GrumpyFrog
Exhausted
- Aug 23, 2020
- 1,913
The concept of recovery from suicidality is a tricky one for me. And I thought about how much the idea of recovery is connected to the idea of hope. If you feel bad enough to CTB, the one thing that can keep you alive and afloat is hope that at some point in the future something will change, allowing you to feel better.
I understand that for some people desire to CTB stems from the general dislike of the very concept of life or some unavoidable aspects of it, such as being a part of the society. There are people that experienced different aspects of life and didn't feel good about any of them, so they dislike the whole idea of life and that's why they want out. I understand that hope for someone like that is tricky and probably unlikely. Although at one point of my life I did have a similar worldview due, yet still hoped something can change for the better - I just couldn't quite put my finger on what it can be.
But for the majority of people their big dark void is circumstantial. They don't hate the very concept of life - just the life they have. And therefore they are hanging out to however little hope for improvement they have.
So I wonder how many people, just like me, are holding onto a hope for an actual change, no matter how small that hope is? Not the therapeutic "change your life by washing the dishes on time, excercising and taking this antidepressant!" kind of a change, but something meaningful actually happening (not that the things I listed can't be meaningful for someone, but I'm sure they aren't meaningful for everyone). Maybe you hope you'll win the lottery, or get a job offer of your dreams out of the blue, or that you'll get some amazing idea that will become your road to success. I know many people put their hopes into getting attention either from an abstract or from a very particular romantic interest. Do you have something that you hope for deep down in your heart, something that could feel you good enough to stop thinking about CTB at least for a while? What is it?
And another thing I wonder is - do you think holding on to a highly unrealistic hope is a good or a bad thing? Do you have to let go in the face of evidence that your hope is fruitless?
I understand that for some people desire to CTB stems from the general dislike of the very concept of life or some unavoidable aspects of it, such as being a part of the society. There are people that experienced different aspects of life and didn't feel good about any of them, so they dislike the whole idea of life and that's why they want out. I understand that hope for someone like that is tricky and probably unlikely. Although at one point of my life I did have a similar worldview due, yet still hoped something can change for the better - I just couldn't quite put my finger on what it can be.
But for the majority of people their big dark void is circumstantial. They don't hate the very concept of life - just the life they have. And therefore they are hanging out to however little hope for improvement they have.
The reason why I don't believe in helpfulnes of "professional help", at least for me, is that I know what the solution they offer look like. They have a pre-set number of things you can do to "improve your quality of life" that are supposed to make you feel better and after forcing yourself to do them for a while you're supposed to get genuinely motivated to continue. At one point I did all those things: spent time outdoors, had small talk with random people, ran in the mornings, meditated, cooked myself "good" meals, cleaned my apartment, avoided drugs and alcohol, put on a freaking face mask while lying in a bubble bath, wrote in a journal about my feelings, and when none of that helped at all started to take "happy pills" to top it all off. The only potential positive effect of all that was keeping me from being up all night crying, because now I was too exhausted and cried myself to sleep fairly quickly. It did nothing to fill my internal dark void, because having a clean livingroom and pimple-free soft skin weren't the things I genuinely cared about. When my doctor told me to just keep forcing myself to do these things and wait for something to change, and in the meantime maybe try a slightly different kind of happy pills that maybe will work a little better, I began to suspect that the point of this whole thing was for me to appear like I'm feeling better even if I'm not, just because I'm doing all the "good" things, and therefore make it appear like my doctor's solution to fix me was working, they were doing a good job and deserved money they were being paid for this job. Or maybe official medicine is wrong about saying "clinical depression" both about people who are very low just because they are depressed, and about people who have the "big sad" because of their personal list of reasons to be depressed about, and the complex of measures doctors are offering is good for the former, and not the latter.
So I wonder how many people, just like me, are holding onto a hope for an actual change, no matter how small that hope is? Not the therapeutic "change your life by washing the dishes on time, excercising and taking this antidepressant!" kind of a change, but something meaningful actually happening (not that the things I listed can't be meaningful for someone, but I'm sure they aren't meaningful for everyone). Maybe you hope you'll win the lottery, or get a job offer of your dreams out of the blue, or that you'll get some amazing idea that will become your road to success. I know many people put their hopes into getting attention either from an abstract or from a very particular romantic interest. Do you have something that you hope for deep down in your heart, something that could feel you good enough to stop thinking about CTB at least for a while? What is it?
And another thing I wonder is - do you think holding on to a highly unrealistic hope is a good or a bad thing? Do you have to let go in the face of evidence that your hope is fruitless?