Truth is the ultimate, objective reality—the deep root of everything that exists. In classical metaphysics, this is understood as Al-Haqq: the Absolute, unchanging Reality that stands independent of human perception. But because the human mind is finite, trying to grasp something so infinite naturally creates a massive struggle. The friction happens when our limited perspectives clash, or when absolute truth aggressively shatters the comfortable illusions, personal delusions, and societal narratives we use to protect ourselves.
Some frameworks see this differently, arguing that truth is just a practical tool we invent to survive. To them, an idea is only true if it functions well and makes life easier. In this view, the struggle isn't a grand climb toward a cosmic mystery. Instead, it is just the frustrating trial-and-error of human beings trying to figure out what reduces everyday friction. For them, if a concept causes endless, destructive agony without utility, its truth is highly questionable.
However, a more critical view warns that claims of truth are often weaponized by those in power to engineer compliance and control society. From this perspective, what we call "truth" is usually just a fragile narrative manufactured by human institutions to maintain authority. The real struggle is a constant, exhausting battlefield against these artificial structures. Because no human illusion can withstand the weight of absolute Reality, these manufactured systems inevitably fracture and collapse the moment they collide with Al-Haqq. Moving toward the ultimate root demands the total destruction of everything false.