Choosing cryopreservation usually means choosing differently from everyone around you. This creates a specific kind of psychological difficulty that's distinct from the technical or economic questions. You're making a call that your family might not understand, your friends might mock, and that carries real social costs in the present. The choice also forces you to examine your own motivations honestly: are you running from death or running toward something? Is this selfish or is that framing itself confused? And there's the uncomfortable question of continuity: if you succeed, you might wake in a world where everyone you knew is gone. This topic helps you sit with that solitude and figure out whether you can make this decision authentically for yourself, independent of social proof or the comfort of consensus.