
Sprite_Geist
NULL
- May 27, 2020
- 1,595
Does anybody else get irritated or even angry at this phrase? I certainly do. Being told that you are "leaving behind" another person makes it sound as if you are permanently tied to others, or that you belong to them like an object, and that you are not allowed to go anywhere...
If someone close to you - such as a friend, family member or romantic partner - cuts you off and/or ends their relationship with you we do not say: "That was horrible of them to do - they left you behind!" as if they are obligated to stay with you no matter what. In fact we are taught the opposite: that relationships with other humans are reciprocal - they are a choice, and that you cannot force someone to like or stay with you. You will be told: "Well you cannot force them to be with you." In other words: they did not "leave you behind" because they did not have to stay by your side in the first place. So why, then, when it comes to someone committing suicide we are told this phrase? It comes across as a contradiction. Everyone around us has a choice to abandon us, and it is not seen as 'bad', but we do not have a choice to leave others - even if they have already left?
Edit: I am not saying that it is good for people to abandon each other or that we should not be loyal (to an extent), in fact I think that we should try to care and stay close to those who we have a connection with; my issue is with the actual double-standard behind the use of the phrase that I perceive.
If someone close to you - such as a friend, family member or romantic partner - cuts you off and/or ends their relationship with you we do not say: "That was horrible of them to do - they left you behind!" as if they are obligated to stay with you no matter what. In fact we are taught the opposite: that relationships with other humans are reciprocal - they are a choice, and that you cannot force someone to like or stay with you. You will be told: "Well you cannot force them to be with you." In other words: they did not "leave you behind" because they did not have to stay by your side in the first place. So why, then, when it comes to someone committing suicide we are told this phrase? It comes across as a contradiction. Everyone around us has a choice to abandon us, and it is not seen as 'bad', but we do not have a choice to leave others - even if they have already left?
Edit: I am not saying that it is good for people to abandon each other or that we should not be loyal (to an extent), in fact I think that we should try to care and stay close to those who we have a connection with; my issue is with the actual double-standard behind the use of the phrase that I perceive.
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