Why Dostoevsky Understood Your Anxiety Better Than Therapy | Crime and Punishment
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There is a specific kind of suffering nobody talks about honestly. It keeps you awake at three in the morning reviewing conversations from six years ago. It makes you feel like someone is about to knock on your door and ask you to account for yourself. Psychologists call parts of it anxiety. Parts of it guilt. In 1866, Dostoevsky described its interior more accurately than almost any therapist has managed since.
This is not an episode about a Russian novel. It is an episode about what guilt actually does inside a human being — and why some anxiety is not a disorder, but a signal.
In this episode:
— The problem: the gap between what you have done and who you thought you were
— The man: mock execution, Siberia, gambling, debt — why Dostoevsky wrote from inside suffering, not above it
— The novel: what Crime and Punishment is really about (not the crime)
— The insight: why Raskolnikov's collapse reveals something true about your own mind
— The resolution: why confession matters — not religiously, but psychologically
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MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE
→ Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky — listen on Audible: [YOUR AUDIBLE AFFILIATE LINK]
→ The Brothers Karamazov — coming later this season
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Classic literature made genuinely accessible. Every episode takes one great novel and asks: what does this book understand about modern life that we have forgotten? New episodes every week.
Keywords: Dostoevsky, Crime and Punishment, anxiety and guilt, classic literature, literary analysis, Russian literature, Raskolnikov, books explained, what great novels teach us, philosophy through fiction
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