
Samsara
Experienced
- Mar 9, 2020
- 246
I've been mulling over the fact that medically assisted euthanasia for psychological suffering is restricted in most areas. And it's been eating away at me, which led me to write the following:
No one can understand the sheer pain and suffering that it takes to override one's survival instinct and end one's suffering through suicide. How dare the authorities restrict euthanasia to physical ailments and not mental suffering?
The pain is indescribable. It hurts even more when you remember what it feels like to want to live – a memory that feels like a faraway dream. No wonder suicidality has such a tremendous, startling impact on society in general – can you imagine what it must take for someone to, in desperation, risk becoming a vegetable or confined to a mental ward by attempting to kill themselves? The pain of life outweighing the pain of a suicide attempt? It's like living in a gray reality that is not yours anymore. A life that is not yours. You are not you. Time is meaningless. Every conscious moment is excruciating, hellish agony, because the experience of consciousness is perverted by pain and suffering. All you can think of is the peaceful nothingness of death; the absence of consciousness -- the final rest.
I believe if someone is chronically suicidal for an extraordinary amount of time – for example, 10 years, euthanasia/medically-assisted suicide should be permitted. It is not anyone's place to deny someone's decision to end their life – they know themselves the best. To deny a suicidal person assisted suicide is to condemn them to a life with continued suffering, and perhaps even more suffering since their death may be inevitable (though delayed due to a series of unsuccessful attempts, and subsequently lead to even more suffering).
And if you want to make the argument that allowing people to die would destroy our society, consider this: Is it better for society to reach a mutual understanding for suicidal individuals and permit them to take their own lives peacefully and on their on conditions with medical help, or is it better to condemn suicide and simply watch as these individuals spontaneously jump off buildings, hang themselves in their closets, and kill themselves by some other means – with the survivors being thrown into hospitals that place them at even greater risk for suicide upon being discharged.
How narcissistic is it for us to assume everyone *must* live, despite their own unique circumstances and against their own wishes? We never asked to be born into this hell on earth – our own private hells – and we deserve the right to end our trials in hell if our pain is unremitting. We have already died.
No one can understand the sheer pain and suffering that it takes to override one's survival instinct and end one's suffering through suicide. How dare the authorities restrict euthanasia to physical ailments and not mental suffering?
The pain is indescribable. It hurts even more when you remember what it feels like to want to live – a memory that feels like a faraway dream. No wonder suicidality has such a tremendous, startling impact on society in general – can you imagine what it must take for someone to, in desperation, risk becoming a vegetable or confined to a mental ward by attempting to kill themselves? The pain of life outweighing the pain of a suicide attempt? It's like living in a gray reality that is not yours anymore. A life that is not yours. You are not you. Time is meaningless. Every conscious moment is excruciating, hellish agony, because the experience of consciousness is perverted by pain and suffering. All you can think of is the peaceful nothingness of death; the absence of consciousness -- the final rest.
I believe if someone is chronically suicidal for an extraordinary amount of time – for example, 10 years, euthanasia/medically-assisted suicide should be permitted. It is not anyone's place to deny someone's decision to end their life – they know themselves the best. To deny a suicidal person assisted suicide is to condemn them to a life with continued suffering, and perhaps even more suffering since their death may be inevitable (though delayed due to a series of unsuccessful attempts, and subsequently lead to even more suffering).
And if you want to make the argument that allowing people to die would destroy our society, consider this: Is it better for society to reach a mutual understanding for suicidal individuals and permit them to take their own lives peacefully and on their on conditions with medical help, or is it better to condemn suicide and simply watch as these individuals spontaneously jump off buildings, hang themselves in their closets, and kill themselves by some other means – with the survivors being thrown into hospitals that place them at even greater risk for suicide upon being discharged.
How narcissistic is it for us to assume everyone *must* live, despite their own unique circumstances and against their own wishes? We never asked to be born into this hell on earth – our own private hells – and we deserve the right to end our trials in hell if our pain is unremitting. We have already died.