F
Forever Sleep
Earned it we have...
- May 4, 2022
- 14,749
Obviously- this thread discusses suicidal thoughts. Please ignore it if that's triggering for you.
Just to clarify- I'm not attempting to recover personally. However, this is something I think about. Do you think it's more likely a person will recover if they no longer consider suicide is a choice they are free to make? Does it make focussing on recovery easier or harder when a person decides suicide is no longer an option for them?
I think that's partly why I don't want to consider recovery now. Because I'm so attached to my suicidal thoughts. That said- when I was younger, I made steps to recover on several attempts, all the while- not ruling suicide out as an eventual possibility.
How do you see it? Is it sort of like alchoholics in recovery? A friend said they always considered themselves to be in recovery- rather than recovered. Maybe the knowledge that they could slip back is what kept them preventing it.
Can a fully recovered person still have ideation from time to time? What do you think? How do you approach your recovery? Do you still permit yourself to think about suicide as an option or, is it simply off the cards for you now? I'm just curious really. I imagine it must be difficult too- if you are choosing to try to banish those thoughts. I've had ideation for 36 years. It's difficult to imagine my perspective without them.
Just to clarify- I'm not attempting to recover personally. However, this is something I think about. Do you think it's more likely a person will recover if they no longer consider suicide is a choice they are free to make? Does it make focussing on recovery easier or harder when a person decides suicide is no longer an option for them?
I think that's partly why I don't want to consider recovery now. Because I'm so attached to my suicidal thoughts. That said- when I was younger, I made steps to recover on several attempts, all the while- not ruling suicide out as an eventual possibility.
How do you see it? Is it sort of like alchoholics in recovery? A friend said they always considered themselves to be in recovery- rather than recovered. Maybe the knowledge that they could slip back is what kept them preventing it.
Can a fully recovered person still have ideation from time to time? What do you think? How do you approach your recovery? Do you still permit yourself to think about suicide as an option or, is it simply off the cards for you now? I'm just curious really. I imagine it must be difficult too- if you are choosing to try to banish those thoughts. I've had ideation for 36 years. It's difficult to imagine my perspective without them.