Weather
Student
- Oct 18, 2020
- 152
What's the difference between those who choose recovery and those who do not? I know most people have tried some sort of help/recovery at some point (meds, talking to someone, life changes, etc.), but it seems like there are some people who keep trying recovery, or return to recovery (even if it seems like beating your head against a wall), and those who do not. Is it a difference in diagnosis, history, environmental factors... or just some unknown internal factor? It feels like some people have a foundational commitment to suicide -- like a biological imperative almost -- and some do not.
I read some folks' posts and think that we are likely similar in many ways, yet I contemplate suicide seriously only in particularly dark times while it seems for them it's a companion, a foregone conclusion. I don't know that there's a right answer, certainly not a universal answer... just something I was thinking about.
I read some folks' posts and think that we are likely similar in many ways, yet I contemplate suicide seriously only in particularly dark times while it seems for them it's a companion, a foregone conclusion. I don't know that there's a right answer, certainly not a universal answer... just something I was thinking about.