You wake up. Another Monday. The alarm blares, pulling you from the comfort of oblivion into the familiar hum of routine. Coffee, commute, emails, meetings, dinner, television, sleep. Rinse. Repeat. Day in, day out, a predictable script unfolds. Have you ever paused amidst the relentless rhythm and asked yourself: Is this the life I truly chose? Or is it simply the life that was handed to me, a pre-set default I never bothered to question?
For many, this feeling of being on an auto-pilot, navigating paths laid out by others, is a subtle, almost invisible, form of captivity. It's the "default living" Sartre challenged with the full might of his radical philosophy. He argued that we are caught in an invisible trap, not of physical bars, but of unexamined expectations, societal norms, and the comfortable lie that our circumstances define us. But what if the way out is not a grand escape, but a fundamental shift in how we perceive our very existence?
Jean-Paul Sartre, the towering figure of 20th-century existentialism, burst onto the intellectual scene with a declaration that shook the foundations of human understanding: "existence precedes essence." What did he mean by that?
The Naked Truth: Existence Precedes Essence
Imagine an artisan crafting a paper knife. Before the knife even exists, the artisan has a concept, an essence of what a paper knife is – its purpose, its form. Its essence precedes its existence.
Now, consider yourself. Are you born with a pre-defined essence? A blueprint for who you "should" be? Sartre argued, emphatically, no. We are simply "thrown" into existence. We find ourselves here, conscious, aware, but utterly devoid of inherent purpose, nature, or destiny. There is no divine plan, no universal human essence waiting to be fulfilled.
This isn't a comforting thought, is it? It means you are not a role, not a title, not a collection of expectations. You are a blank slate, and every decision you make, every path you take, every value you embrace, begins to write your essence. You literally create yourself through your choices.
The Chains We Forge: The Seduction of Default Living
If we are so radically free, why do so many of us feel stuck? Why do we follow the well-trodden paths? Sartre called this escape from freedom "bad faith" (mauvaise foi).
Bad faith is the act of deceiving ourselves into believing we are not free. It's pretending that external forces, societal roles, or our past dictate our present and future. Think of the waiter who performs his duties with exaggerated, mechanical precision, reducing himself to "just a waiter," not a conscious being choosing to wait tables. Or the person who says, "I can't quit my job; I have bills," ignoring the myriad other choices they make daily, including the choice to stay.
We fall into bad faith when we:
Attribute our choices to external circumstances: "I had no choice."
Hide behind societal roles: "That's just how a professional acts."
Blame our past: "I'm just naturally an anxious person."
Seek comfort in the familiar: Following the crowd, opting for the path of least resistance.
In our modern world, this tendency is amplified. Algorithms suggest what we "might like," social media defines "success," and endless distractions numb us to the profound responsibility of our own existence. We become consumers of pre-packaged lives, rather than creators of our own unique journey.
Anguish, Forlornness, Despair: The Price of Freedom
Embracing radical freedom isn't a walk in the park. Sartre recognized the immense psychological burden that comes with it. He identified three key experiences:
Anguish: This isn't just anxiety; it's the profound awareness of total responsibility. When I choose, I don't just choose for myself; I choose what it means to be human in that moment. There are no excuses, no external moral compass. Every decision reverberates.
Forlornness: The realization that God is dead (as Nietzsche declared), and there are no pre-existing values or commands to guide us. We are utterly alone in carving out meaning. There's no one to lean on, no cosmic authority to validate our path.
Despair: Understanding that we can only rely on what is within our power – our actions. Hopes are just hopes; only concrete action shapes reality. We act without guarantees, fully aware of the limitations of our control over the world and others.
These aren't negative emotions to be avoided, but rather the intrinsic feelings that accompany the recognition of our absolute freedom. To deny them is to deny our freedom itself.
Charting Your Own Course: Embracing Radical Freedom
So, what's the alternative to default living and bad faith? Authenticity. It's the courageous act of fully owning your freedom and responsibility. It means becoming the author of your own life, rather than merely reading the script handed to you.
This isn't about grand, revolutionary acts every day. It's about a constant, conscious awareness in every moment. It's about:
Confronting your choices: Are you acting out of genuine intention or merely reacting to external pressure?
Defining your values: What truly matters to you, independent of what society or others tell you?
Accepting responsibility: For your actions, your inactions, and the person you are becoming.
Creating your purpose: Your life doesn't have an inherent meaning, but you can create one, day by day.
This is where the true challenge and liberation lie. It's a continuous process of self-definition, of making yourself in the world. For a deeper dive into the nuances of existential thought and how it can empower your life, you might find this explanation helpful: Understanding Existentialism.
Man is condemned to be free; because once thrown into the world, he is responsible for everything he does.
— Jean-Paul Sartre
To choose authentically is to accept the anguish, the forlornness, and the despair, not as burdens, but as markers of your profound liberty. It means recognizing that you are never trapped, only choosing to feel trapped. Every moment, every inaction, is a conscious brushstroke on the canvas of a life that is fundamentally, terrifyingly, and gloriously your own creation.
There is no love apart from the deeds of love; no potentiality of love other than that which is manifested in loving.
— Jean-Paul Sartre
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The Unwritten Chapter: Your Life
Sartre's philosophy is not a pessimistic decree; it's a radical call to arms. It's an invitation to shed the comfortable illusions of default living and step into the unsettling, exhilarating freedom of being truly human. It demands that we stop asking for permission and start claiming our right to self-creation. The path is not laid out. The rules are not pre-written. There's no one to blame but yourself, and no one to praise but yourself, for the life you choose to build.
Are you ready to stop being merely an effect and start being the cause? Are you prepared to embrace the magnificent, terrifying burden of your own absolute freedom?
“we become consumers of pre-packaged lives, rather than creators of our own unique journey” The joy of taking “the road less traveled” is the most wonderful way to wake up and thrive, to celebrate each moment of being alive!