The Horror of Eternal Consciousness | The Jaunt

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Quinn's Ideas

Quinn's Ideas

Күн бұрын

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@breadstick4458
@breadstick4458 Жыл бұрын
On extra detail left out, there was also a story where a guy threw his wife through the jaunt alive, but with no destination.. His lawyers pleaded not guilty, since she technically wasn’t dead. When everyone realised what that meant the guy got a worse sentence than for murder. I think that’s one of the worst fates in fiction, at least the kid and the prisoner eventually died, she’s just gonna be in the jaunt for an inconceivable amount of time, and it won’t ever end.
@Vaalbeast
@Vaalbeast Жыл бұрын
That is deeply more horrifying than the people who (eventually) came out the other side.
@Randalor
@Randalor Жыл бұрын
Looking back on the story, that small side detail is probably the most horrifying part of the story. If being in the void for a fraction of a second becomes an eternity of nothingness for the mind and drives the person to madness and death, what does being in there for minutes, let alone hours, days, weeks, or monthes do? Considering the physical effects of experiencing the void while conscience for a fraction of a second (white hair, yellowed eyes), IF she ever returned, would we even recognize her as human?
@meatybtz
@meatybtz Жыл бұрын
@@Randalor And thus IT came into being...
@mrbuck5059
@mrbuck5059 Жыл бұрын
@@Randalor she is in there so long that she turns into a Boltzman brain. She could create her own universe.
@cfh0384
@cfh0384 Жыл бұрын
I just stumbled upon this tale toady. I am an atheist, yet this has been my idea of a personal hell for many years. Terrifying. Far worse than not existing.
@MrJedimedic
@MrJedimedic Жыл бұрын
“Longer than you think” gave me chills after his dad’s description of eternity.
@pappas610
@pappas610 7 ай бұрын
All the dad said was that eternity awaits them should they remain conscious.
@Tethloach1
@Tethloach1 7 ай бұрын
7:17 I liked that part
@mccanlessdesign
@mccanlessdesign 5 ай бұрын
Always my favorite King line!
@sterlingcampbell2116
@sterlingcampbell2116 3 ай бұрын
Right? Especially when you recall that his dad theorized "billions of years".
@Ass_grabber
@Ass_grabber 2 ай бұрын
Emesis blue
@braedenhunt3677
@braedenhunt3677 Жыл бұрын
I remember discussing this in my high school Lit. class. Someone had the incredible thought that "longer than you think" could mean "longer than you *can* think." As in, there are only so many thoughts that you can possibly have, but the amount of time it takes to think those thoughts pales in comparison to the infinite time that you *must* think. You will think those same thoughts over and over again forever as you run out of what you can think of.
@MySerpentine
@MySerpentine Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I thought of that too. Or maybe it's so long that you forget how to think . . .
@sweetlew8725
@sweetlew8725 Жыл бұрын
​@@MySerpentineor more so lose the ability to think...imagine having every thought humanly possible but all at once like a tv with every channel showing but you cant focus on any one thing or sound
@sentientcardboarddumpster7900
@sentientcardboarddumpster7900 Жыл бұрын
Getting lost in the thought of getting lost in a thought
@Whyistruth
@Whyistruth Жыл бұрын
This is a perfect description of the thought loop
@xXLunatikxXlul
@xXLunatikxXlul Жыл бұрын
@@sweetlew8725 *pain*
@flibber123
@flibber123 Жыл бұрын
For me the horror is in the implications of "longer than you think". The dad had explained to his kids that one guy said it was eternity in there. The dad speculated that it could be an eternity of eternities in there. Think about that. An eternity of eternities. Then at the end the son says it's longer than you think. What could feel longer than an eternity of eternities? Whatever it is, it apparently doesn't destroy your mind. At least two people come through the jaunt and actually speak coherently, the son even recognizes his dad AND remembers their previous conversation. The shock of being back in physical form is where the problem comes in. This means you never are released from experiencing whatever it is you experience while jaunting. You will never be driven insane so that at least you have no idea of how much you are suffering. The kid retained his mind to the point that he could quantify that it was longer than his dad suspected. Now consider that in the story a woman was sent out on a jaunt that had no exit point. She's jaunting permanently...and it's longer than you think.
@captainyossarian388
@captainyossarian388 7 ай бұрын
Reminds me of the young engineer that gets pulled into the core in Event Horizon. That infinite stare he had when he came back out.
@velocity1238
@velocity1238 6 ай бұрын
Quantum superposition. What state of being occurred? Who knows. This leaves the implication that Jaunts cause a quantum superposition which really screws up the mind itself which heavily relies on theoretically a bunch of quantum mechanisms.
@legitusername-zl7to
@legitusername-zl7to 6 ай бұрын
the indomitable human spirit:
@garlicbreadstick404
@garlicbreadstick404 6 ай бұрын
​@@captainyossarian388 which story is that? It sounds interesting
@shiinondogewalker2809
@shiinondogewalker2809 5 ай бұрын
Eternity means endless time. The jaunts clearly had ends so they are by definition not eternal. In the case you describe with the woman then it's as long as I'd think when I hear eternal
@PNW_Marxist
@PNW_Marxist Жыл бұрын
This was one of my favorite King stories growing up. The sheer existential horror of it rocked me as a child, and it still gives me chills looking back.
@janerecluse4344
@janerecluse4344 Жыл бұрын
But what happened to the *mice?*
@nathantowns2043
@nathantowns2043 Жыл бұрын
It's eternity in there
@EvenTheDogAgrees
@EvenTheDogAgrees Жыл бұрын
He was my favourite writer, growing up. And while his novels were the main draw for me, he was also a damn good writer of short stories. The Jaunt, The Mist, The Raft, The Boogeyman. I'm sure I'm missing some, but these immediately come to mind as some of his stories that had quite an impact on teenage me.
@brianback3865
@brianback3865 Жыл бұрын
This one and the long walk were my 2 favorite short stories by him.
@veramae4098
@veramae4098 Жыл бұрын
I've always found King boring. And I've always known "wishing to live forever" was a really bad idea. The only story about living forever I liked was an astrophysicist making a deal with the devil to find the answers to many questions. The demon in charge thinks its done when they make their first jump to a blue star. The astrophysicist is gleeful "No, no, there's so many other questions to answer!" The demon's "heart" sinks, just how long was this going to take? Veering to another idea: There are a couple of sentences at the start of Genesis that state God is lonely and wishes there were others like him ... to be friends! So he creates the universe and etc. They'll never be "God" but they will be alive. And friends.
@trifectaofchris
@trifectaofchris Жыл бұрын
Had this as an assigned reading in a science fiction class I took in high school. I remember thinking the teacher was a mad lad for assigning such an existential and horrifying story to be dissected by 14 year olds. So incredible grateful for that class and opening me up to the larger genre of cosmic horror.
@jimtroeltsch5998
@jimtroeltsch5998 Жыл бұрын
Woah! You had a scifi class in highschool? That's pretty neat. I was able to take one in university, but in HS we just had an english class.
@TR4R
@TR4R Жыл бұрын
You had an interesting course back then. I'm from Costa Rica and we're exposed to violence in literature at high-school but nothing disturbing, there's a big difference between the two concepts that only a handful of authors can master.
@trifectaofchris
@trifectaofchris Жыл бұрын
@@jimtroeltsch5998 yes it was an elective available only to seniors and I remember being so eager to take it all throughout high school. The teacher was a brilliant oddball who spoke in such strange mannerisms that everyone in the class thought he was an alien.
@trifectaofchris
@trifectaofchris Жыл бұрын
@@TR4R Wow that’s super interesting how your school was a bit more restrictive on the reading material that was taught. I think even in the USA there are big differences between states when it comes to assigned reading. The most graphic book that I can recall reading in High School was Night by Elie Weisel; the historical weight of the story being a true recollection making it all the worse.
@TR4R
@TR4R Жыл бұрын
@@trifectaofchris I guess the two most violent books that I read back in the day were "La Vorágine" from José Eustasio Rivera and "El Reino de Este Mundo" from Alejo Carpentier. Both are classics from the remote and violent past of Latin America, so you can have an idea, political oppression, murders, rape, torture (not that much), slavery and so on, business as usual.
@thechaosmonkey
@thechaosmonkey Жыл бұрын
Resting this story years ago has always made me wish that King played around with sci-fi more than he traditionally has.
@gerdsfargen6687
@gerdsfargen6687 Жыл бұрын
Hell yes! This was a true gem. Slow build up...but one banger of a finish.
@luketien928
@luketien928 11 ай бұрын
There was another one called “The Shortcut”, if memory serves… also sci-fi like.
@gughunterx437
@gughunterx437 9 ай бұрын
@@luketien928 I think it was Mrs. Todd's Shortcut. It's been a while since I read it but it was pretty Lovecraftian.
@alexandertiberius1098
@alexandertiberius1098 7 ай бұрын
Stephen King is a Sci-Fi Horror writer. IT, Tommyknockers, Carrie, Firestarter, 11/32/63, The Dead Zone, Under The Dome, Cell, The Running Man, and The Mist are all Sci-Fi and those are just the ones I can think of.
@Deadclown45acp
@Deadclown45acp 5 ай бұрын
​​@alexandertiberius1098 Check out The Long Walk. I believe it's under Richard Bachman
@H1kari_1
@H1kari_1 11 ай бұрын
I will alreays remember that short scene from a Black Mirror episode. It was about the end, where there was a simulation of a person in a device but it was conscious. The person who held the device could do basically whatever they wanted to the consciousness. The whole episode revolved about getting information out of it since it consciousness was a copy of a criminal or something, but after they were done the handler made the consciousness experience tens of thousands of years in the same vitual unchaning room with the flick of a wrist. For me this was pure horror and makes death seem like a even fair and necesssary thing.
@SMG2fanatic
@SMG2fanatic 11 ай бұрын
I remember that episode. The thing that was crazy was during the conversation between the two employees about whether or not to leave it on over Christmas, some 200 or 500 thousand years had already passed. The conscious copy in there already experienced an eternity and was already completely insane in that brief moment. They ended up leaving it on anyway. I swear, the people in Black Mirror are sometimes unrealistically cruel. Or, at least I hope real people wouldn’t be so cruel, even if the consciousness isn’t an actual person and came from a murderer. I don’t believe in Hell for this very reason. Infinite punishment for something done in a finite life is cruel and unusual. I believe everyone in such a place would be deserving of mercy, even if I have to say it through gritted teeth.
@jdhenge
@jdhenge 10 ай бұрын
I remember that episode also. It was called White Christmas. I can't bring myself to watch it a 2nd time
@Brandon-1996
@Brandon-1996 10 ай бұрын
​@@SMG2fanatic Infinite punishment for a finite life. Me trying to wrap my head around that kind of existential dread as a kid with the pastor or guest speaker saying "even children go to hell", in combination with my dad saying "if anyone deserves to go there, it's Hitler", forced me to think about it and realise that if God were to send Hitler there, he'd have to be infinitely more evil than Hitler. I've been free of that shit for a decade, and the left-over resentment has been manageble, fortunately. I still relate better to the values of Christians than the average non-Christian.
@TheHulaHoop12
@TheHulaHoop12 10 ай бұрын
Exactly what I thought as well, the guy who created it punished a disobedient girl inside it, he left her to do nothing for 6 months, after that she was begging to do something, now imagine that guy inside there having to experience millions of years, your mind can’t even comprehend it
@ionisator1
@ionisator1 10 ай бұрын
@@SMG2fanatic I fundamentally believe that no one deserves Hell. 1. Burning? For even a day? Unbelievably terrifying to think about that. I already wouldn't wish that upon anyone, I guess. 2. Eternity? For a finite crime? No way. Eternity is absolutely ridiculous. Even after a googolplexian years, you're no closer to the end. ESPECIALLY assuming you never lose consciousness, this punishment would be too cruel regardless of how much physical pain you suffered. NOBODY deserves Hell. Not even Hitler, nor any other terrible person deserves it. I would rather be skinned alive than send a single person to Hell.
@ryanlegros2049
@ryanlegros2049 Жыл бұрын
The Jaunt is probably my favorite Stephen King story. The idea is truly horrifying if you can wrap your head around the idea around losing yourself slowly over time as it stretches on.
@FourthDerivative
@FourthDerivative 9 ай бұрын
One of the best horror stories ever. No ghosts or monsters required- just the frailty of the human mind pitted against the impossible vastness of time.
@rafaelgustavo7786
@rafaelgustavo7786 Жыл бұрын
This concept reminded me a little of what would happen to the mind of Leto II, The God Emperor of Dune, each piece of his mind separated into several locations and in an eternal dream. This concept is fantastic, very fantastic. The idea of ​​you being everywhere and nowhere.
@NuclearDetractor
@NuclearDetractor Жыл бұрын
I've been doing ketamine therapy and the first time i "fell into a k-hole" was horrific. Time and space are infinite; you lose memory of who you are or were. Everything is just your conscious mind blending color, shape, sound, smell, into one singular sensation that fills your entire universe. The realization that I was a single conscious entity that existed eternally and would go on existing eternally was horrifying but finally coming to terms with it and accepting it was the opposite of horrific. It was the most liberating feeling i've ever had. The words, "it's eternity in there" really hit me.
@patreekotime4578
@patreekotime4578 Жыл бұрын
Same thoughts about Leto's shattered consciousness. But it's even worse than that... he has no mind! the sandtrout don't appear to have brains as we understand them... so no thought process... only existence... only the unthinking observation and awareness of existence forever and ever and ever... stretched thinner and thinner with every division.
@maeton-gaming
@maeton-gaming Жыл бұрын
you all need to study neoplatonics ;) You would love what you find there. Im beginning to suspect King knew about certain neoplatonic philosophy and has worked it in.
@TheCorrodedMan
@TheCorrodedMan Жыл бұрын
His fate is a bit less horrifying I think. He’s not aware, per se, of his state as a disembodied mind. He’s dreaming, as it says.
@Wertsir
@Wertsir Жыл бұрын
@@NuclearDetractorI haven’t done Ketamine, but the one time i tried salvia i experienced a hallucination of demon made of shadows rising up through a hole in the floor, and peeling off my skin like you would peel an apple, then tossing me into the hole. After entering the hole, i went to hell, and i spent thousands of years there suffering in that place, and then i snapped back to reality mere seconds after i had left, my body intact, and made a note to never smoke salvia again. The part of the experience that really bothered me is that, it really didn’t feel like a dream or hallucination. It felt _real._ It felt _more_ real than this, _any_ of this, even now. When i think back on those millennia they still seem to stretch out, eclipsing the rest of my life. To the point where sometimes it feels like this life is the dream, and the shadow demon is just toying with me to lull me into a false sense of security so he can start the torture all over again. A brief reprieve from eternity. So anyway I try not to think about it because that shit is crazy, and that way lies only madness. The moral of the story is never fucking try salvia, even if its legal where you are. Shit sucks so hard.
@jacobmullin3428
@jacobmullin3428 Жыл бұрын
The Jaunt is ultimately one of my favorite stories of all time. It is so simple and so deeply disturbing, when I first read it at 12 in the tent on my camping trip I was enamored and reread it immediately. It kept me up that night, and every so often keeps me up again. Truly a great marvel of creative writing.
@Loreweavver
@Loreweavver Жыл бұрын
I love the simplicity of this story. They aren't traveling through some clive barker hell demention that drives them mad but just... Nothing...
@foop145
@foop145 Жыл бұрын
Reminds me of "The Long Dream" by Junji Ito. It's a short manga about a guy who has increasingly long dreams. At first, they're no more than a day or two, but eventually they stretch to years and decades and beyond. I won't spoil any more than that, but it's a really great read for anyone looking to explore this concept a little more.
@daedalus1453
@daedalus1453 11 ай бұрын
just went and read it and wow, that was pretty damn good dude
@foop145
@foop145 11 ай бұрын
@@daedalus1453 Yeah, Junji Ito is an absolute god at horror. Definitely check out his other stuff if you liked it. I recommend The Enigma of Amigara Fault, and Uzumaki is pretty good too if you're looking for something that's longer. There's also an anime, but it's pretty shit, so I don't recommend that lol
@daedalus1453
@daedalus1453 11 ай бұрын
@@foop145 thank you! very excited to check those out :D
@foop145
@foop145 11 ай бұрын
@@daedalus1453 cheers!
@milliondollarmistake
@milliondollarmistake 11 ай бұрын
I don't think Junji Ito delves into sc-fi too often but the one story I read was pretty good. It's called "Hellstar Remina" and although it gets a little goofy in some places overall it's really interesting. The concept of something millions of lightyears away somehow noticing that it's being watched by a telescope is just cool lol
@clearcutter74
@clearcutter74 Жыл бұрын
"Jaunt" is such a perfect word for this story. Its normal connotation is a quick, enjoyable trip but King turns it into an eternity of horror, twisting a word that isn't supposed to be associated with horror into something terrifying. He's a master at finding horror where it isn't supposed to be (lawnmowers, vending machines, clowns, the family dog, etc...)
@romanmanner
@romanmanner Жыл бұрын
Yes, juxtaposition is a mother 😊
@darthwyvvern
@darthwyvvern Жыл бұрын
You summed that up nicely friend
@isthattrue
@isthattrue Жыл бұрын
​@@thegodplace7887You hope he never stops writing. That's very dark humour. I just read the story and am still shaken by it.
@finickybits8055
@finickybits8055 Жыл бұрын
Confused why Quinn said it was first used in that novel though, when it's from the 1700s at minimum... First used in scifi as a...thing? I mean, I guess.
@vertigo2894
@vertigo2894 Жыл бұрын
If they are in there mentally for an eternity, then they would never get out. What do they mean by eternity in this sense? A century?
@kajjeletam7957
@kajjeletam7957 Жыл бұрын
I literally rewatched Cronenberg's The Fly three days ago and thought of this deeply unsettling short story. The description of the son is truly something horrifying. It also reminds me of the 1997 horrorfilm Event Horizon. I find these type of cosmic horror stories in which characters go through portals or enter other (hellish) dimensions extremely scary. Great video!
@jchampagne2
@jchampagne2 Жыл бұрын
Never mind eighty-ish years, our minds begin to fray if we are conscious for more than a few days without the relief of sleep. I think that's the true horror of the Jaunt; an eternity of day-night cycles with at least the rhythm and release of sleep would be bad enough but imagine an eternity of CONTINUOUS consciousness.
@ankansenapati3600
@ankansenapati3600 Жыл бұрын
How can it be eternity if they came back
@winwinmilieudefensie7757
@winwinmilieudefensie7757 Жыл бұрын
You start hallucinating hearing and seeing things voices scenarios whole ass people you wont feel alone for long .. and with constant sleepless consciousness before you know it it feels like normal life .. maybe this universe is that😂
@someoneelse3456
@someoneelse3456 Жыл бұрын
@@ankansenapati3600 That's a good question. It could just be "essentially" an eternity - until the heat death of the universe etc.
@mikicerise6250
@mikicerise6250 Жыл бұрын
Yeah they just spend as long as it takes for another universe to randomly arise in which they just happen to pop out the other end. Yikes, and you thought a trans-Atlantic flight made you stir crazy. 😅
@N.M.E.
@N.M.E. Жыл бұрын
@@ankansenapati3600 There are different kinds of infinity. "Countable" infinity, like 1, 2, 3 ... ထ, but also "uncountable infinity" e.g. all numbers between 0 and 1 (0.0000...ထ...01, 0.0000...ထ...02 and so on) Here, there are infinitely many steps within a finite sum. or phrased differently: The finite space is infinitely divisible into infinitely small steps. one can not even begin to make any meaningful progress toward reaching 1, or 0.1, or 0.000000000000001, within any finite amount of time. Perhaps the passing of time within the Jaunt is comparable to counting this "uncountable infinity". At least that's how i imagine it.
@bobross8569
@bobross8569 Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite short stories,and every time i think about it i am also reminded of the sentence one of my science teachers spoke to us "you think that the stars shine at night but not all of them actually do,the universe is a vast place and you may be seeing now the light of a star that died a million years ago."
@willytingles
@willytingles Жыл бұрын
I love reading horror, but rarely does anything I'm reading translate into that visceral ripple of fear that comes from an unconscious response to something terrifying. I remember reading this story for the first time and thinking it was super interesting but more sci-fi than horror.... until the last few lines when the kid comes out of the jaunt screaming "Longer than you think!" over and over again. It really caught me off guard, and I felt a wave of goosebumps all over. Such a good piece of writing. Giving me goosebumps rn just thinking about it.
@TheCorrodedMan
@TheCorrodedMan Жыл бұрын
That’s what got me. Jesus, what’s longer than eternity?
@N0sf3r4tuR1s3n
@N0sf3r4tuR1s3n Жыл бұрын
And he also gouges out his own eyes if I remember correctly.
@willytingles
@willytingles Жыл бұрын
@@N0sf3r4tuR1s3n He does! It's such a gut wrenching scene
@YoungSlim51
@YoungSlim51 Жыл бұрын
That visceral ripple of fear is exactly what I got when I first encountered "I have no mouth and I must scream"
@mrbuck5059
@mrbuck5059 Жыл бұрын
I rescue people's minds out of the Jaunt. I work with Nigilum and Q.
@dmk7700
@dmk7700 Жыл бұрын
My best friend (now passed) said that to understand death you have to imagine what is was like before you were born.
@taotzu1339
@taotzu1339 6 ай бұрын
If the soul is eternal, then it is a good thing that we were not conscious or awake before the time we were born. Otherwise, we'd all be crazy lunatics when born.
@orwellianson
@orwellianson 6 ай бұрын
There is no such thing as a soul.
@Enzo012
@Enzo012 6 ай бұрын
@@taotzu1339 We are crazy lunatics when born? Limbs flailing over the place screaming away, no sensible conversation.
@Enzo012
@Enzo012 6 ай бұрын
@@orwellianson Soul tends to mean your individual consciousness so that exists.
@Enzo012
@Enzo012 6 ай бұрын
There's no before or after but there could be a 'sideways' if parallel universes exist.
@AFNacapella
@AFNacapella Жыл бұрын
on the Trek transporters lore: there is one Barklay focussed TNG episode where we see his POV being uninterupted while beaming, the old surroundings fading into the new. this suggests people stay conscious in the matterstream. at least during de-re-materialization the beamed matter is allowed to interact with itself, even if still in different locations.
@Quasimodo-mq8tw
@Quasimodo-mq8tw Жыл бұрын
Which in the same episode they tell him, is not what is suppossed to be happen. You should not be aware in the Transporter...
@JB52520
@JB52520 Жыл бұрын
Yet Scotty stayed stuck in a pattern buffer for 75 years before being rescued.
@ShawnMCowles
@ShawnMCowles Жыл бұрын
There are at least three other instances of people being merged / separated by the transporter as well. Thomas Riker is the most interesting, I think, as it shows the transporter can create a perfect duplicate. Arguably there is no "original" Riker. There's Will, and Tom, both with equal claim at the instant of re-materialization
@mrbuck5059
@mrbuck5059 Жыл бұрын
​@@ShawnMCowlesthen Tuvix on ST Voyager. Tuvuk and Neelix merged.
@jacquestube
@jacquestube Жыл бұрын
But here's the problem though, it might be uninterrupted but there's no way to tell if it's not just the perspective of yourself going into a new body and somehow or another it's so instantaneous you don't realize that you've transferred into a new body
@georgeoldsterd8994
@georgeoldsterd8994 Жыл бұрын
I remember reading Asimov's The Last Question, and it's had such an impact on me. Still one of my favourite pieces of sci-fi literature.
@hannat6406
@hannat6406 Жыл бұрын
Yesss, the last lines of it give me goosebumps every time, such great writing
@kittybuckley3
@kittybuckley3 Жыл бұрын
I love that story...I like to think that is what may happen or did happen or will happen.
@Ristaak
@Ristaak Жыл бұрын
Truly one of the best short stories out there.
@dalriada
@dalriada Жыл бұрын
Strange that Asimovs story is hopeful, even though it foretells endless cycles of repeated existence whereas King’s is horrifying. What’s the real difference between them though?
@NOOB-ps8km
@NOOB-ps8km Жыл бұрын
​@@dalriadait's the same difference in Liminal Spaces. You can walk around forever in those places and never find anyone, you are free. You can run around everywhere always and never never escape, you are trapped. Similar to the phrase "You may not sleep now there are monsters nearby".
@CSLucasEpic
@CSLucasEpic Жыл бұрын
I am reminded of an Argentinean graphic novel which was discontinued after a couple of issues (which is a pitty because it was good). In it, we find out that because humanity has managed to completely uncover all secrets of the Human Gemone, strange, seemingly random events are happening worldwide. Some are affecting things like causing acid to rain in a city, or fire becoming bubbles on one location. However, other events affect humans directly, and they are disturbing to say the least. In particular, one of the events is that a random bank security guard in Scotland suddenly takes out his gun, yells out "I now know the secret origin of the Universe!" and self terminates with his gun by shooting his own head immediately after he yells that.
@Dondillilochevrolet
@Dondillilochevrolet Жыл бұрын
What’s the name
@hireslehibousacre756
@hireslehibousacre756 Жыл бұрын
It seams dope as hell, what is its name?
@NuclearDetractor
@NuclearDetractor Жыл бұрын
Sort of sounds like an episode of Doctor Who where people start killing themselves after learning a secret of their reality.
@theonewhoistornapart2506
@theonewhoistornapart2506 Жыл бұрын
Can we please have the name of this graphic novel?
@chungwahcancion7870
@chungwahcancion7870 7 ай бұрын
Upright Citizens Brigade called it The Bucket of Truth
@TheBestGamingMomentsYT
@TheBestGamingMomentsYT 11 ай бұрын
"When they figured out how to bring us back, some of us would tell stories about what we saw on the other side. We saw old friends, family, mostly strangers. I spoke to my grandfather. He's been dead for thirty years." "What'd he tell ya?" "It's eternity in there..." - Dell Conagher
@thisguy4517
@thisguy4517 3 ай бұрын
That’s my favorite scene in Emesis Blue.
@yourmomisveryobese4418
@yourmomisveryobese4418 3 ай бұрын
“When Blud figured out how to bring a sigma back, some of us would tell stories of what we saw in Ohio. We saw big chungus, banban, mostly dead memes. I spoke to harambe. He’s been dead for 6 years.” “What did Blud say?” “It’s skibidi in there”
@Skibbityboo0580
@Skibbityboo0580 Жыл бұрын
I read this short story when I was a kid and it freaked me out for months!
@archlich4489
@archlich4489 Жыл бұрын
It reminds me of that storm the plane flew through in "The Langoliers." Everyone who was asleep crossed over, but everyone awake disappeared, leaving clothes, watches, fillings, etc.
@theonewhoistornapart2506
@theonewhoistornapart2506 Жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing. It seems almost connected.
@BruklinBridge
@BruklinBridge Жыл бұрын
Thank you for being one of the only people to ever use the "beyond comprehension" phrase properly, and not as an exaggeration.
@BigPurpleCarrot
@BigPurpleCarrot Жыл бұрын
Weird comment but okay haha
@legoaddiction8607
@legoaddiction8607 Жыл бұрын
@@BigPurpleCarrotthey’re just exaggerating
@nBasedAce
@nBasedAce Жыл бұрын
Pedantry will get you nowhere.
@savvyb54
@savvyb54 Жыл бұрын
One of the only people ever. We checked...
@mrbuck5059
@mrbuck5059 Жыл бұрын
I'm just going to stick with Zefran Cochranes Warp Drive or the borg quantum slipstream tech modified to Federation tech. No warhammer warp, no jaunting, and no bloody Brundle Fly teleportation. Forget it. Zefran Cochrane is the man.
@seb1520
@seb1520 3 ай бұрын
You genuinely made me feel fear and squirm in my seat when you described this story. Amazing video. I actually felt the existential dread. It’s weird how the concept of this story just somehow makes sense. Being in this sort of “gap” between reality where time literally doesn’t exist yet our consciousness is left to interpret that gap in reality. It’s “forever” in there because it never ends, yet somehow we could be yanked out of it. It’s like asking what the end of infinity is, yet paradoxically that is what happens in this story. Fucking genius writing, and of course we’re saying this about Stephen King
@lorraineproselenes
@lorraineproselenes Жыл бұрын
This is the story I always talk about when people ask me about Stephen King. The idea of being trapped in a void… terrifying.
@chriscooper654
@chriscooper654 Жыл бұрын
Good analysis and commentary, as always. Also made me think of Tolkien's Middle Earth setting, in which death is called "the gift of Men" from the creator god Illuvitar; the idea that humans weren't intended to live eternally in the mortal world, but die and go on to another existence better-suited for them.
@SatyreIkon
@SatyreIkon Жыл бұрын
This is one of my favourite King stories of them all. It's such a terrifyingly vast concept in such a comparably small story, and of course wonderfully written.
@jiltedarts
@jiltedarts 8 ай бұрын
Ever since i discovered Stephen Kings' works in the 80's i have been a fan, he weaves tales that shift on both sides of horror from the extreme to the quiet and its the quiet horror stories that really shine because of the nuanced ways they play out.
@happygreenclean
@happygreenclean Жыл бұрын
I just learned about The Jaunt literally two hours ago on you tube. This is crazy.
@NinaNiterose86
@NinaNiterose86 6 ай бұрын
This was always my favourite Stephen King story. I read it when I was Ricky's age and never forgot about it ever since. At that time, I was on a long road trip with my parents and I've never complained about travelling by car again.
@isirlasplace91
@isirlasplace91 Жыл бұрын
I wish all my audiobooks were narrated by this man!!! Love your voice!
@gerdsfargen6687
@gerdsfargen6687 Жыл бұрын
With you on this!
@elektro3000
@elektro3000 11 ай бұрын
This has always been one of my favorite King yarns. I recently listened to two similar stories on The Dark Somnium channel that explore a similar idea, not quite being isolated in nothingness but almost. They are based on the premise of a drug that accelerates human thinking (but not human movement) but, in the case of an unexpected reaction with Ambien, the effect is multiplied to unimaginable time scales (one character perceives something like eight million years curled up on a subway platform after the reaction kicks in). Those stories propose that the human mind, devoid of stimulus but somehow kept alive, would slowly begin forgetting EVERYTHING, including language, and with enough time, simply erase all synapses and become blank jelly. Stephen King's description of people emerging insane and ready to die, but still capable of communication, makes me wonder how long he really imagined the Jaunt to be. Certainly it cannot truly be eternity, or else the person would never emerge. So how long might it take an isolated mind to reach that state? A century? A millennium? Ten millennia?
@globus1971
@globus1971 6 ай бұрын
Wouldn't the decay of the synapses be a physical event? And if the 'real' time passing during a standard jaunt is so short there can be no detrimental physical effect on the brain does that mean the blank jelly effect simply wouldn't have time to occur? ie. the 'victim' would be alert and conscious and fully aware for aeons? That's how I view it but I'm happy to be corrected . . . thanks for the Dark Sonmium tip though, will give it a look.
@NeoDarkling
@NeoDarkling Жыл бұрын
Stephen King is a true master of the short story. To be able to write something so short and yet so impactful is preternatural. I remember reading this decades ago as a teenager and it is still one of the best and most disturbing stories I've ever read.
@AnkhAnanku
@AnkhAnanku Жыл бұрын
I don’t know. In this one he wasted a lot of time talking about petro-dollars and the stock market in terms and detail someone 300 years in the future wouldn’t care to relate to their pre-teen children. It could have used another pass in editing is all im saying…
@wakaneut
@wakaneut 7 ай бұрын
Read many King's short stories. This is the only one that stuck in my head for decades. The horror is another level.
@Dan-ji4db
@Dan-ji4db Жыл бұрын
I read this story as a young teenager and never forgot it. It was such psychological horror. What would your mind become if it were conscious but trapped for 10,000 years?
@isthattrue
@isthattrue Жыл бұрын
That would be already about 125 life times. Unfathomably long. But remember the line "Here was a creature older than time". If we take this literally, we should assume at least 13.8 billion years (age of the universe). It literally is unimaginable.
@k1dn1ce76
@k1dn1ce76 Жыл бұрын
I always wondered what the thoughts would 'sound' like and be construed of once enough time had passed and the psyche had begun to unravel? I can see it splitting into at least 2 parts at first and having conversations with itself but eventually this would erode and decay and the very sense of self would begin to deconstruct. What would the thoughts 'sound like then?!
@waverlyking6045
@waverlyking6045 Жыл бұрын
Keep in mind that the physical time spent for a jaunt (so short that it is almost nothing) has an inverse relationship with the psychological time (so long that it might as well be eternal).
@Dan-ji4db
@Dan-ji4db Жыл бұрын
@@waverlyking6045 interesting, is that mentioned in the story? Been a while since i read it
@waverlyking6045
@waverlyking6045 Жыл бұрын
@@Dan-ji4db It’s been a while since I have read it also. I can’t remember if it’s stated but it’s certainly implied.
@ThisValiantAdventure
@ThisValiantAdventure 9 ай бұрын
Thank you for covering this. Always thought this story and concept were underrated and it’s been rolling in the back of my mind for 30 years or so. Longer than you’d think!
@marcomoscoso7402
@marcomoscoso7402 Жыл бұрын
A beautifully written story that charges up slowly by bringing a very elaborate context and hits you hard at the very last moment. I remember when I read it first. Thank you for reviewing it in a full video!
@unncommonsense
@unncommonsense Жыл бұрын
The Jaunt is one of my favorite King stories because it really made me think. "It's eternity in there!"
@umbraklat
@umbraklat Жыл бұрын
Thanks for covering this story. I read it many years ago and it just stuck with me. Hard to forget that ending! What's worse, is that a small piece of me wonders what it would be like ...
@just_gut
@just_gut Жыл бұрын
I love this short story so much and it always feels like no one either read it or remembered it.
@slayerd357
@slayerd357 Жыл бұрын
The scariest part of this is no one really knows what it's like in there. It's been speculated that you're suspended in endless white for an unspecified amount of time...but nobody really knows for sure that that is exactly what it is. In the end after his son says "IT'S LONGER THAN YOU THINK!" King writes that he "said other things" and than his father started screaming. It chills my blood to think of what those "other things" were.
@mysticdevils
@mysticdevils 7 ай бұрын
twice stephen king has left me DYING to know conversations only referenced. this one and the conversation between the two finalists in the long walk that one of the kids saw when they were younger.... god what i wouldn't do to know what the winner was whispering
@Kirby-gu1lf
@Kirby-gu1lf 3 ай бұрын
I hear they plan to make a movie out of this maybe we will her these other things
@wegner7036
@wegner7036 3 ай бұрын
My head cannon is that the boy maintained his sanity and gouged his eyes out because he wasn't used to using his body and was just trying to rub his eyes. Then he promptly did go insane simply because of feeling the pain of gouging his eyes out. Because feeling pain for the first time in longer than you think must be pretty damn bad.
@NWPaul72
@NWPaul72 Жыл бұрын
Read this about 40 years ago, The Jaunt really stuck with me. I was about 12, and often tried learning through circumventing rules, this story really woke me up to why rules might exist.
@stephenmorton8017
@stephenmorton8017 Жыл бұрын
Lem explored this theme in a few short stories. Basically he said that humans want to live forever but not eternal life. There's a big difference.
@jacquestube
@jacquestube Жыл бұрын
Yeah but there's really no such thing as a eternal life, everything gets wiped out with heat death, there has to be some sort of energy to sustain consciousness
@NobleUnclean
@NobleUnclean Жыл бұрын
@@jacquestube The thing is 'heat death' has not been confirmed. The way people are talking about it, makes it seem like we have perfect knowledge of the end. Its just a theory, and not a particularly thorough one. I mean, we haven't even left our solar system yet, and people are talking like we are a interstellar race. When in reality we know almost nothing.
@jacquestube
@jacquestube Жыл бұрын
@@NobleUnclean you know what it has a hell of a lot more standing than the idea that there's some sort of disembodied Consciousness that can sustain itself
@NobleUnclean
@NobleUnclean Жыл бұрын
@@jacquestube I would agree, but that wasn't really my point. Although, I'm unsure what 'standing' means in this context.
@seanscott1308
@seanscott1308 11 ай бұрын
⁠@@jacquestubeThis is a strange comment. Just because our laws of physics prevent such an eternity, it's still a deeply interesting concept. Hypotheticals don't need to be real to be useful
@JackTheVulture
@JackTheVulture Жыл бұрын
Years ago, when i was a kid, I contemplated the reality of eternity, and ever since, sometimes when I'm lying awake at night, I cant fight it off, and the stress of it threatens to make me physically ill. the pit in my stomach. We are just creatures, we are not built to comprehend or withstand that.
@acephaedramusic9588
@acephaedramusic9588 Жыл бұрын
Perfect timing! I just finished your three body problem series and the bleakness of my feed gave me existential dread
@LearnThaiRapidMethod
@LearnThaiRapidMethod Жыл бұрын
I experienced eternity during a weed “trip”. I went for a walk on the mountain and had the impression that I would never die. The concept was frightening, to live forever, to continuously experience sensations and have to deal with life’s problems and with an eventual boredom that could never be overcome. NEVER. When I came down from my high, I deeply cherished my mortality. That one day it would all end and the struggle to survive and make sense of the world and get through each day would eventually end. Knowing that you will die one day helps to appreciate and enjoy the life you have, and even get through bad periods, pain and depression. If there were no end then every day would (eventually) become hell, an unimaginable torture!
@Bannerman1903
@Bannerman1903 Жыл бұрын
I've always remembered the end of The Jaunt since reading it 30 years ago.
@ihoryanchuk7406
@ihoryanchuk7406 19 күн бұрын
Finished it a couple of hours ago. Amazing and terrifying story. One of the best stories I've read
@TheColombianSpartan
@TheColombianSpartan Жыл бұрын
The scene that Fogiia went through is parodied in an animation called Emesis blue. Though instead of jaunting the person who says the words comes back from the afterlife instead. He comes back in a respawn machine and his eyes are lost. Then he is sent back in and the next respawn... well... it doesn't go well
@ToadAppreciator
@ToadAppreciator Жыл бұрын
Just watched that for the first time a couple days ago. It was awesome 👍
@DrBright5558
@DrBright5558 Жыл бұрын
I love emesis blue, it's an amazing movie.
@PhantomGato-v-
@PhantomGato-v- Жыл бұрын
Emesis Blue is really good
@GR8Trollio
@GR8Trollio 5 ай бұрын
I like that he put the entire script in the description. Makes it easier to follow. Nice touch
@nettewilson5926
@nettewilson5926 Жыл бұрын
Glad this story is getting attention. Classic cosmic horror!
@johnoneofmany
@johnoneofmany Жыл бұрын
I read this story when I was a teenager. It made me a Stephen King fan and was one of his tales that stayed with me my whole life. I often wonder if that's where we go when we die... There... Now you can mull that over too.
@sigilvii
@sigilvii Жыл бұрын
I read this story in like, middle school. Boy was it unsettling. It stuck with me, along with several other short stories in the collection I read (Skeleton Crew, 1985). There were some other sci-fi stories I remember, including "Beachworld", but "The Jaunt" was so much more horrifying.
@gerdsfargen6687
@gerdsfargen6687 Жыл бұрын
Right?? There were truly some slam bang scary shityourpants stories in it. The mix of subjects was insanely good!
@MySerpentine
@MySerpentine 10 ай бұрын
I definitely like "Beachworld," though. 'It's a beach in search of an ocean, mate.'
@seanchupp7455
@seanchupp7455 Жыл бұрын
I remember reading this story it still pops up in my mind every once in a while! Great story!
@Tarnished-bn5gq
@Tarnished-bn5gq Жыл бұрын
Emesis Blue’s existential horror depiction of this story’s main premise was masterful, and I doubt it’ll ever be done as well again. “It’s an eternity in there, longer than you think.”
@ImperialCaleb
@ImperialCaleb 3 ай бұрын
emesis blue was a massively drawn out reference fest. referring to better media doesn't make something better media
@SolarPunk80
@SolarPunk80 8 ай бұрын
This is one of the most terrifying concepts! I discovered this story when I was 13 at summer camp freaked me out and I still ponder it as an unspeakable hell 30 years later! Thank you Quinn! 😂❤
@sparrowhawk_lastname
@sparrowhawk_lastname Жыл бұрын
I'd like to recommend a somewhat obscure story, also about teleportation (of a sort) - Rogue Moon by Algis Budrys. It follows astronauts who've discovered a strange structure on the Moon, and attempt to explore it by using a form of teleportation where their original selves remain intact, and are temporarily synced up with their teleported selves, though only until they're killed by any misstep in the structure, and have to teleport another self to the moon to keep exploring. It's a very interesting story, with a take on teleportation that I haven't seen before.
@tomshep5258
@tomshep5258 10 ай бұрын
You cannot imagine being trapped in your mind. Not hearing, seeing, feeling, touching, speaking, or dreaming, but conscious for all of it, for billions and billions of years. Genius writing.
@trishachokshi8414
@trishachokshi8414 Жыл бұрын
Aaaaah! Not every day your favorite creator posts a video about your favorite cosmic horror story!! I love the existential terror of this classic. It’s a quick read with a gut-punching payoff, and a great one to recommend to people you might want to open some thoughtful discussions with. I always wondered… where does it stop being “eternity in there”? I assumed King was implying a living being’s awake consciousness will simultaneously perceive its experience of time inside the jaunt as *both* an infinite eternity *and* an instantaneous transition. What always scared me was the relatively common teleportation trope that it’s just a clone being generated in a new location and the original person dies. Because if conscious beings functionally “die” inside the jaunt and are then resurrected or cloned at the target location, the implication would be eternal “awake awareness” absent stimulus is the default state for consciousness when the body dies.
@isthattrue
@isthattrue Жыл бұрын
It is general consensus that the brain creates consciousness (i. e. no duality of body and soul). So the clone at the target location will have a brain that creates a new consciousness. The person, however, will feel like the original person as all of the original persons memories right up to the teleportation were copied.
@nekorena
@nekorena Жыл бұрын
My favorite short story from King! 🖤
@kristindreca.8859
@kristindreca.8859 Жыл бұрын
I like the warhammer 40k thumbmail art which shows a phyckers becoming a warp mutation. The warp has a simmilar feel to the jaunt and it does almost the same and an even worse damge. That was some great video! It made me intrested on theese book series, thanks!
@tiffanydegoya
@tiffanydegoya 5 ай бұрын
I read this SK short story years ago and it’s always stayed with me, absolutely terrifying
@ryanragan2206
@ryanragan2206 Жыл бұрын
Incredible video as always Quinn! The Jaunt definitely gives me Lovecraft vibes.... the ones that go through awake just don't have the required Insight, they needed eyes on the inside. Can't perceive the Eldritch Truth without lining the brain with eyes after all.
@juanperezchica650
@juanperezchica650 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for your analysis of The Jaunt by Stephen King. Quinn, I love watching your videos on my big screen smart television by the way. They entertain everyone in the room that is watching them! Two things that give humans a sense of the passage of time is the carcadian rhythm, which affects us physically, mentally, and behaviorally in a 24-hour cycle, and the vibration frequency of our individual atoms. When someone is teleported, he/she is literally liberated from the complex and elaborate constraints of these biological and atomic processes for the duration that the person is transported from point A to point B in space. When those biological and atomic processes are removed, maybe it feels like eternity, since there is nothing to help a human discern the passage of time in that brief moment. Teleportation, which causes consciousness to become disembodied for a brief moment, might just feel like an eternity (since there is no material clock acting on the consciousness to distinguish the passage of time). That is another possibility for what the awake teleporters might be experiencing during these jaunts. Quinn, I would love for you to do an analysis of the story The Cipher, by Kathe Koja. I think viewers would get a kick out of that one.
@johnathancorgan3994
@johnathancorgan3994 Жыл бұрын
This is by far my favorite Stephen King short story! Have you done anything on The Long Walk?
@Loreweavver
@Loreweavver Жыл бұрын
The Bachman books were by far better than his books with his real name.
@raymondcoventry1221
@raymondcoventry1221 Жыл бұрын
Still mad we didn't get Darabont's adaptation of The Long Walk on the big screen. That story has stuck with me since I was a boy.
@mysticdevils
@mysticdevils 7 ай бұрын
AHHHHHHHHHH MY FAVE BOOK OF HIS
@elisebrown5157
@elisebrown5157 Жыл бұрын
I think the brain and consciousness only travel for that fraction of a second, but it's completely outside of linear time. So it is experienced as an eternity. Thank you for reminding me about this story. I read it in my teens, and although I recalled the basics of the plot, I couldn't have told you the title or author. Nice to have those details back in my brain.
@thatfuzzypotato1877
@thatfuzzypotato1877 Жыл бұрын
This makes me think of "Ring" by Stephen Baxter and the fate of one character. It's a nightmare that gives me chills still to think about it and messed with me when I first read it.
@WeirdlyDrowning
@WeirdlyDrowning Жыл бұрын
This is one of my favourite sci fi stories and The Skeleton Crew is a fantastic collection.
@michaelwinters2574
@michaelwinters2574 Жыл бұрын
Great short from King. It horrified me as only a few have ever done. A much more breezier story about everlasting consciousness is “World Without End” by F. Gwynplaine MacIntyre. Pretty good
@isthattrue
@isthattrue Жыл бұрын
I cannot find the book that contains the story. Can you help me?
@michaelwinters2574
@michaelwinters2574 Жыл бұрын
Sure. There are two. The Mammoth Book of Apocalyptic SF and The Mammoth Book of the End of the World
@michaelwinters2574
@michaelwinters2574 Жыл бұрын
@@isthattrue Should be able to get them from a library digitally if you can.
@isthattrue
@isthattrue Жыл бұрын
@@michaelwinters2574 Thank you!
@meggammacisaacrylie7869
@meggammacisaacrylie7869 Жыл бұрын
This short story by King really twisted my brain the first time I read it years ago. Horror at it's finest.
@sebb3301
@sebb3301 Жыл бұрын
Kind of reminds me of long-term exposure to the One Ring; “I feel thin, sort of stretched, like butter scraped over too much bread.” They're of course two very different situations, but both make me think about how horrible immortality is
@kamikeserpentail3778
@kamikeserpentail3778 Жыл бұрын
Immortality need not be horrible. Some day I'll be immortal.
@jamesvonborcke
@jamesvonborcke Жыл бұрын
@@kamikeserpentail3778 Live forever or die trying!
@JoaoPedro-gc8mw
@JoaoPedro-gc8mw Жыл бұрын
I think immortality is only bad in two situations. When it is brute-forced in a being that was not made to endure it (you see a lot of myths about the dangers of wanting to be immortal, but none makes it seem that immortality is bad on the gods themselves), which can be solve by a more careful approach to achieving it. And when the world around you is not immortality as well. I mean, the elves had this problem. Humans, I think, would not suffer from the same problem if the rest of Humanity was also immortal.
@dravex9697
@dravex9697 Жыл бұрын
It's easy to conflate the narrative use of immortality in fictional stories, with theoretical methods of achieving it in real life. Nevertheless, consider that no form of human immortality has been proven to exist so far in history. Every writer that's ever painted it as hell has never experienced it themselves; it's pure speculation on their part. Should immortality arise, it will likely have some key differences: A. It will not make you indestructible. A completely immutable person is not even speculatively feasible with our current understanding of science. Even if it was, I imagine it would be opt-in. The two front-runners in modern discussion of immortality are a means of rejuvenating the body (age reversal) and uploading the mind to a digital format. Regardless of which would end up taking priority, their focus is on preserving the body and expanding our potential lifespans indefinitely. That presumably wouldn't prevent one from taking their own life, or dying in an accident. B. It will not be exclusive. If a method of immortality were developed for humans, there's no reason to think it would not work on more than a select few people. Many people are concerned about billionaires hoarding the technology for themselves - a concern I share - but the problem there wouldn't be the immortality itself, but capitalism. This misconception extends to a lot of stories, where the immortality on display is miserable specifically because of the circumstances surrounding it. Immortality could be an incredible gift to living things, allowing them to live as long as they please. It doesn't have to be miserable, lonely, or even permanent. Unfortunately, the unfounded-yet-embedded narratives and misconceptions surrounding it are formidable obstacles to progress.
@wegner7036
@wegner7036 3 ай бұрын
@@dravex9697 I'm not a good writer, but here's my take on a one-paragraph horror story which is founded. "You merely wanted to die, to opt-out of immortality... And then they called you insane. In this society of immortals, the very act of 'opting-out' is a mental illness itself. They forced the biological maintenance onto you, seeing your protests as little more than a child whining about getting a shot. They put you in an asylum. You will remain here, for hundreds, thousands of years... And death will only claim you when they no longer have the energy to maintain you. You will wait in Hell until the stars go out." In any case, I don't think opting-out will be an option. A society of people who live for millennia cannot accommodate people who live less than a century. Mortals and immortals simply cannot coexist.
@sus_tenants
@sus_tenants 5 ай бұрын
Forever in my top 3 must watch channels! Always engaging and well presented
@AltiniaHoldingsInc
@AltiniaHoldingsInc Жыл бұрын
I read this short at 12 or 13 and it fucked with me for days! I still can’t hear “longer than you think” without picturing the raving boy.
@william4996
@william4996 Жыл бұрын
We were given a book of King short stories in highschool and were told to read a couple of them. I read The Jaunt and enjoyed it. It's the exact type of horror I love and any time King is mentioned I recomend this short story.
@jamesdonahoe7540
@jamesdonahoe7540 Жыл бұрын
Sleeping before entering the Jaunt kinda reminds of The Langoliers where the travelers had to be asleep before entering the portal.
@Scimarad
@Scimarad Жыл бұрын
I hadn't made that connection:)
@theoa803
@theoa803 Жыл бұрын
Reading this story for the first time was probably the most impactful literary experience of my life.
@cbeaudry4646
@cbeaudry4646 Жыл бұрын
Awesome story According to Catholic Legend, St. Thomas Aquinas, who wrote but never finished the monumental Summa Theologica (largely considered 1 of the greatest books ever written), about 3 months before his death had a mystic vision while in deep prayer. After he never wrote, taught, & barely spoke again, saying that everything he had ever written was "like straw" in comparison.
@NHLCyrus
@NHLCyrus Жыл бұрын
Always has been my favorite Stephen king short
@NancyLebovitz
@NancyLebovitz Жыл бұрын
Minor point: Jaunting in _The Stars My Destination_ is a psychic ability, not a something done through a machine. I recommend the novel, it's got an amazing amount going on in it.
@llikeafoxx
@llikeafoxx Жыл бұрын
The Jaunt is one of my favorite Stephen King stories. Excellent choice to cover!
@DrBright5558
@DrBright5558 8 ай бұрын
This short story is actually also partially the inspiration for the movie "Emesis Blue"
@MindEnchantress
@MindEnchantress Жыл бұрын
Skeleton Crew and Night Shift were my introductions to King's short stories, thank you for this stellar re-introduction!
@jaddriscoll
@jaddriscoll Жыл бұрын
The idea of a single infinite consciousness splitting itself because it is lonely is a very interesting one. The webcomic Kill Six Billion Demons explores that a bit in it's multiverse’s creation myth.
@tonoornottono
@tonoornottono Жыл бұрын
so does buddhism
@Psycorde
@Psycorde Жыл бұрын
It's an idea I arrived to myself as well, thinking about the concepts of God and consciousness
@hainleysimpson1507
@hainleysimpson1507 Жыл бұрын
@user-dt7px5xp6z Nothing no big men or women are real.
@kitcrucigera6516
@kitcrucigera6516 Жыл бұрын
​@@PsycordeSame! I don't necessarily believe the following corollary, but I also considered, what if the experience of life as we know it is the creation of such an eternal mind to occupy/distract itself from the maddening knowledge of eternal consciousness? 🤔
@educationvideoadventure9282
@educationvideoadventure9282 11 ай бұрын
Just throwing my comment into the mix......In the "Jaunt" video Quinn talks about a cosmic being which "...because it was alone, being the only thing, it split itself so it would no longer be alone...". That reminded me of the error in some theological thought (in my opinion as a Christian) about the assertion that God created sentient humanity so that God would not be alone. I can see how these ideas of isolation on the grandest scale can be a foundational mindset which leads to a sense of cosmic horror. Understanding the Christian Trinity, however, effectively counters that mindset. I understand that in God being three persons in eternal unity before and throughout creation, God has always been complete in relationship. God never had a need for humanity, but instead created humanity out of love, not need. No other religion has this complete and satisfied, eternal related-ness as the foundation of its total system. In turn, the relationship-focused nature of Christianity ( I know this intimately in my 40+ year relationship with Jesus Christ, the Father, and the Holy Spirit) delivers "...peace...which surpasses all understanding..." Philipians 4:5-7. I am so thankful for that because I also understand, having read ALOT of science fiction, horror (including Lovecraft and PKD), and post-modern philosophy when I was a teenager, that a universe of meaninglessness and no real relationship leads to hopelessness and fear. It is awesome to be delivered from that kind of emptiness and dread.
@candybanks8717
@candybanks8717 11 ай бұрын
Finally, someone covered this story! As I thought about this, a long time ago, to avoid the law of non contradiction, I pictured the decimal and the 67 changing places. Time compressed like matter in a neutron star.
@Bitplex
@Bitplex 11 ай бұрын
10:40 this concept is also known as the boltzmann's brain - and it's one of the most terrifying thought experiments in the universe. By far. The scariest part about it is, it's conceivably possible, and even likely to be our reality in some models.
@zazzrazzamatazz9970
@zazzrazzamatazz9970 Жыл бұрын
HaHA! When you did your sci-fi horror compilation the other day I was disappointed that The Jaunt wasn’t on the list. Glad to see it make its own video instead.
@727Phoenix
@727Phoenix Жыл бұрын
I read that story many years ago when I was still a Christian, when I still believed in a God that had existed for eternity before He created anything. _The Jaunt_ made me wonder if our universe, if the big bang was the result of YHWH being driven insane by eternity. When He couldn't continue His existence as He always had, the spark of our universe was ignited. The big bang altered YHWH profoundly, turning Him into a creator God, who now shaped the universe to make us possible. I then prayed repentantly for forgiveness after that, being that Jehovah God can read minds.
@houndofculann1793
@houndofculann1793 Жыл бұрын
Him being insane definitely would explain all the bad things going around in the world supposedly created and overseen by an all good God, in that case He could genuinely think that everything He has made is good
@educationvideoadventure9282
@educationvideoadventure9282 11 ай бұрын
Here is my comment.... you might find it interesting... In the "Jaunt" video Quin talks about a cosmic being which "...because it was alone, being the only thing, it split itself so it would no longer be alone...". That reminded me of the error in some theological thought (in my opinion as a Christian) about the assertion that God created sentient humanity so that God would not be alone. I can see how these ideas of isolation on the grandest scale can be a foundational mindset which leads to a sense of cosmic horror. Understanding the Christian Trinity, however, effectively counters that mindset. I understand that in God being three persons in eternal unity before and throughout creation, God has always been complete in relationship. God never had a need for humanity, but instead created humanity out of love, not need. No other religion has this complete and satisfied, eternal related-ness as the foundation of its total system. In turn, the relationship-focused nature of Christianity ( I know this intimately in my 40+ year relationship with Jesus Christ, the Father, and the Holy Spirit) delivers "...peace...which surpasses all understanding..." Philipians 4:5-7. I am so thankful for that because I also understand, having read ALOT of science fiction, horror (including Lovecraft and PKD), and post-modern philosophy when I was a teenager, that a universe of meaninglessness and no real relationship leads to hopelessness and fear. It is awesome to be delivered from that kind of emptiness and dread.
@mjreynolds9618
@mjreynolds9618 8 ай бұрын
Of all King’s stories, The Jaunt scared me the most, and it’s the one I still think about the most often.
@llRespectThis
@llRespectThis 7 ай бұрын
I've been there, in that element of eternity - albeit for a brief time. A quick jaunt, one might say. I had a near death experience or what I believe to possibly have been one. I overdosed and found myself in a state of consciousness where the only sensory input was sound of my own screaming into the void along with the absence of everything else. Pitch black, no touch or feeling of the seat my body lay in at that time. No smell. Nothing except the knowledge of what had been and the absolute feeling of dread and "nothingness" that had become my reality. Eventually after screaming for help and yelling if anyone was there to no avail, I say in this darkness for what felt like 10-15 minutes before a very clear and distinct voice that was not my own said, into what would have been my left ear, "you're going to have to fight the devil.". My response, in hindsight, was absurd and even comical. "How long do I have? Can I get back in shape first?". Obviously I was taking this quite literally lol. Nothing else was said and after a short time I began to feel the pressure of the seat under my legs and behind me, still in absolute darkness. Until my vision returned and I awoke in the same seat I was in before, only a giant red STOP sign now filled my field of view out the front windshield. How I came to be in this impossible position I'll never kno. There was no way for the car to come to stop in that place as I was already past the stop sign and at a complete stop by the time this unfolded. It felt like a sign telling me to stop what I was doing and start the long road to recovery, or "fighting that devil". I've been sober since roughly 6 months after this occurred. Even the events that unfolded up to and just prior to this were odd and eerie. Between the non-stop "coincidences" and all kinds of warnings, up to the moment of "death". When I came to a stop my vision did this thing where it was like a VCR was stuck on hold and turning my head didn't change the view. It became frozen and quite noisy image where a "GAME OVER" signage came spinning into view like an old movie newspaper. I heard what felt like dozens of voices singing in an almost choir like mocking tone "you're dead, you're dead, you're dead". And then it just went pitch black and everything I described before unfolded. The whole experience changed me, in some ways for the better but in alot of ways not so. I see patterns in alot of things now that can be a bit unnerving. I doubt my sanity frequently, because it sounds nuts as do the the other things I don't feel like getting into. Everyone I've told this to pretty much shrugs it off and acts like I'm crazy, so I tend to avoid mentioning it at all. I keep to myself and just try to lead the best life I can in the best way I know how. I fear that place is the end though, or what comes after. It's made me believe in a higher power though, whereas I was pretty agnostic before.
@Penfolduk001
@Penfolduk001 Жыл бұрын
Strangely enough this is the second video I've seen about this story this week. But obviously yours is the superior intellect. 🙂
@skipsnapdoesfish8457
@skipsnapdoesfish8457 5 ай бұрын
“I’ve seen the other side, it’s longer than you think” - Sniper tf2
@AlronTwan
@AlronTwan 4 ай бұрын
Noo its sniper emesis blue
@jahjah7940
@jahjah7940 6 ай бұрын
Eventually, Kars stopped thinking.
@anoon-
@anoon- 5 ай бұрын
Luckily for him he would finally die after 100 billion years, the universe's end. That's at least not forever.
@jahjah7940
@jahjah7940 5 ай бұрын
@@anoon- Probably even longer than 100 billion.
@That_Freedom_Guy
@That_Freedom_Guy Жыл бұрын
The real horror is when it dawns on us that the story refers to us here and now! This. We are aware of being alive, conscious and aware yet we don't know what it is! Intelligent awareness floating in an ocean of ignorance! For how long? What is eternity to a photon? May I borrow a couple o' bucks 'till Fridee? Etc. So many unanswered yet deeply profound questions...for eternity! That's terrifyingly terrific!
@bekenotsalony2905
@bekenotsalony2905 Жыл бұрын
I sorta wonder if it wasn't accessing at least some layer of Todash Space and since it wasn't entering another reality it didn't have "time" to expose them to the creatures that spring into being in that space, but let them consciously experience the compressed time that happens inside the space to cause monsters to spawn and evolve when ever a portal is opened. I mean, we kinda know that project arrowhead either found a thinny or were experimenting with some of the protal tech and figured out how to look into Todash Space rather than another universe and the power failure broke the seal between realities and let Todash space to spill out and release the creatures upon their universe. So maybe if it's just their mind going to a lesser field, they're experiencing a small fraction of Todash Space with out actually going there long enough to be eaten?
@christianpscholka6391
@christianpscholka6391 Жыл бұрын
This is my favorite short story by Stephen King. I regularly get chills when I tell people about this story, and the way you present is so well done. I would love to hear you do an overview of Junji Itos "The Long Dream".
@JenDeyan
@JenDeyan Жыл бұрын
This is what I believe Hell to be. Not just eternal damnation in hell fire but burning for all eternity in loneliness. The first time I read about someone experiencing sensory deprivation I thought Hell is this but worse. That's why I can never even casually or jokingly tell someone to "Go to Hell". I don't think anyone deserves that kind of fate. It's why I find it difficult to even believe such a thing exists because even the worse of human beings shouldn't have to exist in eternal pain and loneliness.
@kamikeserpentail3778
@kamikeserpentail3778 Жыл бұрын
Fortunately it does not. I prefer more fun versions of hell.
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