-doujindesu.tv--turning-my-life-around-with-cry... Official
I would read a chapter of Holyland (a manga about a street fighter finding himself) before a boxing session. I would listen to Berserk OSTs while deadlifting. Guts screaming in the eclipse? That was me trying to rep 225 on the bench.
I weighed 280 pounds. My girlfriend had left me in the spring. I had ghosted my family for three months. My life was a static panel—gray, repetitive, and devoid of motion. Doujindesu was my anesthetic. It was a random, obscure doujinshi. No action scenes, no fan service. Just a two-page spread of a character looking in a mirror. -Doujindesu.TV--Turning-My-Life-Around-with-Cry...
I closed my laptop. For the first time in six months, I looked at my own reflection in the black mirror of my phone screen. I would read a chapter of Holyland (a
This merged my two selves. The otaku and the athlete. I started a ritual. I would open Doujindesu.TV on my phone while stretching on the gym mat. I would read one page, do five pushups. Read another page, hold a plank. That was me trying to rep 225 on the bench
I was on .
It was humiliating. Sweat mixed with tears dripped onto the digital display. I looked like a broken extra from a Shinkai movie. But here is the secret I learned:
For the uninitiated, Doujindesu is a digital rabbit hole. It’s the Wild West of fan-translated manga and doujinshi. One minute you’re reading a wholesome rom-com; the next, you’re six chapters deep into a psychological horror about a salaryman who turns into a vending machine.