Dawgmom
Member
- Oct 23, 2019
- 68
I find this story interesting because the person wanting suicide is not dealing with physical pain or a deadly disease. The writers could have written a safe story about either of those justifications. Instead, the writers picked justifications that were harder to defend, such as boredom. And boredom seems like a rather taboo justification for suicide.
Overall, I think "Death Wish" is a decent presentation of a debate on suicide for a casual audience.
I love STV to begin with, but this is one of the more difficult episodes for me and I think about it often. I've considered suicide many times in my life (approaching another time, now) and have struggled a lot with an "afterlife". If I believed in that - and not sure I do - I've wondered about this very topic of boredom. I mean, sometimes I think it would be nice if there were a more pleasant place where I could at least reunite with my dogs, the only things I truly love. Maybe that would be "heaven" for me and maybe there would be no such thing as boredom.
Other times I veer more towards this storyline which, if you think about it, is kind of what we face when we consider an exit here. We may not be bored but we just want life to end. So, even as a "Q" who labels his reason as boredom, maybe it's just like saying he's had enough. Boredom is his symptom for wanting to end his suffering.
But, then again, this is a story. And, when I lean in the other direction, I fear there is no such afterlife anyway. We're here and then we're not.
Thanks for sharing.