TAW122
Emissary of the right to die.
- Aug 30, 2018
- 6,821
It is incredibly frustrating that a lot of people when looking at the causes of why people suicide will oftenly cling onto a singular reason (if there are more than one reason) within a suicide note. I don't believe that most people commit suicide due to only one singular reason (there do exist people like that, but certainly not all of them). Most of the time, it is multitude of reasons, over an extended period of time, culminating into one ultimate, final decision.
For example, someone could have multiple things go wrong simultaneously and continuously. That "one reason" or cause may not be enough to push the person towards suicide, but it is certainly a factor contributing towards their decision of suicide. Consider that someone who been through heartbreak and hurt, spiraled into depression, then coupled with other IRL problems, financial issues, and what not, even if the one reason for suicide is heartbreak, it doesn't mean that there aren't other reasons.
Speaking of myself, I had ongoing problems such as Aspergers and autism along with social anxiety (and general anxiety) which cripple my day to day life, communication, and interaction with other people around me. There is no cure and it is a continuous problem that I will have to live with for the rest of my life. Then, combined with the fact that my music performance anxiety and nerves are fucking up my hobby. Next consider that my relations with an online friend, the ladyfriend has soured since the previous month, and other personal, philosophical, existential, environmental, and societal reasons as well. All it takes is a strong enough catalyst that would push towards actively CTB'ing.
In my case, if say the day that I CTB, I wrote the ALL the reasons, including the causes (major ones, as well as minor ones too) in great detail, some people who read the suicide note would cling onto one reason while ignoring the rest of the other causes. It is incredibly naive, short-sighted, and ignorant for them to do that. Then again, the people who have CTB'd successfully wouldn't worry about that after the fact because they are no longer around to witness any reaction or the aftermath of it. Seeing this possible scenario in advance is rather just frustrating because it means that people just don't get it even with everything spelled out in front of them. At the end of the day, after one is dead it no longer becomes an issue for them, but rather an issue for the living (people who are still alive, the bereaved). I'd just like to think of a suicide note as a way of giving a last message, to give closure, to tie loose ends, and to help people understand, however, it is up to the survivors to understand and interpret it correctly. It doesn't affect the dead as the dead are already at peace, no longer suffering.
For example, someone could have multiple things go wrong simultaneously and continuously. That "one reason" or cause may not be enough to push the person towards suicide, but it is certainly a factor contributing towards their decision of suicide. Consider that someone who been through heartbreak and hurt, spiraled into depression, then coupled with other IRL problems, financial issues, and what not, even if the one reason for suicide is heartbreak, it doesn't mean that there aren't other reasons.
Speaking of myself, I had ongoing problems such as Aspergers and autism along with social anxiety (and general anxiety) which cripple my day to day life, communication, and interaction with other people around me. There is no cure and it is a continuous problem that I will have to live with for the rest of my life. Then, combined with the fact that my music performance anxiety and nerves are fucking up my hobby. Next consider that my relations with an online friend, the ladyfriend has soured since the previous month, and other personal, philosophical, existential, environmental, and societal reasons as well. All it takes is a strong enough catalyst that would push towards actively CTB'ing.
In my case, if say the day that I CTB, I wrote the ALL the reasons, including the causes (major ones, as well as minor ones too) in great detail, some people who read the suicide note would cling onto one reason while ignoring the rest of the other causes. It is incredibly naive, short-sighted, and ignorant for them to do that. Then again, the people who have CTB'd successfully wouldn't worry about that after the fact because they are no longer around to witness any reaction or the aftermath of it. Seeing this possible scenario in advance is rather just frustrating because it means that people just don't get it even with everything spelled out in front of them. At the end of the day, after one is dead it no longer becomes an issue for them, but rather an issue for the living (people who are still alive, the bereaved). I'd just like to think of a suicide note as a way of giving a last message, to give closure, to tie loose ends, and to help people understand, however, it is up to the survivors to understand and interpret it correctly. It doesn't affect the dead as the dead are already at peace, no longer suffering.
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