I don't know the reason for why that is happening to you, but to me it seems 
like the initial ram state when your machine boots is not configured correctly. 
It is not finding systemd I guess. This is something your package manager 
should be doing when you upgrade kernel versions. Look up mkinitcpio. I'm only 
really familiar with this on Arch and maybe gentoo a bit. If this is happening 
when you upgrade to a new Ubuntu big version number, maybe you consider 
sticking to the older one for a bit. Don't feel bad about sticking to an LTS 
kernel if you want.

You can distro hop if you want, but I generally would say if your machine is 
not stable to just downgrade to an older version if possible. You could go to a 
distro which has something other than systemd for init, but recognize  you will 
be missing some features (which could probably be done with something else), 
the daemon services will be written and managed differently, and there are a 
lot fewer people available for support. Unfortunately, a bit of FLOSSware is 
written with the assumption you're using systemd. I tried Artix for a hot 
minute but decided ultimately it wasn't for me because either a) I am dependent 
on the distributers to maintain their repositories which are often missing 
packages for configuring daemon services or b) I would be compiling packages 
for myself and writing my own init scripts.

If you're the only person experiencing this, you're probably doing something 
wrong or there's something irregular about your existing system.

I have no idea if this is helpful, but good luck,
--Zack

Aug 16, 2022 11:34:46 Michael via PLUG-discuss 
<plug-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org>:

> here is the attempt at support if you want to look at it and you are on 
> mint's forum.
> https://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?f=49&t=378087&start=20
> 
> On Tue, Aug 16, 2022 at 2:16 PM Michael <bmi...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> I've been fighting with Mint for a while now. I installed mint21 and it runs 
>> great for about 5 loads then stuff happens. First it would boot into 
>> busybox. I tryed the fsck and that would work sometimes then the kernel 
>> began to panic after a week. I would reinstall and the process (busy box.... 
>> reinstall) would start over. This has been going on about two weeks. The 
>> kernel paniced tonight (it skipped the busybox step) and I finally looked at 
>> the output:
>> 
>> initramfs unpacking failed: ZSTD - compressed data is corrupt
>> Failed to execute /init (error - 2)
>> Kernel panic - not syncing: No working init found.
>> Try passing init=option to kernel.
>> 
>> So I ask those who are much smarter than me (you) what all this means.
>> What init=option could I pass to the kernel? And what about the ZSTD..... 
>> data?
>> What can I do?
>> You know, now that I think about it this problem coincides with the date of 
>> the new release (or at least my update of the system after such). Things 
>> that make you go hmmmmmmmm.....
>> That was a post onto Mint's support page. I haven't received any replies in 
>> like 4 days. I am thinking it is time to try a different distro. I was 
>> thinking about VOID. A couple of questions: what about my /home partition, 
>> will it transfer seamlessly? Do you think void will fix the problem or else 
>> what do you recommend?
>> -- 
>> :-)~MIKE~(-:
> 
> 
> -- 
> :-)~MIKE~(-:
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