People don't like love. They like that glittery, flirty feeling. They don't love love. Love is sacrificial. Love is ferocious. It's not emotive. Our culture doesn't love love. It loves the idea of love. It wants the emotion without paying anything for it.
Tupac was 25 when he died listen to what he was talking about. Nas was 16 when he made illmatic. Listen to how deep it was. Biggie was 24. Fast forward, all these rappers talk about today is pooping pills, shooting, killing, strippers & sex. Of course yall can’t connect.
You know that feeling where you're walking alone at night in a city where nobody knows you and your whole life suddenly makes sense?
There's a reason that hits different than anything you feel at home.
Your brain has two modes that almost never run at the same time. One handles paying attention to new things around you. The other handles thinking about yourself, your past, your future. They work like a seesaw. When one goes up, the other goes down. At home, your brain filters out 90% of your surroundings before you're even conscious of them. Everything is familiar. So the seesaw barely moves.
A foreign city at night breaks that.
Every street sign you can't read, every smell you can't name, every traffic pattern that feels wrong floods your hippocampus with dopamine and norepinephrine. Your brain is treating every single input as new. Meanwhile there's no task. No meeting. No one to perform for. No one even knows your name. So instead of your self-reflection system shutting down like it normally does when your environment gets intense, it stays fully online.
Two systems that normally suppress each other firing in parallel. That almost never happens.
The dopamine makes the moment feel significant. The norepinephrine burns it into long-term memory at a depth that your Tuesday commute never touches. And while all of this is happening, your brain is running old memories of who you used to be against present-tense sensory proof of where you are now.
That "how far I've come" feeling is a real neurochemical event. Your brain is building the most emotionally loaded version of your own story it can, in real time, at 20 watts, inside your skull.