The End of Suspension of Disbelief

The End of Suspension of Disbelief

A cracked-earth labyrinth at twilight with a deep, dark void at its center, viewed from above. The purple horizon and fading light create a bleak, mythic atmosphere.
DALL·E

Somewhere in the last stretch of months, my suspension of disbelief quietly died. No shattering breakdown. No dark night of the soul. It didn’t even leave a note. One day it was propping up the future with hopeful scaffolding, and the next — nothing. Just a clean, cold absence.

And strangely?
It didn’t feel like a crisis.
It felt like waking up without the fog.

There’s a moment in deconstruction where you stop wrestling with the old stories and simply stop believing them. Not because they hurt you. Not because you’re angry. But because they don’t ring true anymore. The trick stops working. The spell lifts. The narrative collapses under its own weight.

Losing suspension of disbelief isn’t losing faith.
It’s losing the ability to lie to yourself gracefully.

And once that ability is gone, it doesn’t come back.

The Promises We Were Handed

Most of us in Christian spaces don’t realize how much of our “hope” was actually inherited wishful thinking — institutional optimism dressed up as faith. A theological pep rally for systems that cannot bear scrutiny.

We were handed a set of promises and told not to read the fine print:

Pray hard enough, and God intervenes.
Vote the right way, and the country heals.
Stay pure and humble, and life rewards you.
Serve the church, and your future has purpose.

These weren’t just spiritual claims. They were political, cultural, and ideological — all built on the same structure. And that structure wasn’t designed to hold truth. It was designed to keep us oriented toward the institution.

Hope wasn’t something we built.
It was something we were issued.

And none of it was meant to survive contact with reality — only to keep us compliant long enough not to notice.

When that version of hope dies, you don’t just lose comfort.
You realize how much of your life was built on something that couldn’t hold your weight.

Institutions promise meaning, but they deliver maintenance.
They exist to preserve themselves, not you.

The Quiet That Follows

When the old framework collapses, what comes next looks like apathy from the outside. It can look like depression. But not all flatness is pathology.

Some of it is just honesty.

For me, this wasn’t the old depression creeping back. This wasn’t the familiar spiral. This was a stillness that came from no longer carrying the weight of pretend — no more performing faith, no more forcing optimism, no more narrating my life as if it were building toward something guaranteed.

This was the moment I realized how much of my life had been built on pretending.

When your internal narrator stops lying, you don’t get despair.
You get silence.

And silence feels unsettling when you’ve spent your whole life inside ideological noise.

The Whiplash of Seeing Clearly

Here’s what no one warns you about once the fog clears: the world looks both apocalyptic and absurdly ordinary at the same time.

On a macro scale, everything resembles a slow-motion unraveling — political erosion, religious extremism, climate instability, the social fabric fraying at every edge. Humanity sprinting toward a wall with complete confidence and no brakes.

On a micro scale, you’re just trying to get through the week. Trying to make a meal your body will tolerate. Trying to finish five minutes of a podcast you’re not sure anyone is waiting for. Trying to keep your kids alive and vaguely nourished.

It’s disorienting.

Everything matters too much, and nothing matters at all.

Living in that tension is exhausting — but it’s also accurate. And after years of filtered living, accuracy doesn’t feel comforting.

It feels almost violent.

Building Meaning With Your Own Hands

Once the scaffolding collapses, the inevitable question surfaces:

If systems can’t be trusted — now what?

The answer is uncomfortable, but it’s the only honest one:

You have to build meaning yourself.

Not the Pinterest version of “choose joy.”
Not some recycled mantra about reclaiming your power.

I mean the slow, unglamorous work of constructing a life that means something to you — without a theology to validate it, without an institution to house it, without a movement to give it momentum.

And no one prepares you for how quiet that work is.
How little feedback you get.
How invisible it feels.

Hope built on systems will always collapse.
Hope built on ideology will always disappoint.
Hope built on certainty is always one crisis away from shattering.

The only hope that survives deconstruction is the kind you forge yourself — the kind no preacher, parent, or political movement can hijack.

No Map, But Tools

For years, religion sold us the promise of a map — follow the rules, memorize the verses, tithe your percentage, and you’ll find the straight path through the maze.

But those maps were drawn by people who never escaped the labyrinth either.

There is no map.
There never was.

But there are tools.

We all carry them, though most of us were trained to set them down or distrust them:

Curiosity.
Compassion.
Memory.
Humor.
Community.
Truth-telling.
Boundaries.
Discernment that isn’t rooted in fear.

None of these will fast-track you out of the labyrinth.
That’s the point.

They don’t exist to get you out.
They exist to help you move through it without losing yourself.

The Hope That Remains

This is the part that doesn’t get talked about enough — not the loss, but what grows in the space left behind.

Not “God will fix this.”
Not “the church will change.”
Not “everything happens for a reason.”

Just this:

I can build a small, honest life in a broken world.
I can love people without needing a theology to justify it.
I can create meaning even when the future feels thin.
I can stop lying to myself — and call that hope.

It doesn’t look impressive.
It won’t win you a stage or a platform.
It’s quiet. Unremarkable. Entirely yours.

But it’s real.

And real, it turns out, is better than magical.

When suspension of disbelief dies, you don’t lose hope.
You lose the illusion that someone else is responsible for carrying it.

That’s not despair.

That’s adulthood without the myth.


About Stuart Delony
I’m Stuart Delony, a former pastor who walked out of the church but couldn’t shake the ways of Jesus. These days, I host Snarky Faith—a podcast and platform that wrestles with faith, culture, and meaning from the fringe. I’m not here to fix Christianity. I’m here to name what’s broken, find what’s still worth keeping, and hold space for the questions that don’t have clean answers. If you’ve been burned, disillusioned, or just done with the noise—welcome. You’re in good company. You can read more about the author here.
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