- Joined
- Mar 9, 2015
Sorry for the morbid topic, but oddly I find this is a wonderful place to find a literal, diverse open minded group of people to talk with.
I find when I'm in the dumps, thinking helps a lot and sadly a few family members passed away, so I guess the whole mortality thing is running in my mind. Forgive the blog post, I just wanted a bit of a preface I'm not an emo kid over all depressed or a risk to myself or in bad health.
So, I was thinking, it's clearly a question I'm asking that has no "right" reply but more just where you stand. We all know how awful cancer is, and it's cures are almost as bad. We all know part of being alive, we will die. That's not a debate. But we have programs like hospice, some nations allow a taking of life under terminal conditions (varying from place to place). That's my question.
If you choose to not fight a .0001% chance of life, is that still same as losing a job and blasting yourself? Sure the reasons and direness are different and we both know the post results will be different, one you get a new job and life goes on the other, your body was shredded your health will never be good etc and depending only extend a short time in poor quality.
Personally, I don't think any adult has to go on, if you can prove you are mentally well and you feel depression, a loss, health etc. I strongly disagree with your choice over something as trivial in the big picture as a break up to self terminate, but I stand for a right of it.
So while I think it's always suicide, I don't try to judge anyone be it 86 and Alzheimer's is setting in and you don't want to be a zombie or 22 and PTSD is just tearing you apart.
Is it always selfish to end your life? If not at what point is it "ok" in your eyes? At what point is it surrender vs self destructive. I mean if you don't take a med you very well may die, and I understand that's different than an active rope tying in action but in moral. How many cases do we hear you have to stop sugar, booze or you will die and people don't stop, it's a slower acting active destruction, than saying no thanks to a treatment.
I know there's no wrong way to view this, but I guess right now I think it would be oddly calming if some people can chime in with how they feel about where the line is, if they see one.
I find when I'm in the dumps, thinking helps a lot and sadly a few family members passed away, so I guess the whole mortality thing is running in my mind. Forgive the blog post, I just wanted a bit of a preface I'm not an emo kid over all depressed or a risk to myself or in bad health.
So, I was thinking, it's clearly a question I'm asking that has no "right" reply but more just where you stand. We all know how awful cancer is, and it's cures are almost as bad. We all know part of being alive, we will die. That's not a debate. But we have programs like hospice, some nations allow a taking of life under terminal conditions (varying from place to place). That's my question.
If you choose to not fight a .0001% chance of life, is that still same as losing a job and blasting yourself? Sure the reasons and direness are different and we both know the post results will be different, one you get a new job and life goes on the other, your body was shredded your health will never be good etc and depending only extend a short time in poor quality.
Personally, I don't think any adult has to go on, if you can prove you are mentally well and you feel depression, a loss, health etc. I strongly disagree with your choice over something as trivial in the big picture as a break up to self terminate, but I stand for a right of it.
So while I think it's always suicide, I don't try to judge anyone be it 86 and Alzheimer's is setting in and you don't want to be a zombie or 22 and PTSD is just tearing you apart.
Is it always selfish to end your life? If not at what point is it "ok" in your eyes? At what point is it surrender vs self destructive. I mean if you don't take a med you very well may die, and I understand that's different than an active rope tying in action but in moral. How many cases do we hear you have to stop sugar, booze or you will die and people don't stop, it's a slower acting active destruction, than saying no thanks to a treatment.
I know there's no wrong way to view this, but I guess right now I think it would be oddly calming if some people can chime in with how they feel about where the line is, if they see one.