But your right, in that light its murder. But murder of who? — Brett
On face value I surmise that this makes sense. But, the issue is that suicide, even in a deterministic universe is still self-harm. You can't really get around this fact — Wallows
I don't know how to explain this but all cases of suicide are a last resort i.e. people who take their own lives are left with no choice. — TheMadFool
Not true, drugs, prostitutes, the "low-life" is always an option. — Wallows
These aren't last on a to-do list. To be fair though I think people differ from each other quite significantly so that no two to-do lists will ever match item for item. So, yes, some people have different items on their list but the point is the last item on any list isn't a choice at all. — TheMadFool
Those are not a solution to most people's pain. Let's say you think the world is never going to provide you the love you want, you're heart has been broken a number of times (and perhaps this mirrors what happened in childhood some way), then someone suggesting 'take drugs' is not solving the problem and the yearning of the depressed person. A drug user might take the drug to find a respite from a similar longing, but they haven't given up yet and they are hooked.Not true, drugs, prostitutes, the "low-life" is always an option. — Wallows
I think the best way to avoid suicidal thoughts is to first take some antidepressant, and engage in therapy or some constructive endeavor if one has enough motivation to do so. — Wallows
Suicide can be mitigated by becoming more aware of other people or thoughts. — Wallows
In Japan, the act is seen as sometimes a noble death. — Wallows
So there is no such thing as suicide construed differently from other forms of death. — TheMadFool
I've since come to the conclusion that there is a non-rational feeling of meaningfulness or meaninglessness that people can have, what I call ontophilia or ontophobia (love or fear of being), and if you are full of that feeling of meaningfulness, you neither fear death nor feel like living is an obligation that you have to fill with distractions because you're just grateful to exist right now and that can go on for as long as it does; while if you're full of that feeling of meaninglessness, you either (or both simultaneously) fear the prospect of ever dying, and feel like having to exist is an oppressive tedium that you have to distract yourself from by filling time with something. — Pfhorrest
Should you avoid suicidal thoughts in the first place? Wouldn't it be better to face them? — Dawnstorm
What if someone uses suicidal thoughts for some sort of catharsis, like roleplaying, rather than as premeditation for an act? — Dawnstorm
Some suicidal thoughts never lead to an actual suicide. But even suicidal thoughts that are not connected to an intention to kill oneself can lay the groundwork for a future suicide - as you familiarise yourself with the thought patterns. An example would be: "having a favourite hypothetical method" --> "being comfortable with the method, thus removing one psychological disincentive." — Dawnstorm
As a formerly suicidal person I can tell you that fear of dying and fear of death are not the same thing. I have the former but not the latter. — Dawnstorm
I've just learned to live through my suicidal phase, and now suicidal thoughts are some sort of cathartic tool (and that sometimes includes black humour). — Dawnstorm
Depression is actually welcome, because it's more comfortable than the anxiety of what sort of contradictory demands will come your way next. — Dawnstorm
I was very much aware of the thing of 'it gets better' and I had nothing but contempt for it, but.... — csalisbury
I went to the same bar every night. I got as drunk as I could and walked home. I would wake up and smoke cigarettes all day (2 packs or so). I checked myself into mental hospitals and then, checked-in, tried to find ways to get out, because it wasn't helping, and I needed to commit suicide. — csalisbury
For me, when feeling ontophobic, trying not to does feel like some kind of cowardly retreat from rationally confronting the only meaningful problem in existence. But when feeling ontophilic, such concerns seem like obviously irrational obsession with an entirely illusory non-problem. For people stuck indefinitely in absurd despair and deprived from periods of awe and serenity, I can understand why they would see trying to break out of that as cowardly even though being like that hurts themselves. It’s like an addiction to something you hate: doing it brings you no pleasure, it may even bring you pain, but you just feel like you have to and it would be wrong of you not to. But once you’re out of it, it seems completely different, and looking back on yourself when you were in that space, or at others still stuck it it, it just seems pitiably irrational and self-destructive to be in that space. — Pfhorrest
*Are we there yet, are we there yet, are we there yet?*
:lol: — Wallows
I really don't know what you mean by "facing suicide". Usually (in my case), there's a lot of anxiety when those thoughts appear. — Wallows
That's pretty dark, man. — Wallows
What do you mean by "psychological disincentive"? — Wallows
Please elaborate. I seem to be encompassed by fear lately. — Wallows
Did time or your age help you see the whole issue as some childish desire or fantasy? — Wallows
Yes, that's it exactly! The difficulty is that, in ontophobia, you can't access the quality, for lack of a better word, of ontophilic space. You can only see it conceptually as something opposed to the ontophobic. So it has no fullness, or reality of its own. It seems to just be [non-ontophobia], a conceptual void defined in terms of its opposite.
I think, for those of us prone to severe mood swings, there's an art to figuring out how to leave conceptual 'anchors' that let us stay connected when you can't access that ok-ness. I find that I can 'know' that there is a kind of 'full' memory I can't access,that is presently barred from me. Knowing it's real, but for some reason barred, helps me realize that a limited depressive state is not as comprehensive as it pretends to be. That probably wouldn't have worked when I was younger but seems to work now that I've seen the depressive state run its course enough times. — csalisbury
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