Pryras
Last hope
- Feb 11, 2020
- 516
I know it's not a competition of suffering since we all experience things differently and have a different tolerance to trauma, but do you ever compare your situation to someone else's?
When I watch interviews or docs about people who have experienced unimaginable loss, maybe lost all their children to murder or escaped being burned alive and are living completely disfigured, what makes them want to keep going? If they're not religious, they usually go on about keeping their child's memory alive or that they want to keep fighting and pursue through the pain and be strong. Even with this in mind I can't imagine going on and ruminating about the past. I've never experienced anything as brutal, but my ruminating will kill me, how does it not push these people in the same way? Is it because I have a weak mind?
What makes these people so different than someone who wants to kill themselves over less brutal experiences?
When I watch interviews or docs about people who have experienced unimaginable loss, maybe lost all their children to murder or escaped being burned alive and are living completely disfigured, what makes them want to keep going? If they're not religious, they usually go on about keeping their child's memory alive or that they want to keep fighting and pursue through the pain and be strong. Even with this in mind I can't imagine going on and ruminating about the past. I've never experienced anything as brutal, but my ruminating will kill me, how does it not push these people in the same way? Is it because I have a weak mind?
What makes these people so different than someone who wants to kill themselves over less brutal experiences?