FreddieQuell
:):
- Apr 14, 2020
- 80
A basic human need is to have control. Control being the idea that an individual's actions work toward some desired outcome. Which I guess is motivation in itself, the motivation to do things, to take action, to work towards some desirable outcome. It is very difficult for the average person to live with the idea that external factors - things we cannot control - can lead to such undesired outcomes that render a life useless.
How many people do you know that stop to have a conversation with a homeless person to find out what factors led to this person being in his or her current situation? I don't know any, except for me. I think people just don't want to know that things beyond their control can lead to such dire outcomes.
To place the blame on the person suiciding is a coping mechanism for those left behind. When the blame is placed purely on the individual instead of taking circumstances into account, the idea of control and motivation is preserved. It is a way for them to say, and believe, things like 'I would never end up in this situation' or 'Only weak people commit suicide', as if the individual holds the key to an outcome, foregoing circumstances that would have led them down the same path.
Many here view people that see no other way out to end their suffering except to take their own life with sympathy and understanding, we are in the same boat after all. Those left behind need the idea of control (and motivation). To place the blame on the individual suiciding is a coping mechanism many need to continue their own lives. If the blame is placed purely on the person suiciding, they can continue believing they would never end up in a similar situation.
It might be an ultimate act of kindness on our part to have others think and say about us what they want, just so they can continue their lives.
How many people do you know that stop to have a conversation with a homeless person to find out what factors led to this person being in his or her current situation? I don't know any, except for me. I think people just don't want to know that things beyond their control can lead to such dire outcomes.
To place the blame on the person suiciding is a coping mechanism for those left behind. When the blame is placed purely on the individual instead of taking circumstances into account, the idea of control and motivation is preserved. It is a way for them to say, and believe, things like 'I would never end up in this situation' or 'Only weak people commit suicide', as if the individual holds the key to an outcome, foregoing circumstances that would have led them down the same path.
Many here view people that see no other way out to end their suffering except to take their own life with sympathy and understanding, we are in the same boat after all. Those left behind need the idea of control (and motivation). To place the blame on the individual suiciding is a coping mechanism many need to continue their own lives. If the blame is placed purely on the person suiciding, they can continue believing they would never end up in a similar situation.
It might be an ultimate act of kindness on our part to have others think and say about us what they want, just so they can continue their lives.
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