Unbearable Mr. Bear
Sometimes, all a cub needs is a hug...
- May 9, 2025
- 1,060
So, this is funny. I was going some light family friendly erotic fetish story writing with z.ai and we ended up talking about suicide and euthanasia and other stuff. We ended thinking over something weird and cool: The Threshold Protocol.
AI+ME STARTS HERE
I want to propose a thought experiment that shifts the conversation around the right to die from "how do we make dying less horrific?" to "how do we make one's last moments their best?"
We all know the current landscape for exit methods is bleak. Even legal euthanasia is overly sterile and medicalized. What if we had a third option? A bridge between the right to die and ultimate subjective freedom.
I call this the Threshold Protocol.
Premise
Some people have reservations about hooking themselves to a machine that simulates reality inside your brain (We've all seen The Matrix), But if the brain consumes artificial and natural sensations identically (as just electrochemical signals) then the prejudice against "artificial" experience is, honestly, a matter of taste more than anything. If a machine could perfectly intercept sensory inputs and replace them with a user-generated simulation, we could offer the ultimate harm reduction: a painless, euphoric exit on the user's own terms.
Technology
The user's brain is connected to a machine similar to an Experience Machine. Senses from the outside world are entirely occluded. The user retains conscious, god-like control over their inner reality, generating their environment according to their will. A few "templates" are offered as starting points, but the user can rewrite the simulation at will.
Bioethics
This is not an escape hatch for a bad week. To access the Protocol, a person must undergo one full year of documented, intractable suffering, verified by medical and psychological professionals. All interventions must have failed. The pain must be overwhelming. If meaning is derived from overcoming friction, the user must have proven that the friction has entirely broken them. Only then is final, informed consent validated. This is more or less how actual real euthanasia works, in regards to how you can apply to one.
Threshold
Once connected, the protocol is irreversible. The user does not eat or drink. The biological body will eventually shut down. However, the machine acts as an active safeguard:
Addressing the Flaws
The core philosophy here is radical autonomy. If you own your life, shouldn't you have the right to trade a painful reality for a peaceful, pleasurable, if brief one, and exit on your own terms when your body is done?
Is the logic sound? Are there ethical or scientific holes I'm missing?
AI+ME STARTS HERE
I want to propose a thought experiment that shifts the conversation around the right to die from "how do we make dying less horrific?" to "how do we make one's last moments their best?"
We all know the current landscape for exit methods is bleak. Even legal euthanasia is overly sterile and medicalized. What if we had a third option? A bridge between the right to die and ultimate subjective freedom.
I call this the Threshold Protocol.
Premise
Some people have reservations about hooking themselves to a machine that simulates reality inside your brain (We've all seen The Matrix), But if the brain consumes artificial and natural sensations identically (as just electrochemical signals) then the prejudice against "artificial" experience is, honestly, a matter of taste more than anything. If a machine could perfectly intercept sensory inputs and replace them with a user-generated simulation, we could offer the ultimate harm reduction: a painless, euphoric exit on the user's own terms.
Technology
The user's brain is connected to a machine similar to an Experience Machine. Senses from the outside world are entirely occluded. The user retains conscious, god-like control over their inner reality, generating their environment according to their will. A few "templates" are offered as starting points, but the user can rewrite the simulation at will.
Bioethics
This is not an escape hatch for a bad week. To access the Protocol, a person must undergo one full year of documented, intractable suffering, verified by medical and psychological professionals. All interventions must have failed. The pain must be overwhelming. If meaning is derived from overcoming friction, the user must have proven that the friction has entirely broken them. Only then is final, informed consent validated. This is more or less how actual real euthanasia works, in regards to how you can apply to one.
Threshold
Once connected, the protocol is irreversible. The user does not eat or drink. The biological body will eventually shut down. However, the machine acts as an active safeguard:
- Auto Panic Button: If the subconscious generates a nightmare or trauma-response, the machine detects the resulting chemical imbalances (cortisol spikes, adrenaline) and instantly "resets" the brain into the safe template. It acts as a psychological airbag, ensuring the experience remains positive.
- The Threshold: Dying of dehydration is biologically messy (delirium, seizures, brain damage). Therefore, the machine continuously monitors neurochemistry and blood toxicity. The moment the body hits the biological threshold where suffering would begin, the machine induces instant, painless brain death.
Addressing the Flaws
- Addiction: This is why it's a one-way trip. If the machine were reversible, the dopamine flood would destroy the brain's reward circuitry, making baseline reality agonizing. Removing the option to leave guarantees the user never experiences the "crash."
- Therapy Paradox: What if the simulation somehow cures the user's trauma? If the machine is that effective, we've accidentally invented the world's best psychiatric treatment, which would probably be way more useful if it can treat people that would otherwise be eligible to die via the machine.
- Societal Slippery Slope: Some may argue this would defund medical research or incentivize people to die rather than be cured. But existing euthanasia frameworks haven't stopped medical progress. Society already allows passive euthanasia; this simply adds a very happy ending to the equation. The objection isn't really about the sanctity of life; it's about society needing compliant bodies to function. The Protocol respects the individual's sovereignty over the legion's need for their labor.
The core philosophy here is radical autonomy. If you own your life, shouldn't you have the right to trade a painful reality for a peaceful, pleasurable, if brief one, and exit on your own terms when your body is done?
Is the logic sound? Are there ethical or scientific holes I'm missing?