Tristevie
Member
- Jul 2, 2019
- 24
Anyone who has never felt the urge to die should not have the right to express themselves on the subject, to tell us that "life is beautiful", and especially this legend "suicide is an act of cowardice".
I am well placed to know and especially understand that it requires enormous courage, of course our society does not want to position itself on the subject and consider the suicidal act as an abnormal thing, and the person who finds the strength to get out of his permanent suffering as deviant, see crazy ...
According to me, to be normal is to be in a norm. And we know very well that the norm is imposed on us by our society, which paradoxically can consider something as abnormal in the past, but totally accept it in the era we are currently living.
I have the impression that what one is, "suicidal", goes beyond the normal-thinking ones, a linear thought does not have the structural possibility to encompass a suicidal thought, and especially places the act before the sufferings so what are the main causes of our self-destruction.
We all have an idea of what is normal and what is not.
The education we have received is a standardization, it gives us the notions of good and bad, normal and its opposite. I am a little afraid that the notion of normality that is imposed on us is purely a principle of exclusion from others.
Ex: he made a suicide attempt, or he committed suicide, and automatically he is no longer considered normal by the group that surrounds him and of course by society.
The most burning news makes us think that civil society, inspired by Judeo-Christian ethics, can not legally grant the individual the right to die, whatever the reason. But history teaches us that other societies, as far apart in space as in time, have given suicide the highest moral virtues.
Thank you to the people of SS who will read these lines, and a big thank you to SS to exist.
Greg
I am well placed to know and especially understand that it requires enormous courage, of course our society does not want to position itself on the subject and consider the suicidal act as an abnormal thing, and the person who finds the strength to get out of his permanent suffering as deviant, see crazy ...
According to me, to be normal is to be in a norm. And we know very well that the norm is imposed on us by our society, which paradoxically can consider something as abnormal in the past, but totally accept it in the era we are currently living.
I have the impression that what one is, "suicidal", goes beyond the normal-thinking ones, a linear thought does not have the structural possibility to encompass a suicidal thought, and especially places the act before the sufferings so what are the main causes of our self-destruction.
We all have an idea of what is normal and what is not.
The education we have received is a standardization, it gives us the notions of good and bad, normal and its opposite. I am a little afraid that the notion of normality that is imposed on us is purely a principle of exclusion from others.
Ex: he made a suicide attempt, or he committed suicide, and automatically he is no longer considered normal by the group that surrounds him and of course by society.
The most burning news makes us think that civil society, inspired by Judeo-Christian ethics, can not legally grant the individual the right to die, whatever the reason. But history teaches us that other societies, as far apart in space as in time, have given suicide the highest moral virtues.
Thank you to the people of SS who will read these lines, and a big thank you to SS to exist.
Greg