bjop
Member
- Feb 8, 2023
- 13
Hello. This is a thread i posted earlier in the suicide discussion where i was nicely adviced to rather ask about it in the recovery section. I hope it's appropriate and not too negative for this section which i don't know a lot about yet. I'm sorry for any inconvenience.
Hi, this might be a dumb question, already asked or without any answer. Maybe i'm just looking to see if anyone shares this frustrating realization i've had these last few years.
Anytime i've been seriously considering and trying to recover i've always hit the same wall. How do you forget about suicide? How do you erase this automatic thinking that it doesn't really matter if you can get better anyway because, by being dead, you wouldn't even exist to contemplate the fact that you could've gotten better? (i do believe that there is absolutely nothing after death, no reincarnation, no heaven, no conservation of the soul or conscience: just non existence)
Even when i want to believe people telling me that things can get better, that with just a bit of effort and will to live from my part i could do something with my life, maybe even be happy who knows, i find myself not really wanting to try. Cause what's the point? There is relief in the idea that i wouldn't even have to ask myself all these questions if i was just dead. I wouldn't even be able to regret my decision. I simply wouldn't be. The certainty of death and the absence of consequences just completely eradicates the want to live a happy life, that isn't even determined.
Has anyone ever find a way to overcome this habit of the mind, a way to forget all about this mental reflex and go back to a time where the easiest answer to every single issue or decisions in life wasn't suicide? Or do other people find themselves stuck in the same mindset?
I know i'm probably asking for the impossible, and even if there was actually something that could be done, the same reflex would probably just outdo it. Why change to be able to get better when simply killing myself would "fix" everything, meaning i would'nt have to deal with anything. Don't know if i'm too pessimistic or too lazy, or probably both haha
Anyway, thanks for reading. I hope your day is going as good as it can go.
Hi, this might be a dumb question, already asked or without any answer. Maybe i'm just looking to see if anyone shares this frustrating realization i've had these last few years.
Anytime i've been seriously considering and trying to recover i've always hit the same wall. How do you forget about suicide? How do you erase this automatic thinking that it doesn't really matter if you can get better anyway because, by being dead, you wouldn't even exist to contemplate the fact that you could've gotten better? (i do believe that there is absolutely nothing after death, no reincarnation, no heaven, no conservation of the soul or conscience: just non existence)
Even when i want to believe people telling me that things can get better, that with just a bit of effort and will to live from my part i could do something with my life, maybe even be happy who knows, i find myself not really wanting to try. Cause what's the point? There is relief in the idea that i wouldn't even have to ask myself all these questions if i was just dead. I wouldn't even be able to regret my decision. I simply wouldn't be. The certainty of death and the absence of consequences just completely eradicates the want to live a happy life, that isn't even determined.
Has anyone ever find a way to overcome this habit of the mind, a way to forget all about this mental reflex and go back to a time where the easiest answer to every single issue or decisions in life wasn't suicide? Or do other people find themselves stuck in the same mindset?
I know i'm probably asking for the impossible, and even if there was actually something that could be done, the same reflex would probably just outdo it. Why change to be able to get better when simply killing myself would "fix" everything, meaning i would'nt have to deal with anything. Don't know if i'm too pessimistic or too lazy, or probably both haha
Anyway, thanks for reading. I hope your day is going as good as it can go.