Realitysis ((new)) May 2026

Realitysis is not pessimism. It is not cynicism. It is the disciplined, often painful practice of examining reality as it is , not as we have been conditioned to believe it should be . It is the X-ray of the collective psyche. 1. Narrative Collapse For decades, we were sustained by grand stories: work hard, climb the ladder, the future is brighter, institutions hold. Realitysis reveals these as scaffolding now rotted. The diagnosis: we are not between chapters of a coherent story; we are standing in the ruins of the story itself.

We have more data than ever—live polls, satellite imagery, leaked documents, real-time outrage. And yet, clarity recedes. More information has not produced more truth; it has produced infinite spin. Realitysis diagnoses this as a crisis of signal extinction , where the noise is the system’s primary output. realitysis

When everything is a crisis, nothing is. The word “trauma” applies to both a canceled flight and combat. “Literally” now means figuratively. Realitysis observes that we have inflated our emotional currency to the point of hyperinflation—words no longer carry weight, only velocity. Realitysis is not pessimism

And in that unflinching awareness—not hope, not despair, but attention —lies the only genuine freedom left. Realitysis: because the first step out of a fever is admitting you have one. It is the X-ray of the collective psyche

To undergo realitysis is to accept that the ground beneath you is not solid. It never was. The only difference now is that you have stopped pretending otherwise.

We live in an age of symptom management. We scroll to soothe, buy to belong, and click to confirm our biases. But beneath the surface-level friction of daily life—the notifications, the small anxieties, the performative debates—there is a deeper fracture. Call it Realitysis .