S

spicyfriedtofu

Idiot
Jun 10, 2018
68
Consider this.

For all my life, I've never had friends. For this reason, I've always been depressed and socially anxious to the point that I haven't been able to work. A couple of years ago, I started studying. It's always been easy for me and I'm extremely passionate about learning all types of knowledge when it comes to the social sciences and the humanities. I never went to high school because I felt bored and depressed at that point in my life. It was a stupid decision. But so finishing the high school courses to be eligible for university was the first step. Online. I knew I would be too anxious to do irl. And I wouldn't have the energy. But I was excited. I really wanted to continue to university to study cultural anthropology. Then when I finally started university, I was really happy.

I've never felt that I belong anywhere, but studying was really something for me. It kept my mood up and even though it was my first semester I knew I wanted to continue on to doctoral studies. Still, I always had a question in the back of my mind: what happens when I graduate? If I don't get into the PhD program? You see, I actually thought about studying somewhat as therapy. I had such interest in what I was studying that it was relatively easy to do it even though I was depressed. (True – and this is part of my problem – I had periods where I fell back into deeper depressive epsiodes and I failed courses, so I've had to retake some courses or switched to others, but studying didn't require me to work everyday and I didn't have to be very social, so it was nothing like a job that'd be more challenging). I hoped I would become better one day and then maybe I would have the energy to find a job. Maybe my degree would help to make it easier. Especially if I get into grad school. Or maybe I could continue to be this weird if I try a career in academia. But I kind of knew that I wouldn't become better.

It's always been about friends for me. I realized that a couple of years ago. Antidepressants have never worked for me. Am I even depressed? I've asked. Because, to elaborate: I've had friends (for a couple of months, the three times I've dated in my life) and those periods have been so tremendously different for me. It's given me so much energy from time to time that both my depression and anxiety lifted for awhile. But so let's fast forward to now: I think I have a friend for real. It's not a date, but we met at university a little more than a year ago and it doesn't have that temporary character anymore. I've also graduated; just now, this spring. Yet I've never been so sure in that I have to commit suicide.

So why does a person that's recently graduated from university and finally found a friend for the first time in his life want to kill himself? I don't. In one sense, I'm the happiest I've ever been in my life. But in another, I've met that point I dreaded: graduated without a possibility of having a job. Partly because I'm still a little depressed and anxious (I just this week left a job as a telephone salesperson because I was too anxious), but mostly because I have zero work experience in my CV. The last 8 years I've been either studying or having depressive episodes doing nothing. And yeah, it's taken me 8 years to study what should've taken 6 years. What's probably more of a red flag for employers (and especially for those with jobs relevant to my degree) is that I'm 31 and never had a job.

Having graduated in my situation also means I won't be able to keep my student apartment. And I can't continue studying for more than 2 months this fall because my student's allowance is maxed out after all the times I've fallen back into depression and failed classes. I also have like $50 k in debt because I had to take loans to pay rent once, and I won't be able to make that down payment at the end of this month, so that means it'll go on the record and I won't be able to get another appartment (which you also need a job for of course).

So I have to leave this world. I don't know why the world hates me, but as soon as something good comes my way, my life just keeps on getting ruined. I don't have words for how much it puzzles me. I've never hurt anyone, I've always worked for promoting human rights and a strange realization when you've had no friends for years is that you want friends because you want someone to care for. And now my life can end in two ways: as homeless or as dead. I'll choose the latter, in a period where I want it the least. I've started to be more distant toward my friend so that our friendship will end naturally, because I don't want her to know I'm dead.

This post is just ... I don't know ... a last desperate and far-fetched hope. Like, if anyone out there happens to be a millionaire and you wanna help out, you're welcome. That's all.
 
  • Hugs
  • Love
Reactions: puppy9, elizabethisworthless, GoodPersonEffed and 2 others
D

Desideratum

Member
Jun 8, 2020
20
Just put a fake job on your cv to cover the two years.
 
  • Like
Reactions: puppy9 and lotus11
L

limpingtowardfreedom

Member
Apr 19, 2020
70
I dunno, it sounds like you're making a lot of assumptions.

I've had huge gaps of years in my resume and most of the things on it were worthless, and I've still gotten jobs. It's harder with the lockdowns at the moment, but at the end of the day it's just a numbers game. Sounds like maybe you're just nervous, that you've spent almost a decade preparing for something and now that something is here and you don't know what to do. I don't know you, but I bet you could make it through all the same.

In the same token, landlords like money, and people want their houses filled. If you miss one payment, big whoop, maybe some will care but you won't be homeless for the rest of your life just because you've got loan debt. Also another situation where it's just a numbers game.

Scary stuff, I know, but all is not lost. Not yet, at least, and not really too close.
 
  • Like
  • Love
Reactions: I_love_to_bake and Poptart
Deleted member 17949

Deleted member 17949

Visionary
May 9, 2020
2,238
I understand the feeling. Everything good that happens with me always feels like it's overshadowed by a mountain of incoming negative things waiting to go wrong. It can be really hard to actually soak in positive events when there is still negative stuff in your head.
 
  • Like
Reactions: I_love_to_bake
S

spicyfriedtofu

Idiot
Jun 10, 2018
68
It's probably more complicated than I can communicate.
 
  • Hugs
  • Like
Reactions: I_love_to_bake and GoodPersonEffed
HeavensOpenDoor

HeavensOpenDoor

Jul 6, 2020
87
IDK what country you are in but have you ever thought about day labor? Here in the states it pays about $70 a day and all u need is ID and SS card. Most of the jobs are like cleaning up and stuff. Not that glamorous but it's daily pay. Take that and see if someone has a room for rent. I did it for a while. Some jobs will hire you on if they like the way you work even without experience. Most jobs just want to know if you can do the job and show up everyday. Plus it will keep your mind occupied. Just a thought. Sorry, I'm not a millionaire lol but if I was I'd definitely hook u up!
 
Last edited:
GoodPersonEffed

GoodPersonEffed

Brevity is my middle name, but my name was TL
Jan 11, 2020
6,727
I don't think this a response you're seeking, but from past experience, you can apply for a deferment on your loan, which won't show up on your credit, and therefore won't impact an apartment application.

Other than that, I want to say that I read your post, I hear you, I know I can't fix anything, and I acknowledge and accept you as you are, as well as what you're experiencing. No negating, no putting my definitions and personal perspectives on you, what you experience, or what you do. Just acknowledgement, acceptance, compassion, and respect. I wish you the best, whatever that is for you in this or any situation.
 
Bombasflower

Bombasflower

Member
Oct 28, 2019
19
Something tells me there aren't a lot of millionaires on this site, when you're on that level there's just a lot less room of worries in your life.
Could still be though, of course, there are always exceptions, but I don't think you'll find any here.
 
  • Love
Reactions: Cashewmilk
GoodPersonEffed

GoodPersonEffed

Brevity is my middle name, but my name was TL
Jan 11, 2020
6,727
It always better to kill yourself when you are still happy, because it won't last.
Sounds kinda self-sabotaging to me

Every condition is subject to change, but happiness is the most fleeting.

Why not die happy than miserable? I never make sexual comments, but what would be more pleasant: death during orgasm or death during suffering? In the case of the latter, death would bring relief, in the former, going out of life with a...bang.


Anyhow, no criticism in this. The posts just inspired the thought.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Desideratum
L

limpingtowardfreedom

Member
Apr 19, 2020
70
Every condition is subject to change, but happiness is the most fleeting.

Why not die happy than miserable? I never make sexual comments, but what would be more pleasant: death during orgasm or death during suffering? In the case of the latter, death would bring relief, in the former, going out of life with a...bang.


Anyhow, no criticism in this. The posts just inspired the thought.
Buddha would agree with you, and so do I, but if the response to that is to reach peak happiness and then quickly end it before it can disappear, then the question becomes 'when is peak happiness?'

I think most of us are bad at determining that, especially those of us suffering from depression or mental illness. To terribly abuse your metaphor, it's a lot harder to perceive whether you're reaching orgasm or have only just gotten your fly unzipped when there aren't simple physical markers.
 

Similar threads

KuriGohan&Kamehameha
Replies
4
Views
195
Offtopic
ijustwishtodie
ijustwishtodie
vadim
Replies
1
Views
277
Suicide Discussion
nihilistic_dragon
nihilistic_dragon
SomewhatLoved
Replies
2
Views
208
Suicide Discussion
maniac116
maniac116
D
Replies
8
Views
316
Suicide Discussion
Damian
D