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A few days ago, I came across a sentence that really struck a chord: "True bravery is not never falling, but daring to show your wounds in close-up after you fall."
The person who said this is Lao Chen, a 42-year-old worker. He never took writing classes, has no millions of followers, but during the year he was laid off, divorced, and his mother was diagnosed with cancer, he started writing things late at night—not motivational stories, nor triumphant tales, but notes like "I was scolded by a client again today," "There are 287 installments left on my mortgage," "My mom is on her third day of chemotherapy, I hid in the stairwell to cry before I dared to go home."
Unexpectedly, these "embarrassing" words quietly went viral. Now, he earns 30,000 yuan a month writing "failure literature," and thousands of people leave comments in the comment section: "So I’m not the only one having a hard time."
This made me suddenly realize: what is most scarce in this era is not a perfect persona, but the courage to reveal the raw, embarrassing truth.
1. Why is "failure literature" popular? Because we have all been living too hard
Have you noticed that in recent years of scrolling through short videos, what moves people the most is no longer "monthly income of 100,000" or "monetized in three days," but those ordinary people facing the camera saying: "I didn’t sleep well again today," "My child has a fever, I can't take leave," "My bank balance is higher than my hairline"?
This is not about ugliness or self-pity, but a collective loosening of emotional restraint.
Take Lao Chen as an example. When he first started writing, it was purely to prevent himself from collapsing. After being laid off, he sent out over 200 resumes, but they all went unanswered. His ex-wife took the children, and his mother was lying in a hospital bed asking him, "Do we still have money?" He dared not answer, only able to type in his phone memo: "Today, I once again..."