**Breaking:** *In an unprecedented psychological breakthrough, a woman known only as "Mina the Hollower" has sparked a global conversation about emotional burnout and the silent epidemic of "soul-shutdown."*
Mina, a former high-achieving artist, recently posted a now-viral video of herself staring blankly at a wall for 72 hours straight. Her caption: *"I’ve emptied out everything I ever felt. I am hollow, and for the first time, I am not afraid."*
Psychologists are calling this a drastic coping mechanism for "emotional compression syndrome"—a term coined for people who suppress feelings so deeply that their psyche creates an internal void to protect them. But here’s the twist: Mina isn't asking for help. She’s teaching others *how* to hollow out.
"Why feel pain when you can feel nothing?" she says in her latest livestream. "I’m not broken. I’m a survival mechanism."
Critics warn this could normalize dissociation, but followers call her a "prophet of peace." One life coach commented: *"Mina isn't a cautionary tale; she's a mirror. We're all so full of noise and expectation that we forget—sometimes the healthiest thing you can do is become a quiet, empty room."*
The question now: Is Mina's hollowness a new form of enlightened detachment, or the loudest cry for help we're too distracted to hear?