I agree with almost everything you wrote — especially the part where you say that life isn't something we shape, but a lottery of birth, often a trap.
But I have to disagree on one point:
suicide is not truly the "one choice we have control over."
It may seem that way — and I understand why — but that's an illusion.
Even this choice is deeply conditioned.
By mental mechanisms, fear, ingrained instincts, upbringing, social norms, moral guilt, trauma, cultural programming.
We don't live in a neutral space where we can freely decide to leave.
We live inside a system of brakes, both internal and external, designed specifically to make sure we don't choose.
If that choice were really free — if we had genuine control over it —
we'd see funerals every single day.
Not because people are "weak," but because many — maybe countless — don't actually want to stay,
they simply can't leave.
And maybe even you, the author of this post, wouldn't be here writing it —
if that choice were truly free.
Because the truth is: even "catching the bus" means breaking through layers of resistance built to stop us.