Because commiting to living requires the most strength. Suicide is a cop out! |
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Wow. I just learned something here today. Thank you 'Original poster' That actually does sound like some really good advice. Perhaps what people should do is maintain a balance of clinging onto life but also ponder about death and understand that life is only temporary so instead of wasting your time worrying about things like you said we should just go for it. |
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Because commiting to living requires the most strength. Suicide is a cop out! |
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I would agree that suicide is a cop out but its only a cop out if the problem thats making you do it is something that can be solved. As for me I wouldn't commit suicide unless it is something extremely horrible, like finding out I have a horrible disease and will die a slow and painful death. If that were the case I would probably do it |
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There is to many cool things to see in life. I am all for life, because it is interesting. Why do anything, if it isn't interesting to you in some way? Me, I think of all the insane technology and knowledge we will have in the future, like space travel, robotic bodies, better than real life virtual reality, discovery of other dimensions, understanding of the universe. That stuff is all really cool and I want to see it. The only way I will see it is if I am alive, so I want to live. |
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Well firstly I have no reason to commit suicide; I have a desire to keep on living which I'm sure can be explained by what loads of other people have posted. A slight fear of death also comes from the process of dying itself (otherwise I don't fear it - after all, I've been not-alive for several billion years before coming here). In addition, however, I wouldn't commit suicide because of the effect it has on those around me. |
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Everyone can make their own choices; that's the beauty of free will. Those choices include suicide. You just have to be willing to live with the consequences; every action has them, whether they be positive or negative. |
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As we felt eternity,
the water recalled her life
as rain.
When the costs of living exceed the benefits of living; then yes, suicide is definitely an option. For example: living in constant, excruciating pain. |
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I think this thread might actually be dangerous to some people who might have real suicidal tendencies. Especially statements like this: |
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I think it's more dangerous to be afraid to address suicide as a society, forcing those tendencies and questions to fester in the dark. I am merely bringing to the surface questions which people with suicidal tendencies are already asking and seeking the answer to. |
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Everything works out in the end, sometimes even badly.
Not to say the consequences (repercussions, results, etc.) are necessarily good or bad, there's really no way for us to tell how that affects you after death. All anyone can see is the immediate aftermath the suicide victim leaves behind here. "Every action has an equal and opposite reaction." There's no escaping consequence; it exists in all situations involving choice. |
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As we felt eternity,
the water recalled her life
as rain.
Oh, don't mind me, I wasn't making any profound point, just a stupid pun. It didn't occur to me until after I posted that by "live with the consequences" you could mean "live [in the next life/form/stage/whatever] with the consequences." Little more like dying with the consequences, I guess |
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"Less of a young professional, more of an ancient amateur."
Ha! I get it now. I was just so wrapped up in the topic, I didn't even catch the pun. XD |
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As we felt eternity,
the water recalled her life
as rain.
I'm not sure if I believe in an afterlife. It would certainly make suicide more appealing if you did not have an afterlife to deal with. Then the only consequence is giving up whatever you could have done with your life besides end it, which isn't worse than nothing. Nothing is just that, and once it comes everything becomes meaningless. Whether or not you die sooner purposefully or later naturally, you die the same way. And you're going to die either way, not killing yourself does not make you immortal. |
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Last edited by Original Poster; 08-21-2012 at 02:40 AM.
Everything works out in the end, sometimes even badly.
I get what you're saying here, but I guess I wouldn't call it "living suicidally", I'd call it finding inner peace, or enlightenment. When I think of the phrase "living suicidally", I think of exactly the thing you said it's not: Jumping into traffic, or ODing on hard drugs or alcohol. But I guess everyone sees things differently, yes? Either way, I understand what you're saying, and I agree with you that letting go of wants and trying not to compare your life with anyone else's is important. |
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As we felt eternity,
the water recalled her life
as rain.
I understand that way I chose to phrase things gives off some unintentional implications. |
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Everything works out in the end, sometimes even badly.
As someone who has been through very dark times and contemplated suicide many times, I still don't see it as morally 'wrong' or have an argument against it in general, but do think it is something not to be taken lightly. |
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Last edited by hermine_hesse; 08-22-2012 at 10:15 PM.
I don't believe it should be taken lightly either. It's the most serious question there is. Life's value and meaning is valuable and meaningful because we create it. We choose to have it, we live on our terms, knowing it's our choice. When we choose to expect or dream of something better it's because those dreams give us meaning right now. I want something. I have a choice, I can pursue the hope or kill it. Expectations are not forced upon me. They are mine to control. My impulses are not gone, but impulses don't make you a slave, refusing responsibility for your life does. The most important choice in life is suicide, everything else is what we hope for and what we live through. |
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Everything works out in the end, sometimes even badly.
OP, I understand what you're saying now. The first part of your reply sounded like you were talking about physical suicide and how it is a representation of the conquering of a previously thought uncontrollable situation. The second part sounds like you're talking about a metaphorical suicide, the killing of the clinging onto ideals, as opposed to a physical one. Is that what you're saying? |
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As we felt eternity,
the water recalled her life
as rain.
Right. |
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Everything works out in the end, sometimes even badly.
Some people commit suicide because they have chemical imbalances that make them severely depressed and they seen no way out. There are psychiatric medications that can bring them completely out of that. If you have a major deficiency of serotonin, for example, no type of thought or self-examination is going to bring you out of the depression. That is why I majorly big time encourage all suicidal people to see psychiatrists. There really are ways out. Sometimes it takes trying different medications, but something will work. This situation happened to me earlier in life. If the situation is psychological, a psychiatrist should be able to determine that and refer the patient to a psychologist. Sometimes a person is just going through a horrific time because of an awful event that happened, and time eventually heals that although the depression can be so bad that it seems like it will never just go away. In those situations, it will. These points apply to anxiety also. |
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You are dreaming right now.
Medication is definitely one step a person can take to become responsible for their own happiness. |
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Last edited by Original Poster; 08-23-2012 at 06:04 PM.
Everything works out in the end, sometimes even badly.
Treating my hypoglycemia, which includes eating the right kinds of grains and getting good aerobic exercise, is what has kept me out of the psychiatrist's office since 1991, except for one time when I went for some short term ADD medicine. |
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You are dreaming right now.
I don't commit suicide because I am not yet done living. Negativity is as worth experiencing as anything else is. I've experienced quite a range of emotions and situations, both positive and negative. However, I still want to experience more. Suicide is a means of ending the experience, as far as I am able to tell right now. Suicide, in my case, is therefore counterproductive. |
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Everyone longs to be dissolved into Unity...This body holding me reminding me that I am not alone... |
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