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So - suicide

DZoolander

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Ehhh - I'll grant that "selfish" isn't exactly the perfect word for it. But - there's a reason why it gets lumped into that.

Selfish often means putting your perceived interests ahead of the interests of others (or more succinctly sacrificing the interests of others for your own perceived interests). When you look at suicide - on many levels - it is exactly that. I could be wrong - but I have a hard time believing anyone TRULY believes that those around them are going to be dancing for joy once the suicide is complete. There are simply too many examples out there of grieving grief stricken people coping with the after effects of suicide for them *not* to notice.

In my mind - that simply means "I don't care. The hurt I feel outweighs that."

Someone else made a comment about keeping their hand in the fire - and whether or not it would be "selfish" to remove it. I would like to believe (and maybe I'm just completely wrong about my constitution) - but I would LIKE to believe that if I were given the choice between irreparable psychological trauma to my child - or keeping my hand in the flame - that I would let that mother burn to a crisp before I'd allow my child to suffer like that.

I also don't really know what to do with the idea of whether or not the family members would be offended reading what I'm saying. I think they would. That does not, however, diminish what I believe to be the truth of what I'm saying. The individual that they love and are protecting the memory of chose to scar them indelibly.
 
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LovebirdsFlying

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Zoo, I can see your point of view, and I'm glad you indicate you can also see mine.

No matter how many people tell me differently, when I am in the depths of a depressive episode, I cannot believe anything OTHER than that if I took myself out of the equation, my family would break into dancing and singing, "Ding Dong, the Witch is Dead." Am I correct? Absolutely not. I know that--when I'm in my right mind. When I'm not, I remain convinced no matter the evidence presented to me. Delusions and hallucinations work in similar ways. If a hallucinating schizophrenic sees a rattlesnake in the middle of the living room floor, there is no way you're ever going to persuade him or her that there isn't one. No amount of proof or logic will help.
 
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DZoolander

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Imo, this discussion could be a slippery slope. After all, if your argument is that your life is not your own, that argument should be applied to other things as well, such as abortion. If there is a living being (even though it is dependent on a "mature" living being, shouldn't the mature living being's life then not be only her own, but also that of the other living being within her? I'm not sure the logic sticks - depending on how you feel about applying it to other areas as well.

Well - that does get into other areas that I find interesting - which are questions like "Is there an intrinsic value to life? If so, what is it? Are all lives equally valuable? If so - how do you account for things like the death penalty, etc? If not - how is value ascertained?" etc...etc...etc..

That all being said - my view is that there are various "strata" of obligations in life...ranging from things like you talk about with respect to not choosing a path that would be psychologically harmful to strangers/relationships of happenstance/etc...all the way to not choosing a path that would be harmful to those you have voluntarily created (like children). The quality and nature of every type of relationship is different - and I think needs to be taken into account when talking about the level of obligation carried.

In my mind - the obligation to a child is the highest one - and I don't believe it ever goes away (at least in terms of doing no harm). Children are unique - because you voluntarily created them - and you occupy a place in their lives that has meaning far different than (most likely) anyone else that they will ever come across.

To that extent - yes - I think that your obligation to a child is far more than something like "Well, are they dependent financially upon me? etc". Most often, parents are the rocks that children have anchored their realities around if done right (and most often even if done wrong). With that in mind - and given the long term effects your actions will truly have (far beyond your own lifetime, God willing), yes, I think their interests do supersede your own.
 
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twob4me

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~~~~~~~~~~~MOD HAT ON!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Okay this thread is being reopened after a few posts have been removed in a clean up. It is quite possible a further cleaning will take place so if you notice a post of yours missing it was more than likely removed in a clean up.

You need to stay on topic. On topic is how suicide effects a spouse, family and children only. There should be no discussion on if suicide is a sin, what is the cause of suicide etc. Also this subject is very delicate and there are members who suffer from suicidal thoughts so please be mindful of what you post and take care in the words you choose.

~~~~~~~~~~~MOD HAT OFF!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
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Autumnleaf

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Suicide is definitely linked to ego in that it is lack of acceptance that causes frustration that causes the pain. Part of that is focusing on ourselves and whatever problems we are dealing with at the time. Its hard to be depressed when we focus on helping others.

From what I understand Williams was very helpful to others and very generous with his time. I've heard he was experiencing a waning career and had large debts related to failed marriages. I think his focus on money problems coupled with his bipolar mind probably drove him to think there was no solution other than the final one. The lows for bipolar people can drive them to the depths of hell compared to the lows most people experience. Some say it is the comparison they experience with their manic phase where they feel elation to the levels the rest of us never experience on Earth.

There is also his addictions which were probably very expensive when he was stuck in them. He recently was in rehab.

Its a shame. He was a brilliant man. I think people who commit suicide are often facing real problems, but they are probably choosing a permanent solution to a temporary problem. I think the way out of that is to open up with people about what is going on. Just doing that can put things in proper perspective.
 
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Tropical Wilds

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This is more for the benefit of the thread and the discussion more than you Zoo, you know all of this already from what we've talked about. LoL!

I think it's a complicated situation with complex emotions that has no one simple explanation, rationalization, or sentiment that can describe the person who made this choice or that choice.

My husband has always thought suicide was a selfish choice. It was one of the few debates I couldn't have with him for the whole of our relationship because he firmly believed it was selfish, the people who did it were selfish, their reasons were selfish, he almost spoke about people who killed themselves with disgust.

Then we had a friend who we loved take his own life. The first person we've known in our immediate circle that had done such a thing.

When our friend died, my husband was the poster child for the 5 stages of grief. When he was settling in to acceptance, he realized his thoughts about suicide weren't matching about our friend... He was struggling with depression and had been for years and years. While the choice was certainly impulsive, my husband was really struggling with the idea of what he did was selfish, at least, maliciously selfish. He knew that our friend was struggling and having seen how dark things got for him, he knew when things got that dark, he was begging for, and not finding, relief. We all tried to help him as best as we knew how (and we all second guessed what we could have done to help him more), but we knew... When it was bad, it was bad. There was nothing we could do. I think seeing our friend's father after the fact and seeing his funeral was a celebration of his life, but most importantly, seeing his mother after-the-fact and hearing her say "He's struggled so long, so hard, we struggled with him... But I thank God he's at least at peace now. He's fought this disease for so long and we always knew it was a terminal illness." I think it hit him hard... Our friend's family was every bit the brokenhearted, grieving, mournful, devastated family... But when he hears our friend's parents say it was an all consuming disease that plagued him... I think reality hit. I think reality hit more when he heard one of our friends say "when my father had cancer, he fought and fought, but when he was tired of fighting and had accepted this was going to kill him, he could go to a doctor and say 'no more, I want no more treatment, I accept what's going to happen' and have that choice be accepted for what it is. We told him he was brave, the doctor gave him pills so he wasn't uncomfortable, we celebrated his life and then he died. (Friend's name) had a disease too and I think this is his same way of doing what my father did. He knew he had no more fight and it was time. Looking at his family, they act a lot like we did when we found out Dad said he was ready to let go. Maybe that's it."

That was the seed that got my husband thinking that maybe it is selfish, but it's not a selfish with a malicious intent. I think he saw our friend was really, really struggling, he thought he was hurting his family with his depression, the expense and stress of dealing with it, and that further fueled his depression. He felt that what he did not only gave him relief after a decade of darkness, but also removed the pain his family felt. I think it was clear that he knew his death would hurt his family, but it would also give them closure and a chance to move on once the grief had subsided. I do know that the pain his family experienced and his guilt over it was massive. He wanted an out for them as much as himself and that's what he thought it was on an impulsive, really dark night.

Shortly after the death of our friend, after a long, really brutal struggle, I was diagnosed with manic depression and then eventually Bipolar II Disorder (Lyme... The disease that keeps on giving). I think that was the tipping point for him, where he figured out that the depression people are in when they choose suicide isn't one of negligent or malicious selfishness. People who kill themselves aren't generally trying to make a point, actively hurt those who they love, or anything like that... They're making a choice that they belief will bring them and their family relief after battling something as awful, all-consuming, and life-changing as cancer, without even the promise of recovery or successful management of the illness, just the promise of good days, bad days and "sticking with it" to see if things get better.

My husband watched me struggle for months and months. He saw me angry and frustrated over nothing, on the brink of tears and completely unable to tell anybody why, he saw pain and didn't know how to fix it. He thought it was his fault, he didn't make me happy, he wanted to fix it and didn't know why sometimes it made it worse. He struggled right along with me, right at ground zero, he saw how guilty I felt that he thought what was wrong with me was him, he felt guilty that made me feel guilty... It was a downward spiral.

I tried to explain to him how it feels. It feels like everything that's great, makes you happy, your good memories, everything that's positive is like water in a bucket that sits under a faucet and that bucket has a huge leak at the bottom where water just pours out. Sometimes that faucet that fills the bucket is on at just a drip, sometimes the faucet is on at full blast... But always, always, no matter how much water is going into the bucket, you're always leaking out the bottom. Depression is that leak at the bottom that you always feel draining, the knowledge that that water is going out the leak and you can't stop it, and this constant fear that the faucet that fills the bucket will shut off, the bucket will empty, or worse, the faucet will shut off while the bucket is empty and never come back on. All you can think about is that leak and what you're losing and the fear and pain over what you're losing and how it won't come back.

Now, I'm horribly lucky... When I'm at my darkest, I never got to full fledged suicidal thoughts. But I did get to a point where my pain was so self-destructive that I would start thinking "I hate that my kids see me like this all the time. I don't want this to be my legacy. If I died tomorrow, I don't want them to remember me like this" and "I bet my husband misses how I was. I hate letting him down everyday. I don't want him to think of me like this." Then, more guilt, more pain, more fueling of the depression... And it was that point where I realized that these thoughts were the gateway thoughts to suicidal thoughts. In the highs, which were lower and lower highs, I was able to ground myself with "hang in there for your husband, he loves you" and "try to beat this for your kids." When it started to feel like it wasn't enough, I knew I was in trouble and it all culminated in me having a breakdown, telling my husband something was really wrong and I needed help, and he said whatever I needed I needed to do because he knew something was really, really wrong.

We had to confront if I was suicidal and I wasn't, but my husband said that seeing what depression, real depression, is like at ground zero, he sees how people get there. It's not selfishness, it's a cry for relief after relentlessly managing the worst of one's inner demons, exhaustion, maybe impulse during a time when your bucket is empty and the faucet isn't turning on, misplaced belief that you're giving relief to others, a desperate attempt to have the only control in a uncontrollable situation... Even if we take it as a selfish action that's done for one's self only, it's not malicious. Most don't do it to hurt their loved ones, but because they hurt so much and just want it to stop.

I think people would be surprised to hear the number of people who make this choice that think "I'm tired of putting my friends and family through hell... And I'm the hell. I can't keep doing this to them and me. This is my only choice."

I for sure think Robin was there. And seeing how Zelda talks about it, I see a lot of what I saw in my friend's family... An acknowledgement of the demons of depression and implications that while she's devastated she's gone, she's glad he's finally free of what was killing him.
 
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mkgal1

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I also agree with Dr. Drew Pinsky on this:

Williams had a brain disease. It wasn’t a demon or a devil. In fact, I strongly object to people referring to those with psychiatric illnesses as "struggling with inner demons." That only promotes a primitive and stigmatizing sense of these conditions. We don’t say someone is struggling with an inner demon when they have a tumor somewhere -- although there was a time when we did! And we have not relinquished these backwards notions when we refer to disorders of the brain.~Dr. Drew: Please don't call it 'inner demons' | HLNtv.com
 
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pdudgeon

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I would put medically assisted suicide right up there along with self-suicide as being an even more hurtful thing for families to go thru. No matter how one looks at it, medically assisted suicide is murder, plain and simple.

I know all the reasons people use to justify it, but involving or obligating family members to willingly kill one of their own is just not right, no matter how it's dressed up.

That kind of thinking needed to justify taking a life stays with a person, and eventually becomes a cancer of wrong thought in their own life. It totally changes the worth of a human life from irreplaceable to expendable for convenience sake.

All of this is a part of the culture of death that is sweeping the country, involving more and more people every day. Why people can no longer see the worth and value of a human life just for itself and not assign value only for who a person is, what they can achieve, or what they can physically or mentally do i don't know.

We used to value life.
We used to have heroes and people we looked up to not only for what they might one day do, but to always honor them for what they had done. We used to have hope. Now it seems like everyone is just looking for an easy way out of difficulty and applying the quick solutions even to the problems of life.

I know that I am getting long winded here, but if there is anything that can stop this culture of death from taking over good lives, it is the words of Jesus;

"I am come that they might have life, and have it abundantly.":thumbsup:

Honor life, don't trash it!
 
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LJSGM2

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It's amazing that a Christian would choose judgment over compassion. That is true selfishness. Perhaps this is why the church is so powerless. What about the "dead" that are still living all around you? Are you going to judge them or give them compassion. Love which may restore them and give them life through Jesus?
 
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mkgal1

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Tropical Wilds

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I would put medically assisted suicide right up there along with self-suicide as being an even more hurtful thing for families to go thru. No matter how one looks at it, medically assisted suicide is murder, plain and simple.

I know all the reasons people use to justify it, but involving or obligating family members to willingly kill one of their own is just not right, no matter how it's dressed up.

That kind of thinking needed to justify taking a life stays with a person, and eventually becomes a cancer of wrong thought in their own life. It totally changes the worth of a human life from irreplaceable to expendable for convenience sake.

If we're talking about what I said, I'm more talking the people who make the decision to forego treatment in a terminal illness and allow what happens to happen, getting only comfort care. Not assisted suicide. Assisted suicide isn't something I've experienced or knew people who experienced it, so I can't speak to the thought process behind it. I can't imagine it'd be the same because I think there's a difference between a consuming depression where you feel death is the only escape and finding out about a terminal illness where death is inevitable and one chooses to end their life as opposed to living through the illness. One is more like a symptom, side effect, whatever, brought on directly by depression... The other is more medical related.

All of this is a part of the culture of death that is sweeping the country, involving more and more people every day. Why people can no longer see the worth and value of a human life just for itself and not assign value only for who a person is, what they can achieve, or what they can physically or mentally do i don't know.

That's the trick to depression. They have attempted to assign that value... Sometimes to a degree that's all-consuming, even obsessive, and because of their illness they still come up short, feeling there is no value, there's nothing that they can or will achieve, and they are unable to physically or mentally do anything but feel only the most extreme of the worst feelings people can have.

We used to value life.
We used to have heroes and people we looked up to not only for what they might one day do, but to always honor them for what they had done. We used to have hope. Now it seems like everyone is just looking for an easy way out of difficulty and applying the quick solutions even to the problems of life.

I think that this kind of overly waters down the issue of suicide to saying that it's a quick solution and depression is "a problem of life." I have a hard time thinking of the person who resorted to suicide as the first step to relieving severe depression, not the last, desperate resort. And depression, true depression, especially what Robin Williams had (manic depression and a form of bipolar disorder though I'm not sure which one) is far more than "a problem of life." Like I said before, it's something that people tend to brush off because everybody has been sad, everybody has been what they term as depressed... But this level of depression is a diagnosis as serious as cancer. It is a condition that doesn't go away. It goes into remission, but it comes back. The highs of life aren't really highs, they're just robbed from you because what brings you to your low is still there, waiting to come back and you know it. The lows are severe, long lasting, and bring a level of hopelessness that's hard to put into words. And it just doesn't go away. Ever. Medications may or not work and if they do, they may have side effects that make things worse in different ways.

Imagine living your life with a person behind you, always three feet away, carrying a knife. You know at any moment he could come and cut off a finger or two. You don't know when, you don't know how much of the finger he'll take or how many of them he'll take. You just know he's there. You try to do what makes you happy, but you know... That person with the knife is still there. You can see him and you know what he's waiting to do. Even things that made you happy before, all you can focus on is "I hope he doesn't do it now... Gosh, he moved a foot to the left... Is he coming? He's coming isn't he... When he does, the pain will be unreal..." Then he comes, he cuts off your fingers, and all you can feel is blinding hurt. The pain meds you take may not work. The medical care you get only kind of stops the bleeding. All you can do is wait until you feel better, hope he doesn't come and take more fingers while you're still in pain, and you rely on your body to just kind of make it as OK as it can.

That's how it can feel when you're dealing with this level of depression. It makes you almost paranoid. It eventually just totally eats away at you. It's a hard way to live and it's even harder if you feel like nobody gets it. You're alone in dealing with it and you feel like your dragging your loved ones down with you.

I know that I am getting long winded here, but if there is anything that can stop this culture of death from taking over good lives, it is the words of Jesus;

"I am come that they might have life, and have it abundantly.":thumbsup:

But by saying that we imply that people who kill themselves aren't Christian, aren't good Christians, or are people who don't have faith or know Jesus. That's often not the case and in fact I believe studies show that suicide between people with a faith is the same and/or higher than those who don't.

And really, with a problem like true and lasting depression, saying to somebody with the pain of depression and suicidal faults that all they need to do to be better is to understand that after their fingers are chopped off, the invisible police will be there to make it better and arrest the guy. You won't see it and you may not feel it, but they will (trust us)... It's not just not helpful.
 
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Tropical Wilds

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I also agree with Dr. Drew Pinsky on this:

I actually am OK with it in the context that it isn't demons causing it, but a description/comparison to the type of discord that would be caused by a demon. When I think about it and how I feel, demons is almost the best way to put it. It's almost how it feels... Like some dark entity is throwing darkness on you and you can't get out of it and it feels like it's malicious.

Like sometimes people refer to cancer as a demon (Imagine Dragons has a hit song based on that actually). We know it's not a demon that caused it or a demon that's in them, it's figurative for the malignant force that's residing in somebody's body. It feels malevolent and vicious and it's taking from you. Like a demon.
 
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mkgal1

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I actually am OK with it in the context that it isn't demons causing it, but a description/comparison to the type of discord that would be caused by a demon. When I think about it and how I feel, demons is almost the best way to put it. It's almost how it feels... Like some dark entity is throwing darkness on you and you can't get out of it and it feels like it's malicious.

Like sometimes people refer to cancer as a demon (Imagine Dragons has a hit song based on that actually). We know it's not a demon that caused it or a demon that's in them, it's figurative for the malignant force that's residing in somebody's body. It feels malevolent and vicious and it's taking from you. Like a demon.

I guess what bothers me about the use of "inner demons" is that, since this has been brought to the forefront, I've read blogs about how people need to "rely on God".....or "pray for God to help" (as if that hasn't been done) or other things along those lines. It just seems to bring it too close to, "a REAL Christian wouldn't struggle with this".....and that's wrong. You know what I mean?
 
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Wren

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I'll admit I skimmed this thread and posts in it. Did anyone mention that Robin Williams was in the early stages of Parkinson's disease? You take someone who already feels like a waste of space and burden, then add that which would seal the deal in someone's mind of how much they are or could become a burden. So, in his mind (I'm obviously guessing), he may have felt the opposite of selfish.

I think it's easy to use words like selfish when you've never been in that pit. My father killed himself when I was just shy of 12 years old. The world "selfish" never occurred to me. I always just wondered how he ended up the way he did (especially considering that his siblings don't seem to have the same issues) if it went beyond a chemical imbalance in the brain. I guess my thinking is to understand where the person may have been coming from to make such an extreme decision, rather than judge them. But that may show my bias. For most of my life, I haven't had the luxury of distance on this subject.
 
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mkgal1

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I'll admit I skimmed this thread and posts in it. Did anyone mention that Robin Williams was in the early stages of Parkinson's disease? You take someone who already feels like a waste of space and burden, then add that which would seal the deal in someone's mind of how much they are or could become a burden. So, in his mind (I'm obviously guessing), he may have felt the opposite of selfish.

I completely agree....and, no, I don't think that'd been mentioned yet.

I think it's easy to use words like selfish when you've never been in that pit. My father killed himself when I was just shy of 12 years old. The world "selfish" never occurred to me. I always just wondered how he ended up the way he did (especially considering that his siblings don't seem to have the same issues) if it went beyond a chemical imbalance in the brain. I guess my thinking is to understand where the person may have been coming from to make such an extreme decision, rather than judge them. But that may show my bias. For most of my life, I haven't had the luxury of distance on this subject.
So sorry you've lived this (((HUGS)))...but I completely agree that unless one has actually been there (even THEN) it's always best to try to understand where a person is coming from rather than to judge (without knowing what's truly going on).
 
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DZoolander

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My thoughts on suicide are kinda hard to articulate...at least in the context of what we're talking about. I've alluded to it - and kinda gone into aspects of it with respect to what I perceive to be obligations to others... But maybe it might help to give a more detailed explanation?

The truth is, I feel a little uncomfortable using the word "selfish" when I talk about it (mostly directed toward TW after her very thoughtful response) - because there are a lot of implied "feelings" that are associated with the word selfish that I don't want to convey in what I'm intending to say. I'm glad that you drew the distinction between "selfishness" and "malicious selfishness" - because that does kind of get into the delineation that I feel is important to draw. I'm usually pretty good at finding synonyms to words - but there really isn't one that I can think of...so "malicious selfishness" vs. "plain selfishness" (defined as a self centered act - albeit not malicious in intent) will have to do.

In that - I don't really ever think it's a malicious act...and I really hope it doesn't sound like I'm being judgmental of the people. I'm really not trying to be - at least not in a condescending "look at how you've sinned" kind of way.

The truth is - suicide in and of itself as an act doesn't really bother me. It's the context that matters in my eyes. I weight acts differently depending on context. Maybe that sounds kinda crappy - but it's honestly how I look at things.

Like - if someone were to get stranded on an island and God were to appear saying "Nobody will ever know what happened to you here - you will never be found" - etc... I really couldn't care less (nor would I find any problem) in that person committing suicide.

Medically assisted suicide also doesn't really bother me - because the context is often different. Usually, at least from my understanding of it, it's a long drawn out process where expectations are set, goodbyes are done and everything is done within possible means to use it as a form of closure to a really bad situation. In that - it doesn't "offend" me - because it's my impression everyone's involved.

...which is far different than unexpectedly coming home and finding your loved one with a bullet in the brain or hanging from the rafters or bled out in the bathtub or something. Which - by the way - the police don't clean up for you. That's a wonderful job left to your loved ones.

Then you get into other areas. Like, say there was a hermit who never had children...his/her parents had died...they were kinda anti-social... that person's suicide wouldn't bother me nearly as much as someone who had a wife and five young children.

Why?

Because I see different levels of "obligation" within a person's life...and I place different weights on different types of relationships. Paramount in all of that is the parent/child relationship - which I think is so unique that it trumps everything. In my eyes, once someone has taken on the role of parenthood, they have an implicit duty to do no intentional harm to their child (whether it be physical or mental) and that obligation lasts until the day they die.

I rarely quote TV shows - but there was a line in last week's True Blood that kinda encapsulates how I feel about the parent/child thing in a pretty succinct (less wordy than I would normally be) way. People live two lives...the first is for themselves - the second is for their children.

In that - I do think that once you CHOOSE to bring a child in the world - your life no longer really belongs to you. There is something so unique about the way children look at their parents and the role parents play in their lives that you cease having the autonomy that you had before. Kids don't ask to be born - we choose to bring them into this world. They're going to outlast us - and their perceptions of the world are going to influence how they treat their own children. In that - actions beget actions that can have repercussions that last a LONG time.

...and to that end - no - I believe that once we've chosen to have a kid - it really kinda is about them and ceases to be about us...and it's for that reason that hearing about the suicide of a parent rubs me in a way that other suicides don't. I look at my daughter - and maybe I'm naive for saying this - I'd like to believe that I would sit through anything to prevent her from coming to harm and I could not bear to think that a lifetime of psychological trauma would come from my hand.

...which leads to two other arguments people make...

First - that they think that they're doing it out of love...to relieve the trauma they might already be inflicting upon them.

Next - that the loved ones find a way to look at it that at least shines it in an understandable light.

The truth is - I don't know what to do with either of those arguments.

The first argument about how they think it's almost a compassionate act...I just wonder how they could come to see things like that? I think most people know someone that has either committed suicide - or else knows someone intimately that knows someone. It's not something really far removed from anyone's lives...at least nobody I've ever met.

...and I've yet to come across anyone that was like "whew - glad they did that!"

I don't think that exists. So - how could anyone go through life where suicide ain't all that far removed - see the devastation that it brings - and somehow think that they're the unique one so loathed or so burdensome that theirs is the one that would be welcomed or thrown a party for? I just don't get that.

The second one - about how families find a way to gleam something from it - I don't know how to address that one without making an argument that would be hurtful to them...which is the last thing I'd want to do.

Ehhh - oh well - what a meandering post.
 
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