One of the most common tropes in fiction- the "curse" of immortality. Or "curse" of amazing strength, or "curse" of being great, and living fulfilling life while practicing your passion (usually killing)
Why the hell do any authors even pretend its a curse? I mean okay, there were instances of immortality being a curse - if its not paired with not-aging, but usually its a hunk/hunkess that says that, with pretty much no drawbacks, maybe some ocasionall innocent blood, but listen- 90% of people would not mind killing innocent child if it didn't lead to any consequences and let them have a new iPhone.
So, any opinions? I'm asking, as I was talking with my other cursed friends, as I was complaining about my huge pp curse, and how terrible it is, they claimed their immortality was worse. Posers.
Also, TV tropes for similar:
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/WhoWantsToLiveForever https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/CursedWithAwesome
The curse of immortality affects mostly the person's sentiments and emotions.
If you are immortal and nothing can kill you, you can live a free and fearless life, right? But that gets old very quickly. All you need to travel around the world on a sailing yacht is 2 months, more or less. Then maybe you visit every inch of the land, which takes you 100 years. What then? You've already explored everything, and you've already mastered every hobby within that 100 years. Maybe you can do it again for another 100 years, but you've already seen the sights and since you've already mastered every hobby within that first 100 years, there's nothing more to do other than interacting with new people. But even interacting with new people gets old because humans have the tendency to copy each other so you'd be interacting mostly with people who are more or less similar to each other.
Maybe you'd like to collect and master every knowledge that exist in the world? Let's say that you do get the chance to do that, which couldn't have taken more than 1000 years. So now you have spent 1200 years and two months. What do you do with the other 5,000 or 10,000, or 100,000 years?
Then there's also the pain of watching your loved ones die one after another. This leads to you not wanting to form bonds with people, leaving you with a sterile feeling. With every person you love dying, the deader you feel inside. For a normal person, this is a scar that never really recovers. The only saving grace is that you know death is the fate of everyone, including you and you believe that if you live life fully, you can one day meet them again and tell them everything you've experienced after their passing. For an immortal, this doesn't happen, because there is no relief called death.
Besides, think about the memories. Over time, your memories get buried as you pile on new memories. Consider living so long that you can't remember the face or name or the touch of your own mother, sister, wife or children. Just knowing that you once had it, but you can't remember it at all will break you. Ai-chan remember how Ai-chan had a dream about that. Ai-chan dreamt that Ai-chan lived for so long that no matter how much Ai-chan tried to recall, Ai-chan couldn't remember mom's face or her voice, Ai-chan only knows that mama used to exist. Ai-chan screamed into the universe in that dream and woke up screaming and crying.
You have no idea how relieved Ai-chan was to see mama's face and that it was all a dream. Ai-chan still cries to that dream as Ai-chan writes this. Because of that, if Ai-chan is offered immortality, Ai-chan would refuse it. If immortality is forced on Ai-chan, suicide is most definitely in Ai-chan's future.