What are they gonna do? Arrest you? (laughs)Spartan Bannana said:These days, there's much talk of suicide, and while I personally think of it as a terrible thing and decision, I consider it to be a person's right. They should be allowed to take their own life if they really want to. However, many people see fit to stop other people from committing suicide, and I think that this is a form of oppression. So what do all of you think, is suicide a right? Should people be allowed to commit suicide unobstructed?
I agree with this, no one except the person themselves can say whether suicide is the best option for them. Whilst yes, some people can get over depression with drugs or therapy and go on to live a "norml" life, others will just try again and again until eventually they succeed. And surely drawing out whatever suffering they have that makes them suicidal is more cruel than allowing them to end their life.Spartan Bannana said:These days, there's much talk of suicide, and while I personally think of it as a terrible thing and decision, I consider it to be a person's right. They should be allowed to take their own life if they really want to. However, many people see fit to stop other people from committing suicide, and I think that this is a form of oppression. So what do all of you think, is suicide a right? Should people be allowed to commit suicide unobstructed?
Your Avatar fits perfectly with this topicSpartan Bannana said:These days, there's much talk of suicide, and while I personally think of it as a terrible thing and decision, I consider it to be a person's right. They should be allowed to take their own life if they really want to. However, many people see fit to stop other people from committing suicide, and I think that this is a form of oppression. So what do all of you think, is suicide a right? Should people be allowed to commit suicide unobstructed?
But I wonder... Why is it my responsibility to suffer, just so that those around me will not feel sorrow?ZeroMachine said:In very, very, very rare cases, suicide can be justified. We're talking "I'm dying, there is no cure, I'll be in incredible amounts of pain for the rest of my life."
Other than that, suicide doesn't just effect the one who commits it. It effects everyone around them in one way or another. Think of it this way...
There's a big puddle. Let's say 8 feet across, perfectly circular for the metaphor's sake. The person who commits suicide is in the dead center of it (no pun intended) and the parts closer to the center represent the people closest to the suicidal one. The person commits suicide; you throw a huge rock right in the center. The entire puddle is thrown into chaos (pain, sadness, grief), some water splashes out (people leave what could have been a close knit group), and the puddle probably deforms and it no longer a perfect circle (everyone's life from that point on is either a little messed up or completely fucked up).
... Probably not the best metaphor, but the point still stands. Suicidal tendencies are usually signs of mental disorders that can be helped, and those that go through with it irreparably change everyone around them.
Are you saying you feel suicidal? There's plenty of help out there for you. Just reach out for it. Call someone who specializes in helping people going through that stuff.Longshot said:But I wonder... Why is it my responsibility to suffer, just so that those around me will not feel sorrow?ZeroMachine said:In very, very, very rare cases, suicide can be justified. We're talking "I'm dying, there is no cure, I'll be in incredible amounts of pain for the rest of my life."
Other than that, suicide doesn't just effect the one who commits it. It effects everyone around them in one way or another. Think of it this way...
There's a big puddle. Let's say 8 feet across, perfectly circular for the metaphor's sake. The person who commits suicide is in the dead center of it (no pun intended) and the parts closer to the center represent the people closest to the suicidal one. The person commits suicide; you throw a huge rock right in the center. The entire puddle is thrown into chaos (pain, sadness, grief), some water splashes out (people leave what could have been a close knit group), and the puddle probably deforms and it no longer a perfect circle (everyone's life from that point on is either a little messed up or completely fucked up).
... Probably not the best metaphor, but the point still stands. Suicidal tendencies are usually signs of mental disorders that can be helped, and those that go through with it irreparably change everyone around them.