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Here is a system of illusions—engraved into culture, commerce, and consciousness—that keeps humanity asleep at the wheel:


I. Personal Myths (Lies of the Self)

  1. “I am what I own.”
    Identity is mistaken for inventory. Consumerism replaces soul-searching with shopping.
  2. “I have time.”
    The great procrastination spell. Mortality is outsourced to the future self.
  3. “Success equals happiness.”
    Achievement becomes anesthesia. The ladder climbs into a void.
  4. “My thoughts are me.”
    People confuse the voice in their head with the one behind their eyes.
  5. “Healing is linear.”
    Trauma does not move in straight lines—it loops, spirals, erupts, returns.

II. Cultural Myths (Lies of the Tribe)

  1. “History is objective.”
    History is a story told by winners, edited by power, and consumed as truth.
  2. “The news tells me what matters.”
    Media manufactures urgency, not insight. Attention is farmed, not informed.
  3. “Democracy is real.”
    Most people vote once every few years. Billionaires vote every day—with money.
  4. “Education makes you smart.”
    School teaches obedience, not wisdom. It rewards memory, not vision.
  5. “Work gives life meaning.”
    Labor under capitalism is not sacred. It’s sacrifice disguised as purpose.

III. Technological Myths (Lies of the Machine)

  1. “More data = more truth.”
    Data without discernment is noise. The map is not the territory.
  2. “AI will save us.”
    Tools have no ethics. Only their masters do.
  3. “Algorithms are neutral.”
    They are trained on bias, optimized for profit, and designed to manipulate.

IV. Metaphysical Myths (Lies of the Cosmos)

  1. “I am separate.”
    You are not a skin-encapsulated ego. You are a temporary expression of eternity.
  2. “There is one truth.”
    Truth is a prism, not a point. What you see depends on how you look.
  3. “Death is the end.”
    Every myth system worth its salt treats death not as an end—but as initiation.
  4. “The world is fixed.”
    Reality is plastic. Beliefs bend light.

V. Capitalist Myths (Lies of the Market)

  1. “Brands are my friends.”
    No corporation loves you. They love your dopamine loops.
  2. “Money is real.”
    Money is collective fiction—numbers backed by belief and enforced by violence.
  3. “This is as good as it gets.”
    That’s the lullaby of the system: a whisper that says “don’t dream too big.”

Which of these lies have shaped your core identity without your permission?

@foot_meet_neck

China is choosing violence 🤣🤣🤣🤣they say “ play with yo momma, not me” 😂😂😂

♬ original sound – Foot_meet_neck

By the time you finish reading this, a TikTok from a Chinese factory worker will have reached more people than a Hermès campaign ever will—and done more damage than any critic ever could.

Welcome to the collapse of the luxury illusion.

Across Chinese TikTok (Douyin), manufacturers are lifting the curtain on fashion’s most guarded secret: what luxury goods actually cost to make. The numbers aren’t just embarrassing—they’re revolutionary.

  • A $38,000 Hermès Birkin? Around $800 to produce.
  • A $100 pair of Lululemon leggings? Costs $6 on the factory floor.

No glossy editorials. No influencers. Just raw footage, pricing receipts, and factory walk-throughs. And people are watching—millions of them.

This isn’t a trend. It’s a reckoning.


The Seduction of the Label

Luxury was never about the object.
It’s about what the object says about you.

A logo is a social passport. A flex. A shield against invisibility. We don’t buy luxury for the leather—we buy it for the lie: that owning it means we’ve arrived.

But what happens when the people who make these items show up on your feed saying,

“This costs $6 to make. Here’s the link if you want it without the markup”?

What happens is chaos.

Because luxury depends on distance. Mystique. A carefully orchestrated silence between the sweatshop and the storefront. These TikToks smash that silence like a hammer through glass.


Baudrillard, But Make It Viral

French theorist Jean Baudrillard warned us: when reality becomes too ugly, society turns to symbols. We stop consuming things—we consume the idea of them.

That’s luxury: the hyperreality of status.
A Hermès bag isn’t a bag. It’s a narrative: wealth, taste, power.
But when the factory shows the exact same bag being made for pennies, the narrative falls apart.

And we’re left staring at a sobering truth:

You’ve been paying for permission to feel worthy.


From Supply Chain to Subversion

This wave of viral transparency isn’t just financial—it’s philosophical.

It doesn’t just question what luxury costs.
It questions what luxury is.

  • What happens when the margins are exposed?
  • When the “Made in Italy” label turns out to be Chinese-stitched, Italian-assembled fakery?
  • When “craftsmanship” is replaced by assembly-line efficiency and influencer collabs?

Suddenly, luxury becomes indistinguishable from fast fashion—except with better PR.


The Gen Z Effect: Status ≠ Stupidity

This new generation isn’t just style-savvy. They’re system-savvy.

They’re not asking, “Where can I buy this?”
They’re asking, “Who made this, how much were they paid, and why am I being manipulated?”

And that’s what terrifies the luxury world:
Not knockoffs, but informed consumers.

Because when status is no longer about price but principle, the entire luxury model—built on secrecy, seduction, and shame—starts to collapse.


What Comes After the Illusion?

If luxury is no longer a price tag, maybe it’s time we redefine it.

Maybe the new luxury is:

  • Radical transparency
  • Ethical production
  • Style without slavery
  • Quality without cruelty
  • And value without the vampire fangs of branding

Luxury isn’t dead. But its costume is rotting.

And the people who made your favorite “It” bag?
They just set the costume on fire—and filmed it in 4K.

therapy

things my therapist told me