citysnowfall
the leitmotif of a dead character
- Oct 11, 2019
- 8
I don't know why I feel the need to talk about this. Maybe I'm trying to convince myself. Maybe I just want to understand better why I'm still alive.
A lot of folks believe -- not necessarily here (in fact I doubt many of you have this view) -- that suicide is irrational.
Since I was young, I've always had the same opinion on suicide. Suicide is always an option that is rational immediately upon going beneath "baseline" happiness, dipping beyond neutrality into unhappiness.
I like to think of it as cashing out. You take your total happiness or unhappiness in your life, and you end it.
Of course, suicide itself drives happiness down. The act of killing oneself is tremendously difficult due to survival instinct. So the amount of time it takes to commit suicide, multiplied by how unhappy it makes you, is the total net loss of happiness from your life. But, if you expect to live most of your life below baseline, then "cashing out" and taking the overwhelming negative immediately is sometimes best.
Thinking about it like this, a short term spike of unhappiness vs. a long term unhappiness, actually makes suicide the rational choice in a lot of situations, the only irrationality coming from the survival instinct itself.
A lot of folks believe -- not necessarily here (in fact I doubt many of you have this view) -- that suicide is irrational.
Since I was young, I've always had the same opinion on suicide. Suicide is always an option that is rational immediately upon going beneath "baseline" happiness, dipping beyond neutrality into unhappiness.
I like to think of it as cashing out. You take your total happiness or unhappiness in your life, and you end it.
Of course, suicide itself drives happiness down. The act of killing oneself is tremendously difficult due to survival instinct. So the amount of time it takes to commit suicide, multiplied by how unhappy it makes you, is the total net loss of happiness from your life. But, if you expect to live most of your life below baseline, then "cashing out" and taking the overwhelming negative immediately is sometimes best.
Thinking about it like this, a short term spike of unhappiness vs. a long term unhappiness, actually makes suicide the rational choice in a lot of situations, the only irrationality coming from the survival instinct itself.