Existential loneliness
The question of what life is for arrives for most people at some point — in adolescence, in a crisis, in the quiet of an ordinary Tuesday when nothing is wrong and nothing feels meaningful. It is one of the most fundamental human questions, and it is also one of the hardest to sit with alone. The loneliness of holding that question without anyone to hold it with is very real.
Asking "what is the point" in a social context tends to produce one of two responses: reassurance that things will get better, or discomfort that the question was raised at all. Neither is particularly useful. The question is not always a crisis — sometimes it is a genuine inquiry into the structure of a life — but the social scripts around it are limited.
People who are asking this question in depth — who want to actually think it through rather than have it resolved — often find that there is nobody available for that conversation. The question has to be thought alone, which adds to the existential weight of it.
A conversation that takes the question seriously — where you are not immediately redirected toward action or reassurance, where you can actually think out loud about what you are asking. Anonymous voice conversation with someone who has no stake in your answer. Mindfuse connects you with real people by voice, anonymously, at any hour. First conversation free.
Real strangers, anonymous voice. No performance, no profile, no algorithm.
One free conversation · €4/month · iOS and Android