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Sunday, October 26, 2025

Reading the book, The Idiot. At the same time, the TV is blaring in the background, about President Trump’s newest nightmare.

The first crack appeared subtly, a hairline fracture across the polished surface of reality. I saw it, perhaps, because for months I had been living inside another mind, one that mapped the fault lines of the soul with a terrifying precision. Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky had been my unreliable guide, specifically his Prince Myshkin, from “The Idiot.” I had approached that novel like the prompt described, drawn by the terrible beauty of a house fire, knowing it would consume me. And consume me it did, leaving me raw, exposed, and hypersensitive to the world’s inherent brokenness.

Prince Myshkin, I had learned, wasn’t a gentle saviour, but a catalyst. His goodness, pure and blinding, didn’t heal the corrupt world he entered; it destroyed everyone around him, exposing the rot, the lies, the unutterable shame that clung to every interaction like a shroud. He was a moral hurricane, and I found myself morbidly fascinated by the possibility of a modern equivalent, a force entering the already fractured stage of contemporary life that, through its sheer alienness to the established rules, would tear everything apart.

Then he arrived. Not a prince of Christ-like goodness, but something almost its inverse. A man built of noise and bluster, gilded surface and, it seemed, an utter lack of self-doubt or reflection. Donald Trump, the man who, the prompt suggested, tried to break the world. I watched him, initially with a detached, scholarly curiosity, as one might observe a strange specimen under a microscope. But the detachment didn’t last. The Dostoevsky lens had warped my vision, heightened my perception of the underlying currents of chaos, and I began to see something horrific unfolding, not just in the political sphere but in the very fabric of the collective psyche.

He crashed into the established order like a rogue comet. Like Myshkin’s innocent truth, his chaotic energy, his blunt disregard for convention, and his inability-or refusal—to speak the language of diplomatic facade had an immediate, shattering effect. The “world built on lies, greed, and moral compromise,” as the prompt described Myshkin’s Russia, recoiled, shrieked, and began to unravel.

I saw, through my Dostoevsky-tinted glasses, the modern equivalents of the Epanchins, the Ivolgins, the Rogozhins. Pundits, politicians, journalists, academics, ordinary citizens – all caught in the gravitational pull of this disruptive force. And exactly like Myshkin’s effect, this force didn’t inspire unity or reasoned debate; it exposed the underlying hypocrisy, the performative virtue, the desperate clinging to social games that held our world together, however tenuously. Those who postured as paragons of morality revealed their venom; those who feigned sophistication descended into primal rage; those who claimed objectivity were stripped bare, their biases screaming from their pores.

It was horrifying. Not in the way of a monster under the bed, but in the profound, existential dread that settles when you realize the shared reality you thought you inhabited was a fragile construct, easily shattered. This figure, this agent of disruption, seemed to wield chaos not as a weapon of conscious intent, but as a natural extension of his being, much like Myshkin wielded unconscious destruction through his inability to lie or manipulate. Both forces, in their way, were incapable of playing the game, and their presence revealed the game itself to be a necessary, if corrupt, glue. Without the glue, everything fragmented.

The psychological complexity was nearly driving me mad, much like the prompt had warned about in The Idiot. I saw “Nastasya Filippovnas” everywhere – wounded, magnificent souls, damaged by the world, yet paradoxically drawn to the chaos that validated their internal torment. They couldn’t process conventional orders; they either thrived or perhaps self-destructed in the maelstrom. And “Rogozhins” – dark twins, consumed by passionate obsession, jealousy, and a terrifying potential for violence, mirroring the disruptive force’s energy, amplifying it, turning the latent rage of society into volcanic eruptions.

Watching the interaction between the disruptive force and the world felt like witnessing Dostoevsky’s terrifying portrait of human nature writ large across the global stage. The tenderness of the Myshkin/Rogozhin relationship found a dark echo in the strange, fraught interactions between the disruptive force and his supposed rivals or allies – moments of unsettling intimacy born from shared antagonism or cynical transaction, always underscored by the threat of betrayal, the metaphorical knife waiting under the pillow.

The constant stream of news felt like Dostoevsky’s party scene, endlessly repeated. A figure speaking absolute truth one moment (however his truth might be defined, it was his truth, unfiltered by convention) and utter falsehood the next, to a room full of people invested in a different set of comfortable lies. And the reaction was always the same: not conversion, but immediate, visceral social destruction, a collective gasp of outrage that quickly curdled into homicidal rage, albeit often expressed through screens and keyboards. Prophetic truth-telling, or even just disruptive noise-making, in a corrupt society, Dostoevsky showed us, doesn’t inspire conversion; it provokes violent rejection.

What haunted me most was how this era, viewed through the lens of Dostoevsky, refused to make sense or offer comfort. This force didn’t heal anything; it exposed wounds that perhaps would have been better left covered. Its inability to navigate social complexity didn’t make it pure; it made it dangerous. When I saw lives, careers, and relationships inadvertently destroyed by this chaotic presence, I began questioning everything I thought I knew about leadership, stability, and collective sanity.

The Dostoevsky theme of money and class pulsed beneath it all. The scramble for wealth, influence, and power became more desperate, more exposed. The system’s corruption, always present, felt laid bare, raw and ugly. The cynical transactions, the prioritizing of profit over principle, the way economic desperation turned everyone into potential participants in the chaos – it was Dostoevsky’s savage understanding of corruption, amplified to a terrifying scale.

And then there were moments, often in the dead of night, scrolling through endless cycles of outrage and despair, when I felt something akin to Dostoevsky’s exploration of epilepsy. Not a medical event, but a spiritual apocalypse. Moments when the veil between worlds – the world of manufactured reality and the terrifying world of raw, exposed truth – felt thin. The pre-seizure aura, described by Myshkin as a moment of perfect understanding and harmony, in this context felt like an unbearable intensity of discordant truth. A sudden, horrifying clarity about the depth of division, the fragility of institutions, the unsettling ease with which shared reality could be fractured. It wasn’t harmonious; it was like hearing the universe scream. In those moments, surrounded by the fallout of the collision, I found myself wondering, with terrifying sincerity, if madness might be the only appropriate response to a world this broken.

The spiritual void felt palpable. In this seemingly godless age, where authentic connection often felt replaced by performative outrage or tribal loyalty, the very idea of genuine spiritual experience seemed absent, or perhaps, if it existed, it would appear as madness, idiocy, or something profoundly alien to those around it. This disruptive force, whatever else he was, was profoundly alien to the polished, secular norms of public life, and his reception mirrored that – he was often labelled insane, idiotic, outside the bounds of reason. Was his “simplicity,” his bluntness, his defiance of conventional wisdom, just intellectual limitation, or did it represent some distorted, dark mirror image of that spiritual sophistication that looked like regression?

Months, even years later, I still carry the wound of witnessing this collision. The world is permanently altered, its illusions shattered, its divisions laid bare. The question Dostoevsky’s The Idiot forced me to confront – whether virtue that cannot survive contact with reality is virtuous – morphed into a different, equally terrifying question: what happens when a force that seems defined by its lack of conventional virtue collides with a world already compromised? The answer, observed through this lens of Dostoevsky-esque horror, was apocalyptic.

Reading The Idiot felt like psychological surgery; living through this era, viewed through that same lens, felt like being left in the operating theatre afterwards, raw and exposed, staring at the messy, internal workings of a world that had lost its skin. It wasn’t just a political drama; it was a mirror reflecting everything—ugly and beautiful, base and terrifying—about the human condition when confronted with a force that refused to play by the rules, forcing everyone else to reveal what rules they truly lived by, if any. It forced me to recognize not just the Christ and the murderer within myself, but the terrified, confused animal scrambling for purchase as the ground gives way. We were no more prepared for this kind of disruptive energy than Nastasya Filippovna or Rogozhin were for Myshkin’s goodness – and that recognition remains both humbling and terrifying. The horror wasn’t just him; it was us, revealed in the shattering.

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