• Cracks_InTheWalls@sh.itjust.works
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    3 hours ago

    Idk, I always thought of it as a modern take on Walden . A cautionary tale for those folks who get really hyped up about a life in the bush who forget the crucial fact that Thoreau was on a friend’s property and got more meaningful support from people than the book really lets on.

    One of those “Yes, lots of people feel like you do, AP English guy, but don’t think you’ll make it on vibes alone and not die like a dumbass” kind of things. Appreciated it differently at 16 and 20.

    • You read Walden once
      And now you’re obsessed
      With a life where you don’t have to try
      To be liked, or to be loved
      Man it’s aweso-dumb, yeah I know
      And I really think you
      Earned the right to go and leave
      And never talk to human beings
      Being that they’re all insane, and
      Fucking up this world we’ve made
      You should just get up and go
      Just quit your job, leave your phone
      Or jump into the great unknown
      Or stay at home, it’s all in your head
      It’s all in my head

      - Hobo Johnson

    • lad@programming.dev
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      1 hour ago

      I felt like that, too. I guess people glorifying him are missing the point entirely, and it is close to the ‘we finally announce our very own torment nexus implementation’ level of missing a point, imo

      • InputZero@lemmy.world
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        56 minutes ago

        The movie glorified him and his death. It isn’t portrayed as needless or reckless. His death in the movie is framed as being a spiritual awakening, him finally leaving the material world behind and achieving enlightenment and that dying that way is something to aspire to. It was a dumb movie with hot people in places with exceptional natural beauty with a sloppy message which itself undercuts for mass appeal.