TAW122
Emissary of the right to die.
- Aug 30, 2018
- 6,821
I think many may already know this, but I have made this realization especially after the years of perusing reddit and just general experiences in life with people, especially when the topic of mental health comes up. More oftenly than not, when there is mental health awareness campaigns and stories, be it IRL, online, just in comments of the articles, social media, and more, it's just virtue signaling. People do this mainly to absolve themselves of guilt and to earn brownie points, to feel good about the "act" of caring.
If you look around some of the threads and posts on the SW subreddit especially ones that talk about a friend, sibling, or other person the poster knows that CTB'd, they oftenly make it about themselves, their feelings, and the guilt they feel. They didn't "really" care before said person CTB'd and tried to help (I know not all, but most people), then after CTB occurred, they start to scramble to care (even though they will forget about it and consider it as 'moving on'). Also, sometimes, they even blame the victim as well. The other subreddit, suicidebereavement is similar to that. Sure the people who post there are oftenly the survivors but still they make it about themselves and their feelings, and then the people there shower them with platitudes and comfort (nothing wrong with that), but there is never consideration for the deceased nor understanding, just shame and guilt-trips, judgment, and blaming the person who CTB'd. Perhaps if people genuinely cared about those people prior to CTB'ing and/or at least were more respectful and understanding, then those people might not have CTB'd to begin with! 20/20 hindsight though.
This isn't even limited to just suicides and CTB, but even after tragedies (mass shootings, homicides, natural disasters, and more), the survivors and people who were interviewed afterwards oftenly first distance themselves from the situation and then make up shitty excuses and saying inane shit just to sound good, make themselves feel not responsible, and what not (well for other deaths and tragedies, not necessarily CTB related), sure it's not explicitly their fault but the fact that they pretend to care and act like they are noble is just sickening and frustrating. A common response usually after these events (whether CTB or non-CTB) are often whether the survivors could have done something differently and pretending like they can change things, which isn't always true. Sometimes people already made up their minds and there is nothing that others say or do that will alter the suicidal's decision. However, most people are too ignorant and stubborn that they refuse to see it and ideally (and falsely) believe that they can make a difference or change the outcome.
I feel like one possible reason is they wrongfully associate someone's personal decision to CTB with their actions and believe that they can be a hero. So in short, this thread basically highlights how people are oftenly superficial, egotistical, and only like the feeling of helping, whether it makes things better or not, therefore, they are egotistical and selfish. They don't care whether the person gets better (or if they make the person suffer even more), but just their own selfish egos. Of course, not every single human being is like that, but the vast majority of people are. The irony is that when you try to expose them and prove their superficiality, they become defensive, angry, and hostile (along with dishonesty, denial, and double-down on the virtue signals).
If you look around some of the threads and posts on the SW subreddit especially ones that talk about a friend, sibling, or other person the poster knows that CTB'd, they oftenly make it about themselves, their feelings, and the guilt they feel. They didn't "really" care before said person CTB'd and tried to help (I know not all, but most people), then after CTB occurred, they start to scramble to care (even though they will forget about it and consider it as 'moving on'). Also, sometimes, they even blame the victim as well. The other subreddit, suicidebereavement is similar to that. Sure the people who post there are oftenly the survivors but still they make it about themselves and their feelings, and then the people there shower them with platitudes and comfort (nothing wrong with that), but there is never consideration for the deceased nor understanding, just shame and guilt-trips, judgment, and blaming the person who CTB'd. Perhaps if people genuinely cared about those people prior to CTB'ing and/or at least were more respectful and understanding, then those people might not have CTB'd to begin with! 20/20 hindsight though.
This isn't even limited to just suicides and CTB, but even after tragedies (mass shootings, homicides, natural disasters, and more), the survivors and people who were interviewed afterwards oftenly first distance themselves from the situation and then make up shitty excuses and saying inane shit just to sound good, make themselves feel not responsible, and what not (well for other deaths and tragedies, not necessarily CTB related), sure it's not explicitly their fault but the fact that they pretend to care and act like they are noble is just sickening and frustrating. A common response usually after these events (whether CTB or non-CTB) are often whether the survivors could have done something differently and pretending like they can change things, which isn't always true. Sometimes people already made up their minds and there is nothing that others say or do that will alter the suicidal's decision. However, most people are too ignorant and stubborn that they refuse to see it and ideally (and falsely) believe that they can make a difference or change the outcome.
I feel like one possible reason is they wrongfully associate someone's personal decision to CTB with their actions and believe that they can be a hero. So in short, this thread basically highlights how people are oftenly superficial, egotistical, and only like the feeling of helping, whether it makes things better or not, therefore, they are egotistical and selfish. They don't care whether the person gets better (or if they make the person suffer even more), but just their own selfish egos. Of course, not every single human being is like that, but the vast majority of people are. The irony is that when you try to expose them and prove their superficiality, they become defensive, angry, and hostile (along with dishonesty, denial, and double-down on the virtue signals).
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