Distrust brings questioning, and questioning leads to clarity.

A person either learns trust or does not, and this settles into their worldview. The one who carries the feeling of trust outward assumes the society as legitimate in the subconscious, and thus, at the slightest mishap, seeks the “problem” not in the world but in themselves. Because it is of course easier to say, “the storm is inside me,” than to admit the “storm” is everywhere. Yet for the one who has never acquired trust, this is the sole reality: everything is already rotten at its foundation. Since distrust brings questioning, and questioning leads to clarity, it is more likely for those who have not acquired trust to become deeper philosophical and artistic individuals. In the end, those who have merged into society (not necessarily physically, but mentally) gradually lose themselves more and more within it, while those who have developed a self apart from it become, with each passing day, even more unreachable.