into haunted toasters
- how humor can become psychological survival equipment
- why intuition matters more than most systems
- how fake social behavior quietly drains human beings
- why your nervous system is not designed for 8 billion opinions per second
- how to survive chaos without becoming completely emotionally laminated
But most importantly:
you’ll learn that being confused by this world might actually be one of the healthiest reactions available.
This memoir will not teach you how to “win.”
It teaches you how to remain psychologically operational while reality keeps doing backflips into a shopping cart filled with emotional damage and administrative paperwork.
Surviving in a Fake World
Because apparently we’re all just trying to keep our remaining braincells alive long enough to locate the parking payment machine of existence.
