Bad Person Today
Arthur didn’t wake up one morning and decide to be a villain. He simply decided that being "good" was a luxury he could no longer afford.
Arthur's fall followed a predictable pattern: he believed a lie, held onto it when challenged, and eventually embraced a worse lie to justify his survival. By the end of the year, he wasn't just a man who had stolen money; he was a man who had orchestrated Leo’s firing to protect his own secret. bad person
reddit.com/r/writing/comments/17fihhl/how_do_you_redeem_a_character_whos_done_terrible/">redemption ? Arthur didn’t wake up one morning and decide
For years, Arthur had been the guy who stayed late at the office, the one who loaned money to neighbors, and the one who always said "yes". He lived by the "good-person syndrome," believing that if he treated the world with kindness, the world would eventually reciprocate. Instead, the world took his promotion, his savings, and his dignity. By the end of the year, he wasn't
This story explores the perspective of a "bad person" through the lens of a , where a character's choices lead to moral deterioration.
His transformation began with a small, functional lie: "I’m just doing this for my family".
It started at work. Arthur discovered a minor accounting error that would have cost a client thousands but netted his firm—and his own commission—a significant bonus. In the past, he would have flagged it immediately. This time, he deleted the notification. He told himself it was a victimless crime, a correction of the universe’s unfairness.