
Hecuba
Member
- Dec 24, 2021
- 12
This is probably more a 'recovery' post, but I don't think I'm there yet. I'm posting here solely because this is a consideration that has changed the way I think about ctb.
So... I have had a cat for a while. I have always had cats. My cat is one of the most amazing beings I have ever met, but he was never enough for me not to consider ctb. At the end of the day, I know who will take care of him if I end up leaving this world. That's the main thing I would indicate in my letter.
I have been very on edge recently trying to ctb with fent. Well, trying to find fent in the first place. And I somehow, meanwhile, impulsively adopted a dog. It's only been a week, but my life has improved significantly, and I think I might be ok to commit to being alive for however long this dog will be alive. I know not everybody likes animals, not everybody's living circumstances allow them to get an animal, and sometimes animals are just expensive. I'm really poor, but I know I can provide anything for my pets if need be. All I am saying is that it took courage and, essentially, impulsivity, to get this dog. But he might be saving my life, who knows. Although it might be a honeymoon sort of period that will fade an leave me just about as suicidal, or even more, as before getting the dog.
I hope that, if you ever considered getting a dog and yet hesitated, this post might motivate you to give it a try. It's scary at first, and you will probably get the adoption blues, but if you give it a couple of weeks, you might find yourself in a place where living has suddenly become bearable. Most shelters allow you to bring the animal back in the first month, so it's not as if you have to be 100% committed when getting it.
So... I have had a cat for a while. I have always had cats. My cat is one of the most amazing beings I have ever met, but he was never enough for me not to consider ctb. At the end of the day, I know who will take care of him if I end up leaving this world. That's the main thing I would indicate in my letter.
I have been very on edge recently trying to ctb with fent. Well, trying to find fent in the first place. And I somehow, meanwhile, impulsively adopted a dog. It's only been a week, but my life has improved significantly, and I think I might be ok to commit to being alive for however long this dog will be alive. I know not everybody likes animals, not everybody's living circumstances allow them to get an animal, and sometimes animals are just expensive. I'm really poor, but I know I can provide anything for my pets if need be. All I am saying is that it took courage and, essentially, impulsivity, to get this dog. But he might be saving my life, who knows. Although it might be a honeymoon sort of period that will fade an leave me just about as suicidal, or even more, as before getting the dog.
I hope that, if you ever considered getting a dog and yet hesitated, this post might motivate you to give it a try. It's scary at first, and you will probably get the adoption blues, but if you give it a couple of weeks, you might find yourself in a place where living has suddenly become bearable. Most shelters allow you to bring the animal back in the first month, so it's not as if you have to be 100% committed when getting it.