M
Mbound
Experienced
- Apr 29, 2019
- 255
I'm sure this has been talked about before on here, but:
"the coward's way out"
"a permanent solution to a temporary problem"
jfc neither of these stupid aphorisms could be further from the truth. There are few things I can think of that take more guts, more balls, than looking death square in the face--overcoming the natural, inborn survival instinct we all have-- and diving headfirst into the unknown (often, unfortunately, in an incredibly painful and lonely way). Not to make it sound noble or whatever, but it's definitely not for the faint of heart, or a "coward." I feel much more cowardly silently suffering through day after miserable day because action requires tremendous risk and commitment.
And then there's the notion that our problems are "temporary." For fuck's sake, all problems are technically temporary because life is temporary. If your life is nothing but crushing waves of problems or one soul-emptying lifelong problem and it feels suffocating and hopeless enough that you would rather be dead than suffer through it any longer...I would say that's not something random idiots can patronize you into feeling more positive about. And this idea that everything will get better... your lifelong mental illness, your health issues, your addiction, your grief, your poverty, your injuries, your isolation, your sense of absolute unbelonging, your inability to cope with the innumerable daily miseries we all take as a given....and how, again? A call to the sui hotline, a visit to a therapist, an SSRI or two, maybe an IOP and a few halfhearted attempts to "put yourself out there"? Lather, rinse, repeat. And for what--a chance that it could maybe improve, a bit, at some point? Why can't we just accept that some people were not cut out for this shit, recognize that most people try very hard to find other solutions before ctb, and stop the condescending garbage?
"the coward's way out"
"a permanent solution to a temporary problem"
jfc neither of these stupid aphorisms could be further from the truth. There are few things I can think of that take more guts, more balls, than looking death square in the face--overcoming the natural, inborn survival instinct we all have-- and diving headfirst into the unknown (often, unfortunately, in an incredibly painful and lonely way). Not to make it sound noble or whatever, but it's definitely not for the faint of heart, or a "coward." I feel much more cowardly silently suffering through day after miserable day because action requires tremendous risk and commitment.
And then there's the notion that our problems are "temporary." For fuck's sake, all problems are technically temporary because life is temporary. If your life is nothing but crushing waves of problems or one soul-emptying lifelong problem and it feels suffocating and hopeless enough that you would rather be dead than suffer through it any longer...I would say that's not something random idiots can patronize you into feeling more positive about. And this idea that everything will get better... your lifelong mental illness, your health issues, your addiction, your grief, your poverty, your injuries, your isolation, your sense of absolute unbelonging, your inability to cope with the innumerable daily miseries we all take as a given....and how, again? A call to the sui hotline, a visit to a therapist, an SSRI or two, maybe an IOP and a few halfhearted attempts to "put yourself out there"? Lather, rinse, repeat. And for what--a chance that it could maybe improve, a bit, at some point? Why can't we just accept that some people were not cut out for this shit, recognize that most people try very hard to find other solutions before ctb, and stop the condescending garbage?
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