
GoodPersonEffed
Brevity is my middle name, but my name was TL
- Jan 11, 2020
- 6,726
Asssuming there is interest and participation, I hope the comments in this thread are respectful to all who participate. There's been a bit of provocation and trolling on the forum the past week or so, and in awareness of that I preemptively request civil discourse. No poking, please. If you can't help yourself, then I offer this request as your help. If you still can't help yourself, the delete and edit buttons are your friends, they show up as soon as you post.
The starting point for this thread is the following quote:
Just as I shall select my ship when I am about to go on a voyage, or my house when I propose to take a residence, so I shall choose my death when I am about to depart from life. Moreover, just as a long-drawn-out life does not necessarily mean a better one, so a long-drawn-out death necessarily means a worse one. There is no occasion when the soul should be humored more than at the moment of death. Let the soul depart as it feels itself impelled to go; whether it seeks the sword, or the halter, or some draught that attacks the veins, let it proceed and burst the bonds of its slavery. Every man ought to make his life acceptable to others besides himself, but his death to himself alone. The best form of death is the one we like. Men are foolish who reflect thus: 'One person will say that my conduct was not brave enough; another, that I was too headstrong; a third, that a particular kind of death would have betokened more spirit.' What you should really reflect is: 'I have under consideration a purpose with which the talk of men has no concern!' Your sole aim should be to escape from Fortune as speedily as possible; otherwise, there will be no lack of persons who will think ill of what you have done.
- Seneca
I find a lot of value in this forum when it comes to talking about methods. Getting input from others helps one to become aware of unforeseen risks and consequences.
What I find challenging to manage is when one negates a method or one's desire for it based on their desires for themselves, their own capacities, their own limitations, and their own available resources and options (that is, their own freedoms which others may not share). Some people can manage more pain, some people have limited options and so must by necessity seek out less peaceful and/or more drawn-out means to accomplish the goal that they choose. But my reaction of feeling challenged by negating responses is my own, and I admit the responsibility is mine to work to not take them on, they're not about me but about the person speaking. I am evolving in managing my reactions, but have a ways to go.
Interacting with others is challenging period, whether one has social phobia or is an unaffected extrovert; we are social animals and require interaction with others, and interactions often don't go according to our own comfort levels and preferences. So I am aware that my posting this quote is in part a way to try to soothe by convincing others to go along with my preference for awareness and acceptance of others. I, too, have desires for myself, and want to feel comfortable just as those who negate a method also want to be comfortable. I have reached the point that I can more easily honor both, but it has taken work, and the work is not yet complete.
I look forward to any thoughts about this quote or the post. I am putting it all outside of myself and hope that in return I can gain fresh insight. I hope also that my posting may benefit others, and I have no attachment to what that benefit may be, because I am offering things here without being asked for them and I have no control over how they are received. I would be happy if my post is received well and provides some form of good, and I'm okay if it doesn't. If someone disagrees with me, then they give me the opportunity to broaden my perspective, so I welcome disagreement. I'm okay with crickets, too. I still enjoy reading the quote, and I got some value out of working out a bit of shit with regard to my defensiveness and other challenges. I'm an extrovert, I work shit out best when I externalize it.
If you felt poked at by my post, please know that was not my intention. I have no desire to harm, and I did my imperfect best to express that. Along with any reactions I have to anything anyone does, I also always sincerely wish for the well-being, autonomy and non-other-harming self-determination of everyone, even when I disagree with something they do, think, or say, or when they disagree with me.
REMINDER: BE CIVIL. RESPECT OTHERS. YOU CAN DO IT.
NB:
I have a couple of other thoughts about the quote in relation to making one's life acceptable to others (a Stoic position on being a social animal) and how that comes into play with criticism of methods that involve others, such as suicide by train, cop, or traffic. These are highly-criticized methods on the forum, and I'm working out my position about those as well, trying to take into account as I suggested in this post that others have limitations to personal freedoms and capacity that may make such methods the only viable options. Sometimes we cannot choose the death we like best, but the best option we can manage when continuing to live even temporarily is no longer viable.
The starting point for this thread is the following quote:
Just as I shall select my ship when I am about to go on a voyage, or my house when I propose to take a residence, so I shall choose my death when I am about to depart from life. Moreover, just as a long-drawn-out life does not necessarily mean a better one, so a long-drawn-out death necessarily means a worse one. There is no occasion when the soul should be humored more than at the moment of death. Let the soul depart as it feels itself impelled to go; whether it seeks the sword, or the halter, or some draught that attacks the veins, let it proceed and burst the bonds of its slavery. Every man ought to make his life acceptable to others besides himself, but his death to himself alone. The best form of death is the one we like. Men are foolish who reflect thus: 'One person will say that my conduct was not brave enough; another, that I was too headstrong; a third, that a particular kind of death would have betokened more spirit.' What you should really reflect is: 'I have under consideration a purpose with which the talk of men has no concern!' Your sole aim should be to escape from Fortune as speedily as possible; otherwise, there will be no lack of persons who will think ill of what you have done.
- Seneca
I find a lot of value in this forum when it comes to talking about methods. Getting input from others helps one to become aware of unforeseen risks and consequences.
What I find challenging to manage is when one negates a method or one's desire for it based on their desires for themselves, their own capacities, their own limitations, and their own available resources and options (that is, their own freedoms which others may not share). Some people can manage more pain, some people have limited options and so must by necessity seek out less peaceful and/or more drawn-out means to accomplish the goal that they choose. But my reaction of feeling challenged by negating responses is my own, and I admit the responsibility is mine to work to not take them on, they're not about me but about the person speaking. I am evolving in managing my reactions, but have a ways to go.
Interacting with others is challenging period, whether one has social phobia or is an unaffected extrovert; we are social animals and require interaction with others, and interactions often don't go according to our own comfort levels and preferences. So I am aware that my posting this quote is in part a way to try to soothe by convincing others to go along with my preference for awareness and acceptance of others. I, too, have desires for myself, and want to feel comfortable just as those who negate a method also want to be comfortable. I have reached the point that I can more easily honor both, but it has taken work, and the work is not yet complete.
I look forward to any thoughts about this quote or the post. I am putting it all outside of myself and hope that in return I can gain fresh insight. I hope also that my posting may benefit others, and I have no attachment to what that benefit may be, because I am offering things here without being asked for them and I have no control over how they are received. I would be happy if my post is received well and provides some form of good, and I'm okay if it doesn't. If someone disagrees with me, then they give me the opportunity to broaden my perspective, so I welcome disagreement. I'm okay with crickets, too. I still enjoy reading the quote, and I got some value out of working out a bit of shit with regard to my defensiveness and other challenges. I'm an extrovert, I work shit out best when I externalize it.
If you felt poked at by my post, please know that was not my intention. I have no desire to harm, and I did my imperfect best to express that. Along with any reactions I have to anything anyone does, I also always sincerely wish for the well-being, autonomy and non-other-harming self-determination of everyone, even when I disagree with something they do, think, or say, or when they disagree with me.
REMINDER: BE CIVIL. RESPECT OTHERS. YOU CAN DO IT.
NB:
I have a couple of other thoughts about the quote in relation to making one's life acceptable to others (a Stoic position on being a social animal) and how that comes into play with criticism of methods that involve others, such as suicide by train, cop, or traffic. These are highly-criticized methods on the forum, and I'm working out my position about those as well, trying to take into account as I suggested in this post that others have limitations to personal freedoms and capacity that may make such methods the only viable options. Sometimes we cannot choose the death we like best, but the best option we can manage when continuing to live even temporarily is no longer viable.