
dearlybeloved998
Lost and confused
- Dec 10, 2021
- 36
One of the main reasons I don't believe suicide is always irrational, is serious, life-altering chronic conditions. A common objection to suicidality by pro-life individuals is that suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem.
However, it is scientifically proven that not all problems are temporary. Various autoimmune or neuropathic conditions exist that can limit a person's mobility, remove or significantly reduce a sense (eg, sight) or cause debilitating pain, fatigue and other symptoms.
While a lot of the time these conditions are managable, and the sufferers have a relatively good quality of life, and live relatively symptom free aside from the occasional 2 week flare-up, a lot of the time that isn't the case.
I decided to make this post to highlight to the pro-lifers lurking here how not everyone in this forum is making an irrational, impulsive decision when it comes to taking their own lives, and how some problems are simply not temporary, and neither are they managable.
So, asking all the members of this forum with serious disabilities or life altering conditions that are considering CTB: What is your illness called, and how does it affect your life? What have you done to learn to manage it and to save your own life?
I think a perfect example of a chronic illness that is neither temporary nor managable is Adam Maier Clayton, who suffered from Somatoform Disorder after smoking Marijuana and having a terrible panic attack, and long story short, his psychiatric condition made basics things such us speaking, reading, writing, and focusing extremely painful to the point where he had to ration out how much he talked to his own family and couldn't have friends. Thinking or focusing too hard alone was painful for this guy.
He didn't want to resort to suicide, tried very hard to save his life and believed that life is inherently a gift, despite there being some conditions, both medical and psychiatric that may make it anything other than that in certain cases. That's why 40+ treatments failed to save his life (including several forms of therapy, SSRI, SNRI, TCA, MAOI, antipsychotics, anticonvulsants, gabapentinoids, opioids, ketamine, and CBD).
Chronically ill and disabled users of SS, what is your story?
However, it is scientifically proven that not all problems are temporary. Various autoimmune or neuropathic conditions exist that can limit a person's mobility, remove or significantly reduce a sense (eg, sight) or cause debilitating pain, fatigue and other symptoms.
While a lot of the time these conditions are managable, and the sufferers have a relatively good quality of life, and live relatively symptom free aside from the occasional 2 week flare-up, a lot of the time that isn't the case.
I decided to make this post to highlight to the pro-lifers lurking here how not everyone in this forum is making an irrational, impulsive decision when it comes to taking their own lives, and how some problems are simply not temporary, and neither are they managable.
So, asking all the members of this forum with serious disabilities or life altering conditions that are considering CTB: What is your illness called, and how does it affect your life? What have you done to learn to manage it and to save your own life?
I think a perfect example of a chronic illness that is neither temporary nor managable is Adam Maier Clayton, who suffered from Somatoform Disorder after smoking Marijuana and having a terrible panic attack, and long story short, his psychiatric condition made basics things such us speaking, reading, writing, and focusing extremely painful to the point where he had to ration out how much he talked to his own family and couldn't have friends. Thinking or focusing too hard alone was painful for this guy.
He didn't want to resort to suicide, tried very hard to save his life and believed that life is inherently a gift, despite there being some conditions, both medical and psychiatric that may make it anything other than that in certain cases. That's why 40+ treatments failed to save his life (including several forms of therapy, SSRI, SNRI, TCA, MAOI, antipsychotics, anticonvulsants, gabapentinoids, opioids, ketamine, and CBD).
Chronically ill and disabled users of SS, what is your story?