‘I’m 28. And I’m Scheduled to Die in May.’ - Some right-to-die activists want everyone to have access to euthanasia—even young people with mental illness. Are they also making suicide contagious?

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Zoraya ter Beek, 28, expects to be euthanized in early May.

Her plan, she said, is to be cremated.

“I did not want to burden my partner with having to keep the grave tidy,” ter Beek texted me. “We have not picked an urn yet, but that will be my new house!”

She added an urn emoji after “house!”

Ter Beek, who lives in a little Dutch town near the German border, once had ambitions to become a psychiatrist, but she was never able to muster the will to finish school or start a career. She said she was hobbled by her depression and autism and borderline personality disorder. Now she was tired of living—despite, she said, being in love with her boyfriend, a 40-year-old IT programmer, and living in a nice house with their two cats.

She recalled her psychiatrist telling her that they had tried everything, that “there’s nothing more we can do for you. It’s never gonna get any better.”

At that point, she said, she decided to die. “I was always very clear that if it doesn’t get better, I can’t do this anymore.”

As if to advertise her hopelessness, ter Beek has a tattoo of a “tree of life” on her upper left arm, but “in reverse.”

“Where the tree of life stands for growth and new beginnings,” she texted, “my tree is the opposite. It is losing its leaves, it is dying. And once the tree died, the bird flew out of it. I don’t see it as my soul leaving, but more as myself being freed from life.”

Her liberation, as it were, will take place at her home. “No music,” she said. “I will be going on the couch in the living room.”

She added: “The doctor really takes her time. It is not that they walk in and say: lay down please! Most of the time it is first a cup of coffee to settle the nerves and create a soft atmosphere. Then she asks if I am ready. I will take my place on the couch. She will once again ask if I am sure, and she will start up the procedure and wish me a good journey. Or, in my case, a nice nap, because I hate it if people say, ‘Safe journey.’ I’m not going anywhere.”

Then the doctor will administer a sedative, followed by a drug that will stop ter Beek’s heart.

When she’s dead, a euthanasia review committee will evaluate her death to ensure the doctor adhered to “due care criteria,” and the Dutch government will (almost certainly) declare that the life of Zoraya ter Beek was lawfully ended.

She’s asked her boyfriend to be with her to the very end.

There won’t be any funeral. She doesn’t have much family; she doesn’t think her friends will feel like going. Instead, her boyfriend will scatter her ashes in “a nice spot in the woods” that they have chosen together, she said.

“I’m a little afraid of dying, because it’s the ultimate unknown,” she said. “We don’t really know what’s next—or is there nothing? That’s the scary part.”

Ter Beek is one of a growing number of people across the West choosing to end their lives rather than live in pain. Pain that, in many cases, can be treated.

Typically, when we think of people who are considering assisted suicide, we think of people facing terminal illness. But this new group is suffering from other syndromes—depression or anxiety exacerbated, they say, by economic uncertainty, the climate, social media, and a seemingly limitless array of fears and disappointments.

“I’m seeing euthanasia as some sort of acceptable option brought to the table by physicians, by psychiatrists, when previously it was the ultimate last resort,” Stef Groenewoud, a healthcare ethicist at Theological University Kampen, in the Netherlands, told me. “I see the phenomenon especially in people with psychiatric diseases, and especially young people with psychiatric disorders, where the healthcare professional seems to give up on them more easily than before.”

Theo Boer, a healthcare ethics professor at Protestant Theological University in Groningen, served for a decade on a euthanasia review board in the Netherlands. “I entered the review committee in 2005, and I was there until 2014,” Boer told me. “In those years, I saw the Dutch euthanasia practice evolve from death being a last resort to death being a default option.” He ultimately resigned.

Boer had in mind people like Zoraya ter Beek—who, critics argue, have been tacitly encouraged to kill themselves by laws that destigmatize suicide, a social media culture that glamorizes it, and radical right-to-die activists who insist we should be free to kill ourselves whenever our lives are “complete.”

They have fallen victim, in critics’ eyes, to a kind of suicide contagion.

Statistics suggest these critics have a point.

In 2001, the Netherlands became the first country in the world to make euthanasia legal. Since then, the number of people who increasingly choose to die is startling.

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Typically, when we think of people who are considering assisted suicide, we think of people facing terminal illness. But this new group is suffering from other syndromes—depression or anxiety exacerbated, they say, by economic uncertainty, the climate, social media, and a seemingly limitless array of fears and disappointments.
This should be a cause for concern for anyone who has a modicum of empathy. Unfortunately, it's a feature - tauting suicide as austerity-motivated healthcare. Why spend the money on a societal drain when they can just kill themselves? Awesome!

No jobs in the market? Getting priced out of your community as rent keeps going up and wages (as if you have a job LOLOL) are stagnating? Just McFucking Kill Yourself, because we sure as shit aren't going to improve the standard of living for you lowly maggots.
 
The psychiatrist sounds like a complete fucking psycho.
I wonder if the “this is as good as it gets” wasn’t delivered very differently. This woman sounds like a BPD attention-seeking nut case (which she is).

If she kept wasting the psychiatrist’s time with minor ailments or “I’m not really happy” BS, I could see a physician affirming that, yeah, most times life ain’t amazing, especially for pessimists. This patient, though, turns minor pushback of the “get over yourself” variety into victimization because she’s motivated by external attention—so it’s not that she’s vain or self-absorbed, it’s that the psychiatrist sucks and/or she’s just chronically depressed with no cure.

I hope we get a follow-up. I don’t think this narcissist will go through with it, but I do think the world would be better off without her.
 
At least wait until your cats die, you owe them that. You may hate yourself but your cats probably love you because they don't know any better.

I was gonna say, it's wild to me whenever people kill themselves but they still have pets.

I've had both dogs and cats, and both always got beyond stoked whenever I came back home from work or a trip. I couldn't imagine just leaving them to forever never know if I was ever coming back.

That's not even touching the people in your life who are left to wonder what they could have done, or have to grieve when they shouldn't have to.

The person in this story who should actually consider killing themselves is the piece of shit therapist who said there was nothing to be done. What kind of fucking doctor says that shit when it's not cancer? (Assuming this crazy bitch isn't making shit up).
 
"Depression and autism and borderline personality disorder" Name the more iconic internet munchies' favorite.

Otherwise, this is tragic, because I doubt that there's no release for her - but I wouldn't put it beyond the psychiatrist being tired of her and the overall narrow-mindedness of modern psychiatry being the culprit.
 
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This dumb cunt was sold the idea of suicide as a romantic option to end her life of goldbricking and dependence. The State was all too happy to remove one more welfare leech from its roles, selling its soul to the Devil in the process. There's a reason many mainstream religions thought of suicide as being an even worse sin than murder. This is where Dante thought the souls of suicides would go:


Imagine you've just been diagnosed with cancer, aged 30. You have a family with young children, but you've just been told to get your life in order because you have about three months to live. Imagine reading this article and knowing that a perfectly healthy person was willing to throw her precious life away over nothing. Some terminal cancer patients should show up at this attention whore's door and beat her to a pulp with their IV stands.
 
I was gonna say, it's wild to me whenever people kill themselves but they still have pets.

I've had both dogs and cats, and both always got beyond stoked whenever I came back home from work or a trip. I couldn't imagine just leaving them to forever never know I never came back.

That's not even touching the people in your life who are left to wonder what they could have done, or have to grieve when they shouldn't have to.

The person in this story who should actually consider killing themselves is the piece of shi therapist who said there was nothing to be done. What kind of fucking doctor says that shit when it's not cancer?
She's a liberal upper-middle class white woman and you expected her NOT to be a selfish piece of shit?
 
At least wait until your cats die, you owe them that. You may hate yourself but your cats probably love you because they don't know any better.
Honestly, this is the philosophy that helps keep me in the game, just add people I care about to the list. I wake up feeling like a failure at life and I wanna blow my own head off? Do I still have people on this earth that give a shit about me and would be sobbing their eyes out if I did something so retardedly selfish as depriving them the gift that is me cause I have the fucking sads? Oh, guess I don't get to knock off early then. Guess I just have to stop crying like a little bitch and fight through another day.

That and I wanna outlive as many trannies as I can.
 
I was gonna say, it's wild to me whenever people kill themselves but they still have pets.

I've had both dogs and cats, and both always got beyond stoked whenever I came back home from work or a trip. I couldn't imagine just leaving them to forever never know if I was ever coming back.
seriously there's plenty of people in my life who I have mixed enough feelings about that I wouldn't give that many fucks about doing a flip and leaving them in a lurch emotionally after some of the shit they've done to me, but yeah I'd never do that to my cat
 
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