How to Avoid Stillness Because It Will Eat You Alive
A raw guide to outrunning overthinking, anxiety, and emotional collapse through movement and noise
First rule, stay on your feet.
People sit down
and the floor opens.
Every unfinished grief waits there,
every sealed room cracks open,
every memory you shoved into storage
starts yelling for air.
So keep moving.
Turn the music up.
Not soft music.
Not acoustic guitar background noise.
Something loud enough to drown out your own head.
If possible, Nirvana.
If not Nirvana, something that sounds like the inside of your skull.
Scrub something until your arms ache.
Get on your hands and knees and clean baseboards
like you’re trying to evict a demon.
Organize a drawer that was already fine.
Look up flights you absolutely cannot afford.
Text someone.
Change subjects mid message.
Keep it messy. Keep it moving.
Momentum matters.
Movement keeps you alive.
Someone will suggest breathing exercises.
Tell them sure
and then go walk three miles instead.
Stillness will try to convince you it’s peace.
It smiles while it closes the doors.
Then you’re stuck in a hallway
with fluorescent lights
and your own thoughts echoing back at you.
So you outrun it.
You fill boxes.
You canoe fifty miles with kids.
You jump out of airplanes.
You refuse to disappear.
And sometimes the quiet still catches you
and the room fills up anyway.
Remember this.
It hasn’t killed you yet.
Stand back up.
About the Creator
Fatal Serendipity
Fatal Serendipity writes flash, micro, speculative and literary fiction, and poetry. Their work explores memory, impermanence, and the quiet fractures between grief, silence, connection and change. They linger in liminal spaces and moments.
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