Story of the loneliest man in history

Jason Voorhees

Jason Voorhees

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I'm talking about Joseph Merrick here. The elephant man

Joseph Merrick was born as a normal baby on August 5, 1862.

Around the age of five he began to grow abnormal deformations.


Screenshot 20210708 221253


Six years later, his mother died.

His father soon remarried, and Joseph was consequently rejected by his own father and stepmother. They never showed any affectionate feelings towards him whatsoever.

From the age of thirteen on (when he left school just like any other kid at the time) he worked in a cigar factory. At the age of sixteen he had to stop since he did not have the dexterity anymore to roll cigars, due to the worsened deformity in his right hand.

He then worked as a “hawker,” selling stuff from a haberdashery store, door to door. His changing physique interfered more and more with his tries to lead a normal life:

This endeavour was unsuccessful, for Merrick's facial deformities rendered his speech increasingly unintelligible, and prospective customers reacted with horror to his physical appearance. People refused to open doors for him and now people not only stared at him but followed him out of curiosity.
Screenshot 20210708 221341

After a severe beating by his father in 1877 he ran away from home for good, and went to live with his uncle Charles.

The extra mouth in Charles’s family was hard to feed, and at the age of seventeen, Joseph moved to a workhouse — also known as “poorhouse

Merrick soon realized and concluded that the only way to escape the workhouse was to “perform” on carnivales and sideshows, as a frea

And that is exactly what he did

He then became known as the “Elephant man,” working for a number of people. Here is a small excerpt on his working for Tom Norman
Nevertheless, he exhibited Merrick in the back of an empty shop on Witechapel Road Merrick had an iron bed with a curtain drawn around to afford him some privacy. Norman observed Merrick asleep one morning and learnt that he always slept sitting up, with his legs drawn up and his head resting on his knees. His enlarged head was too heavy to allow him to sleep lying down and, as Merrick put it, he would risk "waking with a broken neck.”
Four years later, that area would be haunted by the ghost of Jack The Ripper.

Screenshot 20210708 221435

The shop on Whitechapel road was directly across the road from the London Hospital, and through a visitor of the show who was working as a surgeon in the hospital, Joseph became acquainted with a doctor named Frederick Treves.

It would change his life.

Joseph continued to perform as a freak, but his entire life savings were eventually stolen by his then-manager, and then he was abandoned.

In dire circumstances, he returned to London again:

He approached strangers for help, but his speech was unintelligible and his appearance repugnant. He drew a crowd of curious onlookers until a policeman helped him into an empty waiting room, where he huddled in a corner, exhausted. Unable to make himself understood, his only identifying possession was Frederick Treves' card.
Screenshot 20210708 221801

He moved to the London Hospital, and stayed there for the rest of his life, in a furnished room without mirrors (at his request), only leaving on three occasions for some time off.

(Treves might have been the only friend of Joseph Merrick in his life, but Treves also said that Merrick never confided in him.)

Joseph always carried a photograph of his mother on him.

There is much to say about his hospital years, but the very essence is that he wanted to live a normal life, sometimes becoming depressed and always very lonely.

Famously, when he met a young and pretty woman called Leila Maturin through Treves, Joseph became overcome with emotions because Maturin had been the first woman to ever smile at him, and to shake his hand.

Joseph Merrick died on April 11, 1890.

He was found lying dead across his bed.

An autopsy (performed by Treves) showed that Joseph died from a dislocated neck. Knowing how Joseph slept at night, Treves concluded that Joseph “made the experiment.”

From what I have read about Joseph Merrick, I understand that he was a very kind and intelligent man, locked in a tortured body which never stopped deforming.

An extremely lonely and melancholic man.

But in the end he died just as he wished. Like a normal human in his sleep


Screenshot 20210708 222809
 
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This guy was probably the biggest incel in human history. Poor guy
 
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Not lonely if we know of him today

Statusmaxxed and jestermaxxed (not voluntarily) incel
 
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mogs me cause white
 
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I'm on my way to become the top 1
 
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Great high effort thread and important story. Watch the movie about him guys if you haven’t seen it yet.
 
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I don't mass tag but this is a high effort thread.

@kjsbdfiusdf @@looksmaxxer234 @volcelfatcel @AlexAP @Jagged0 @Hopelessmofoker @Latebloomer10 @Adriana Lima @JustMewbrah @AcneScars @volcelfatcel @Chadeep @delusionalretard @moonblunt @reptiles
 
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Eggy vs Elephant man mog battle
 
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I knew that he existed, but not that he died so early and lonely. Damn, that is brutal.
 
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I'm talking about Joseph Merrick here. The elephant man

Joseph Merrick was born as a normal baby on August 5, 1862.

Around the age of five he began to grow abnormal deformations.


View attachment 1215147

Six years later, his mother died.

His father soon remarried, and Joseph was consequently rejected by his own father and stepmother. They never showed any affectionate feelings towards him whatsoever.

From the age of thirteen on (when he left school just like any other kid at the time) he worked in a cigar factory. At the age of sixteen he had to stop since he did not have the dexterity anymore to roll cigars, due to the worsened deformity in his right hand.

He then worked as a “hawker,” selling stuff from a haberdashery store, door to door. His changing physique interfered more and more with his tries to lead a normal life:


View attachment 1215163
After a severe beating by his father in 1877 he ran away from home for good, and went to live with his uncle Charles.

The extra mouth in Charles’s family was hard to feed, and at the age of seventeen, Joseph moved to a workhouse — also known as “poorhouse

Merrick soon realized and concluded that the only way to escape the workhouse was to “perform” on carnivales and sideshows, as a frea

And that is exactly what he did

He then became known as the “Elephant man,” working for a number of people. Here is a small excerpt on his working for Tom Norman

Four years later, that area would be haunted by the ghost of Jack The Ripper.

View attachment 1215152
The shop on Whitechapel road was directly across the road from the London Hospital, and through a visitor of the show who was working as a surgeon in the hospital, Joseph became acquainted with a doctor named Frederick Treves.

It would change his life.

Joseph continued to perform as a freak, but his entire life savings were eventually stolen by his then-manager, and then he was abandoned.

In dire circumstances, he returned to London again:


View attachment 1215156
He moved to the London Hospital, and stayed there for the rest of his life, in a furnished room without mirrors (at his request), only leaving on three occasions for some time off.

(Treves might have been the only friend of Joseph Merrick in his life, but Treves also said that Merrick never confided in him.)

Joseph always carried a photograph of his mother on him.

There is much to say about his hospital years, but the very essence is that he wanted to live a normal life, sometimes becoming depressed and always very lonely.

Famously, when he met a young and pretty woman called Leila Maturin through Treves, Joseph became overcome with emotions because Maturin had been the first woman to ever smile at him, and to shake his hand.

Joseph Merrick died on April 11, 1890.

He was found lying dead across his bed.

An autopsy (performed by Treves) showed that Joseph died from a dislocated neck. Knowing how Joseph slept at night, Treves concluded that Joseph “made the experiment.”

From what I have read about Joseph Merrick, I understand that he was a very kind and intelligent man, locked in a tortured body which never stopped deforming.

An extremely lonely and melancholic man.

But in the end he died just as he wished. Like a normal human in his sleep


View attachment 1215168
Did you watched 'elephant man'
 
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brutal , but he mogs @RoBobaFett999 ....Feelin bad for both of them

@RoBobaFett999 -

 
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when he met a young and pretty woman called Leila Maturin through Treves, Joseph became overcome with emotions because Maturin had been the first woman to ever smile at him, and to shake his hand.
brutal life, that part hits hard. No one ever smiled at him, he just wanted to have a normal life but his looks quite literally denied him everything even his parents love.

copers still deny lookism though, this guy had his whole life taken away because he had deformities
 
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I knew that he existed, but not that he died so early and lonely. Damn, that is brutal.
his death was a suicide is what is theorized nowadays, he just got tired of life being such a harsh world since he was genuinely ugly.
 
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Who the fuck reacted with “jfl” to this thread, and who hurt you Jesus Christ.
 
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Oh never mind it was @Yellow_fever_cel you are pretty chill bro.
 
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Wow 20 replies in and no dn read memes yet. I'm impressed. :feelsgood:
 
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I distinctly remember a time in middle school where I did a project on the life of Joseph. When I presented the project, my classmates instantly started laughing and making jokes about his appearance, some gagging, some calling him hideous names. And that was just through a screen. Imagine their reactions if they saw him in person. This man lived like that everyday.
 
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I distinctly remember a time in middle school where I did a project on the life of Joseph. When I presented the project, my classmates instantly started laughing and making jokes about his appearance, some gagging, some calling him hideous names. And that was just through a screen. Imagine their reactions if they saw him in person. This man lived like that everyday.
Probably smelled bad too.
 
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Poor guy, didn’t deserve that shit. Unfortunately, can’t choose who you are born as, also unfortunately that humans can’t get over our primal instincts and treat people like trash for things they can’t choose, not even showing the slightest friendliness to them. Insane how much people can suffer just from looks
 
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People below 2/10 should unironically rope. There's no solution to their pain
20210703 001453
 
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Low t if you get sad at this. Just be happy that you have someone to mog easily. If there was a button that would make every other man look like this I wouldn't hesitate to press it.
 
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People below 2/10 should unironically rope. There's no solution to their pain
View attachment 1215210
Agreed, but instead of rope they should drug cope for a few years. Escorts and hard drugs weekly until their brain melts. Can at least get some pleasure out of life that way.
 
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Low t if you get sad at this. Just be happy that you have someone to mog easily. If there was a button that would make every other man look like this I wouldn't hesitate to press it.
It’s high E if anything. Only women can be this cruel and unempathetic
 
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still mogs me cus larger neurocranium
 
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@SubhumanCurrycel @Copeful @Aquiillaxo @Maesthetic
 
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the reptiles origin
 
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I'm talking about Joseph Merrick here. The elephant man

Joseph Merrick was born as a normal baby on August 5, 1862.

Around the age of five he began to grow abnormal deformations.


View attachment 1215147

Six years later, his mother died.

His father soon remarried, and Joseph was consequently rejected by his own father and stepmother. They never showed any affectionate feelings towards him whatsoever.

From the age of thirteen on (when he left school just like any other kid at the time) he worked in a cigar factory. At the age of sixteen he had to stop since he did not have the dexterity anymore to roll cigars, due to the worsened deformity in his right hand.

He then worked as a “hawker,” selling stuff from a haberdashery store, door to door. His changing physique interfered more and more with his tries to lead a normal life:


View attachment 1215163
After a severe beating by his father in 1877 he ran away from home for good, and went to live with his uncle Charles.

The extra mouth in Charles’s family was hard to feed, and at the age of seventeen, Joseph moved to a workhouse — also known as “poorhouse

Merrick soon realized and concluded that the only way to escape the workhouse was to “perform” on carnivales and sideshows, as a frea

And that is exactly what he did

He then became known as the “Elephant man,” working for a number of people. Here is a small excerpt on his working for Tom Norman

Four years later, that area would be haunted by the ghost of Jack The Ripper.

View attachment 1215152
The shop on Whitechapel road was directly across the road from the London Hospital, and through a visitor of the show who was working as a surgeon in the hospital, Joseph became acquainted with a doctor named Frederick Treves.

It would change his life.

Joseph continued to perform as a freak, but his entire life savings were eventually stolen by his then-manager, and then he was abandoned.

In dire circumstances, he returned to London again:


View attachment 1215156
He moved to the London Hospital, and stayed there for the rest of his life, in a furnished room without mirrors (at his request), only leaving on three occasions for some time off.

(Treves might have been the only friend of Joseph Merrick in his life, but Treves also said that Merrick never confided in him.)

Joseph always carried a photograph of his mother on him.

There is much to say about his hospital years, but the very essence is that he wanted to live a normal life, sometimes becoming depressed and always very lonely.

Famously, when he met a young and pretty woman called Leila Maturin through Treves, Joseph became overcome with emotions because Maturin had been the first woman to ever smile at him, and to shake his hand.

Joseph Merrick died on April 11, 1890.

He was found lying dead across his bed.

An autopsy (performed by Treves) showed that Joseph died from a dislocated neck. Knowing how Joseph slept at night, Treves concluded that Joseph “made the experiment.”

From what I have read about Joseph Merrick, I understand that he was a very kind and intelligent man, locked in a tortured body which never stopped deforming.

An extremely lonely and melancholic man.

But in the end he died just as he wished. Like a normal human in his sleep


View attachment 1215168
sad shit bro imagine having only one shot at life before dissapearing forever and you come out like this😢
 
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super sad story he tried all he could
 
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@muhammaddeen233 @Newone @ArvidGustavsson @larsanova69 @Rothschild @africancel @Wallenberg
 
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I'm talking about Joseph Merrick here. The elephant man

Joseph Merrick was born as a normal baby on August 5, 1862.

Around the age of five he began to grow abnormal deformations.


View attachment 1215147

Six years later, his mother died.

His father soon remarried, and Joseph was consequently rejected by his own father and stepmother. They never showed any affectionate feelings towards him whatsoever.

From the age of thirteen on (when he left school just like any other kid at the time) he worked in a cigar factory. At the age of sixteen he had to stop since he did not have the dexterity anymore to roll cigars, due to the worsened deformity in his right hand.

He then worked as a “hawker,” selling stuff from a haberdashery store, door to door. His changing physique interfered more and more with his tries to lead a normal life:


View attachment 1215163
After a severe beating by his father in 1877 he ran away from home for good, and went to live with his uncle Charles.

The extra mouth in Charles’s family was hard to feed, and at the age of seventeen, Joseph moved to a workhouse — also known as “poorhouse

Merrick soon realized and concluded that the only way to escape the workhouse was to “perform” on carnivales and sideshows, as a frea

And that is exactly what he did

He then became known as the “Elephant man,” working for a number of people. Here is a small excerpt on his working for Tom Norman

Four years later, that area would be haunted by the ghost of Jack The Ripper.

View attachment 1215152
The shop on Whitechapel road was directly across the road from the London Hospital, and through a visitor of the show who was working as a surgeon in the hospital, Joseph became acquainted with a doctor named Frederick Treves.

It would change his life.

Joseph continued to perform as a freak, but his entire life savings were eventually stolen by his then-manager, and then he was abandoned.

In dire circumstances, he returned to London again:


View attachment 1215156
He moved to the London Hospital, and stayed there for the rest of his life, in a furnished room without mirrors (at his request), only leaving on three occasions for some time off.

(Treves might have been the only friend of Joseph Merrick in his life, but Treves also said that Merrick never confided in him.)

Joseph always carried a photograph of his mother on him.

There is much to say about his hospital years, but the very essence is that he wanted to live a normal life, sometimes becoming depressed and always very lonely.

Famously, when he met a young and pretty woman called Leila Maturin through Treves, Joseph became overcome with emotions because Maturin had been the first woman to ever smile at him, and to shake his hand.

Joseph Merrick died on April 11, 1890.

He was found lying dead across his bed.

An autopsy (performed by Treves) showed that Joseph died from a dislocated neck. Knowing how Joseph slept at night, Treves concluded that Joseph “made the experiment.”

From what I have read about Joseph Merrick, I understand that he was a very kind and intelligent man, locked in a tortured body which never stopped deforming.

An extremely lonely and melancholic man.

But in the end he died just as he wished. Like a normal human in his sleep


View attachment 1215168
He mogs Makin It Happen
 
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@portuguesecel
 
nigga, what , i am not gonna read this

stoped at half
 
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@StrangerDanger
 
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I'm talking about Joseph Merrick here. The elephant man

Joseph Merrick was born as a normal baby on August 5, 1862.

Around the age of five he began to grow abnormal deformations.


View attachment 1215147

Six years later, his mother died.

His father soon remarried, and Joseph was consequently rejected by his own father and stepmother. They never showed any affectionate feelings towards him whatsoever.

From the age of thirteen on (when he left school just like any other kid at the time) he worked in a cigar factory. At the age of sixteen he had to stop since he did not have the dexterity anymore to roll cigars, due to the worsened deformity in his right hand.

He then worked as a “hawker,” selling stuff from a haberdashery store, door to door. His changing physique interfered more and more with his tries to lead a normal life:


View attachment 1215163
After a severe beating by his father in 1877 he ran away from home for good, and went to live with his uncle Charles.

The extra mouth in Charles’s family was hard to feed, and at the age of seventeen, Joseph moved to a workhouse — also known as “poorhouse

Merrick soon realized and concluded that the only way to escape the workhouse was to “perform” on carnivales and sideshows, as a frea

And that is exactly what he did

He then became known as the “Elephant man,” working for a number of people. Here is a small excerpt on his working for Tom Norman

Four years later, that area would be haunted by the ghost of Jack The Ripper.

View attachment 1215152
The shop on Whitechapel road was directly across the road from the London Hospital, and through a visitor of the show who was working as a surgeon in the hospital, Joseph became acquainted with a doctor named Frederick Treves.

It would change his life.

Joseph continued to perform as a freak, but his entire life savings were eventually stolen by his then-manager, and then he was abandoned.

In dire circumstances, he returned to London again:


View attachment 1215156
He moved to the London Hospital, and stayed there for the rest of his life, in a furnished room without mirrors (at his request), only leaving on three occasions for some time off.

(Treves might have been the only friend of Joseph Merrick in his life, but Treves also said that Merrick never confided in him.)

Joseph always carried a photograph of his mother on him.

There is much to say about his hospital years, but the very essence is that he wanted to live a normal life, sometimes becoming depressed and always very lonely.

Famously, when he met a young and pretty woman called Leila Maturin through Treves, Joseph became overcome with emotions because Maturin had been the first woman to ever smile at him, and to shake his hand.

Joseph Merrick died on April 11, 1890.

He was found lying dead across his bed.

An autopsy (performed by Treves) showed that Joseph died from a dislocated neck. Knowing how Joseph slept at night, Treves concluded that Joseph “made the experiment.”

From what I have read about Joseph Merrick, I understand that he was a very kind and intelligent man, locked in a tortured body which never stopped deforming.

An extremely lonely and melancholic man.

But in the end he died just as he wished. Like a normal human in his sleep


View attachment 1215168
He mogs me
 
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Fucking cursed shit
Poor guy though no escape from being judged
 
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meanwhile weak minded “men” cry about being 6’2.5 or 18 inch bideltoid or whatever

grow up
 
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Muh muh I need lefort 3 I need bimax I need this

Be grateful for what you have because there were people just like this poor soul
 
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because Maturin had been the first woman to ever smile at him, and to shake his hand.
He mogged some incels that claim to be handholdness virgin
(I don't even know how it's possible to never shake hands lol)
 
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He mogged some incels that claim to be handholdness virgin
(I don't even know how it's possible to never shake hands lol)
Unironically mogs me I'm khv.

Fuck me man :feelswah:
20210704 110940
 
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Great post and sheds light on one of the most unfortunate men to have ever been born. Its one thing to be ugly/average and not noticed by foids. Its another to be so hideous that the only way you can ever earn money is by freaking people out. Although iam familiar with the story of the elephant man, i never saw it in the context of inceldom. This was truly eye opening.
 
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