It is happy people who are the most beautiful, and being happy is more than just smiling, but that can help!

Finding mental wellness is a maze, a journey, full of discovery, dangers, risks, and being happy. Remember to be happy. It is a choice you know.

The river flows backwards and the boat also, the town you left is here in all its glory, all gold and full of flowers in vases, all lovely like a painting, till it peels away, the vision is gone, and something is coming, something like a train in the night, screeching like a giant bat, the night of wonders and magic.

The years go, anytime anyway, no matter what it flies, times are leaping ahead of you, catching on fire, shooting for the moon and fading..

Ascending into an innocent city, neon women very pretty, vodka and tonic get you moving, get you talking, make you foolish, idiots with cool looks on the sidewalk smoking cigars, quick fixes fixer ups and downers, people chasing people, people down on their luck, zombies in drag, its Babylon my friends.

Alice in Wonderland and Franz Kafka’s The Trial share striking structural similarities, as both narratives subvert the "elite, intellectual" labels often placed on them to deliver raw, visceral critiques of systems that strip individuals of control. While The Trial is treated as an existential nightmare and Alice as a whimsical children's fantasy, both stories explore the absolute terror of being trapped in an absurd, unaccountable system.The two works mirror each other through specific narrative mechanisms:The Illusion of RulesThe Trial: Josef K. is arrested for an unstated crime by a faceless, labyrinthine court system. The rules are entirely opaque, yet he is expected to navigate them perfectly.Alice in Wonderland: Alice is constantly scrutinized and judged by characters who demand adherence to arbitrary rules of etiquette and logic (e.g., the Mad Hatter's tea party rules or the Queen’s croquet game).The Critique: Both authors show that when a system's rules are unpredictable and hidden, the individual can never truly be "innocent" or safe.The Tyranny of the Absurd Administrative StateThe Trial: The court offices are hidden in cramped, suffocating attics, run by low-level, incompetent, yet fiercely punitive bureaucrats.Alice in Wonderland: Wonderland is governed by an unstable, violent bureaucracy. The Queen of Hearts operates on raw, unchecked power, famously demanding "Sentence first—verdict afterwards!" during the trial of the Knave of Hearts.The Critique: Just as Kafka captures the modern dread of an unaccountable administrative state, Lewis Carroll captures the exact same nightmare under the guise of nonsense literature. The "court" in Wonderland is not interested in justice; it is an exercise in pure institutional ego.The Subversion of the Intellectual CanonKafka: Mainstream literary critics often gatekeep Kafka as an "elite liberal modernist" icon, ignoring the fact that his work is a deeply populist, accessible warning against centralized institutional power.Alice: Carroll’s work is frequently intellectualized by academics analyzing its mathematical logic and linguistic philosophy. Yet, at its core, it resonates with anyone who has ever felt powerless against arbitrary authority figures who make no sense.Both stories pull back the curtain on elite institutions to reveal that underneath the grand titles and complex language, the system is often just a chaotic, irrational machine designed to crush individual sovereignty.