‘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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Reading this, she sounds like she is more romancing death than having a mental illness that is making her life so hard to live. Depression or anxiety, aren't reasons to end life, can be hard to deal with, getting better can take a long time and even then may not get fully better, but you can get to some level of normal functioning, and having those issues doesn't stop you from having any joy in ones life, case in point she has a boyfriend and wants him to be with her to the end, if no enjoyment in her life why would she care about that?

I support euthanasia, but cases like this will just be used as reasons to stop it from coming to other countries for people who really do need it, such as those with alzheimer's or inoperable cancer.
 
They keep taking away access to methods that are effective and painless to people (eg. nembutal) and forcing them to go to methods that traumatize other people via exposure and leaving a huge mess that's expensive to clean up.

We want to do it ourselves but again, not given many good fucking options that don't traumatize others or potentially leave us crippled and becoming a permanent burden upon others with disability.
i don't have a problem with a pharmacy offering barbiturates and scuba masks hooked up to gas tanks to people who want to die, i have a problem with people being talked into killing themselves by quacks and sick fucks who work for the government

also, the stupid bitch in OP seems to be glorifying and almost fetishizing suicide, it's just abusive to go "urn shopping" with your boyfriend

if she really loved him, she'd try to pull a fast one and do it while he was grabbing a pizza on the other side of town or something, or "go on a trip", or just cut ties and ghost everyone and then do it on her own time so that the loss felt more impersonal

this pageantry is disgusting
 
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I 100% support "youth with mental illness" committing suicide
  • they're subhuman
  • there are people with real but solvable problems who get volunteered for MAiD

It IS a problem that people get told "eckshually, your reluctance to eat bugs / live in a pod / suck the girldick is a mental illness, you need *~*~therapy~*~*", but this already is a thing with or without suicide.

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.
ALL OF THEM ARE LIKE THIS
ALL OF THEM
"Therapists" are the most retarded of doctors ("doctors") with the average IQ of 100.

Also,
- therapy is obvious bullshit
- victims of it get heaped praise on
- victims of it are told they're "working"

This creates a therapy victim to therapist pipeline with greater throughput than streamer to troon.

You've probably heard stories when a child, saved by a doctor / cop / firefighter, is inspired to become one. But they don't count their experience of having pediatric cancer / being a hostage / nearly dying in a fire as relevant job experience, they're just thankful. Therapists do. They think brain rot makes them more qualified.

Normal, healthy people are taking life advice from subhumans who are afraid to pick up a phone or take a shower because "anxiety".

Ter Beek is one of a growing number of people across the West choosing to end their lives rather than live in pain.
WHAT PAIN

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

Statistics suggest these critics have a point.
This right here is the problem:
But this new group is suffering from other syndromes—depression or anxiety exacerbated, they say, by economic uncertainty
No, you haven't been deliberately made destitute by globohomo with no, however exploitative, pathway to improvement, you're just *~*~depressed~*~*. And if brain rot drugs don't help (they won't, lol), the next option is suicide.
But if legal suicide wasn't an option, these people would've died from an overdose, or jumped, or trooned out.
 
Agreed. That bitch already hit the fucking wall.
1712138802454.png

she fat
 
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The psychiatrist sounds like a complete fucking psycho.
"I don't know what to do, doc."
"You're hopeless. Kill yourself."

“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.”
She sounds dim. She should have had multiple Dutch kids by age 20 and she'd have been just fine. Now she's suicidal with cats at age 30.
 
There's a reason the assisted suicide was so prominently displayed in Soylent Green--it was to show the film took place in a DYSTOPIA.

We are living in a dystopia now. This is one more indication. Anyone who came here from 1974 would see modern society with it's troonery, refugees, inflation, consoomerism, vapid, oversexualized pop culture, race riots, plague lockdowns, government and corporate surveillance, nascent AI abuse, and now government assisted suicide as a horrorshow and rightfully so.

How long until old age is a valid reason for MAID? How long until it's mandatory, for Climate Justice?

"Run Runner, run!"
 
There needs to be a point to life. When you become an adult you need to figure that out - find a point, make a point. Don't ask your psychiatrist to justify your continued existence. It needs to come from you.

If you've been around for 28 years and you can't see any point to this, then sure just end it. I think you've had long enough, and you sound kinda dumb anyway. This goes double for any clowns who are genuinely sadbrained about what the weather might be in another 30 years time.
 
It‘s a huge relief to give up on life. Then you don’t have to change, learn, grow, or adapt to anything. Ever! Congratulations, you are relieved of all responsibility til the end of time. It is much, much harder and bolder to stubbornly live and find purpose and meaning in it all. When you stop considering suicide an option it forces you to find within yourself, in the words of a better writer, an invincible summer.

It makes me think of how many religions consider suicide a sin. I’m not religious so I don’t really go for the concept of sin. But I do believe populations subtly change mentally depending on what you encourage and discourage. Encouraging people to live through despair fosters strength and hope, while normalizing suicide fosters defeatism and helplessness. I know which one I’d rather base my society on.
 
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