
GrumpyFrog
Exhausted
- Aug 23, 2020
- 1,913
Hey, everyone!
There is something that has really been driving me up the wall. I am an anxious person and I have a hard time drawing the line between rational and irrational fears. I have extensive history of getting caught up on things that only had a small chance of happening and treating them as something that is very probable if not definite, and making really dumb radical decisions because of that. I wish it made me a more careful person, but in reality it mostly makes me go crazy with anxiety until I snap and do stuff of "quitting my job because I am going to be fired anyway" variety just to relieve the tension. Me being self-aware about this isn't super helpful, because in the moment I can't draw the line between the reasonable precaution and anxious bullshit.
And currently I am absolutely caught up on fears about methods. I have fears of getting tardive dyskinesia that leaves me permanently disabled from one meto, fears of being permanently disabled by SN, fears of being permanently disabled by full suspension hanging. And all of this combined still doesn't make me not want to CTB. Instead it is slowly pushing me towards thinking of more gruesome methods that can potentially cause harm to others and towards using them sooner because my brain is driving me up the wall. I recognize that this is not good, but I don't know how to help myself.
I thought that there might be people on this forum that might have an idea of how to distinguish between rational and irrational fear specifically when it comes to methods. I tend to ask for an outside perspective, sometimes from multiple people, when I'm stuck in this mindset, but with CTB methods I know that pretty much everywhere people will just try to scare me further even if it is irrational, without realizing that it is not going to make me less suicidal because mentally I'm well beyond the point of being scared out of CTB. Any advice? I know it sounds like a very vague question, but I don't know how to formulate it better. I am shit at making scary decisions, that's the problem.
Thanks for reading.
There is something that has really been driving me up the wall. I am an anxious person and I have a hard time drawing the line between rational and irrational fears. I have extensive history of getting caught up on things that only had a small chance of happening and treating them as something that is very probable if not definite, and making really dumb radical decisions because of that. I wish it made me a more careful person, but in reality it mostly makes me go crazy with anxiety until I snap and do stuff of "quitting my job because I am going to be fired anyway" variety just to relieve the tension. Me being self-aware about this isn't super helpful, because in the moment I can't draw the line between the reasonable precaution and anxious bullshit.
And currently I am absolutely caught up on fears about methods. I have fears of getting tardive dyskinesia that leaves me permanently disabled from one meto, fears of being permanently disabled by SN, fears of being permanently disabled by full suspension hanging. And all of this combined still doesn't make me not want to CTB. Instead it is slowly pushing me towards thinking of more gruesome methods that can potentially cause harm to others and towards using them sooner because my brain is driving me up the wall. I recognize that this is not good, but I don't know how to help myself.
I thought that there might be people on this forum that might have an idea of how to distinguish between rational and irrational fear specifically when it comes to methods. I tend to ask for an outside perspective, sometimes from multiple people, when I'm stuck in this mindset, but with CTB methods I know that pretty much everywhere people will just try to scare me further even if it is irrational, without realizing that it is not going to make me less suicidal because mentally I'm well beyond the point of being scared out of CTB. Any advice? I know it sounds like a very vague question, but I don't know how to formulate it better. I am shit at making scary decisions, that's the problem.
Thanks for reading.