
kazewoatsumete
hey come on and bury me!
- Dec 11, 2022
- 55
I am starting to realize that my suicidal feelings will keep coming back, and it always happens to be due to the same event— loss.
My parents are dead, many friends long gone, partners left, and it seems as though the grief just piles up. I have tried antipsychotics. I have tried multiple types of therapy. It works in the short term, but when it comes to the threat of loss, I end up exactly in the same spot as I am now.
I am troubled because I really do feel like I enjoy my life— or at least tolerate it times when I have brief reprieves from loss or fall for false promises of permanence, but I am also coming to grips with the fact that loss is inevitable after I lost a dear friend to suicide and my partner of 3 years left me.
No matter how much therapy or meds, I don't feel better. It feels like everything piles up. That is why I am certain that catching the bus may be in my best interest— if the stress of loss and grief has incapacitated me to this extent when I'm hardly in my mid-twenties, if I always come back to this spot, perhaps I need to break the cycle. I don't think I can like myself, and I don't think I can overcome the trauma and grief I feel if it will only come at me again and again. It feels as though the happy times are not worth it.
The issue is that my survival instinct has been kicking in intensely as I plan more thoroughly— what about my pets, won't my friends be sad, oh this new person wants to talk to me!
I don't want to hurt anyone but I'm not sure how much longer I can feasibly endure agony. I am not impulsive, this may actually be one of the first times these thoughts are not impulsive.
Is there any way to cope with the guilt and fear of missing out? Is there any way to suppress my survival instinct? Is it just not my time yet? I want it to be my time. I don't want to endure this for years to come.
My parents are dead, many friends long gone, partners left, and it seems as though the grief just piles up. I have tried antipsychotics. I have tried multiple types of therapy. It works in the short term, but when it comes to the threat of loss, I end up exactly in the same spot as I am now.
I am troubled because I really do feel like I enjoy my life— or at least tolerate it times when I have brief reprieves from loss or fall for false promises of permanence, but I am also coming to grips with the fact that loss is inevitable after I lost a dear friend to suicide and my partner of 3 years left me.
No matter how much therapy or meds, I don't feel better. It feels like everything piles up. That is why I am certain that catching the bus may be in my best interest— if the stress of loss and grief has incapacitated me to this extent when I'm hardly in my mid-twenties, if I always come back to this spot, perhaps I need to break the cycle. I don't think I can like myself, and I don't think I can overcome the trauma and grief I feel if it will only come at me again and again. It feels as though the happy times are not worth it.
The issue is that my survival instinct has been kicking in intensely as I plan more thoroughly— what about my pets, won't my friends be sad, oh this new person wants to talk to me!
I don't want to hurt anyone but I'm not sure how much longer I can feasibly endure agony. I am not impulsive, this may actually be one of the first times these thoughts are not impulsive.
Is there any way to cope with the guilt and fear of missing out? Is there any way to suppress my survival instinct? Is it just not my time yet? I want it to be my time. I don't want to endure this for years to come.