Virginia Woolf's Journey through Suffering



Virginia Woolf's tragedy wasn't a single incident; it was a long, slowly building pain.

Her life began to fall apart in her childhood. Her mother died when she was 13, and her father passed away a few years later. Furthermore, she silently bore the pain of sexual abuse at the hands of her stepbrothers for a long time. At that time, society neither understood nor provided the right treatment.

Virginia possessed an extraordinary mind, but her sensitivity was also profound. She felt even the simplest things deeply. She frequently suffered from severe depression and mental breakdowns. What we might today call bipolar disorder or severe clinical depression was then considered a "weakness."

She felt alive while writing, but writing itself exhausted her. Her mental condition worsened after each book. She feared she would sink back into madness and become a burden to her husband, Leonard Woolf.

The other great pain was loneliness.  She lived among intellectuals like the Bloomsbury Group, but deep inside she felt isolated and disconnected. She felt the world's sounds, war, noise, and human cruelty were tearing her mind apart.

In 1941, in the midst of World War II, when she felt her depression had returned and she couldn't overcome it this time, she jumped into the River Ouse with stones in her coat pockets. Before dying, she wrote a letter saying she couldn't struggle any longer and wanted to set her husband free.

Virginia Woolf's tragedy was that her mind was far ahead of its time, but her treatment, society, and understanding were far behind them. She wasn't weak; she was simply a person who felt too much.

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