
greyhound
Arcanist
- Oct 8, 2020
- 471
I've been chronically ill for the past 27 years. I got super depressed during high school but my first definitive suicidal plans were around age 20. I was 'saved' by my parents but wasn't able to get a diagnosis for my illness until around 10 years ago around age 30. I've tried treating it with everything since then but nothing has really worked, some minor improvements but other things worse - in general I'm just older and worse for the wear.
I've been fairly open with my family about my latest suicidal ideas. Their main response is that life is hard and I should just suck it up. I know I'm going to get this a lot over Christmas from the rest of my family when I'm they're in town. My brother just says he knows clients that are worse off (rehabing physio patients) and I shouldn't complain. Part of the problem is that with my illness you look mostly normal.
I know the Buddha said that life is suffering. I remember scoffing when I first heard this as kid. But he was right, it is a freaking grind. It also doesn't seem like there are safeguards in place such that only as much suffering as a person can handle is doled out to them.
Religion seems to be universally opposed to suicide (except for Shinto, which maybe explains all the Japanese themed usernames / avatars on here). But religion also seems to be full of BS with all the eternal heaven/hell and original sin, etc.
I mean I get that suffering is part of the human experience, but the potential for suffering seems to be infinite while our capacity for absorbing it is definitely finite. I think in my case it's not that the pain is constantly unbearable, it's just the complete helplessness in fixing.
I'm sort of in a bad spot in that I'm afraid to CTB but also terrified at the thought of living for decades more with the illness. It's at the point of getting random panic attacks here and there at being stuck in this situation - I'm sure many of you are in a similar boat.
I've been fairly open with my family about my latest suicidal ideas. Their main response is that life is hard and I should just suck it up. I know I'm going to get this a lot over Christmas from the rest of my family when I'm they're in town. My brother just says he knows clients that are worse off (rehabing physio patients) and I shouldn't complain. Part of the problem is that with my illness you look mostly normal.
I know the Buddha said that life is suffering. I remember scoffing when I first heard this as kid. But he was right, it is a freaking grind. It also doesn't seem like there are safeguards in place such that only as much suffering as a person can handle is doled out to them.
Religion seems to be universally opposed to suicide (except for Shinto, which maybe explains all the Japanese themed usernames / avatars on here). But religion also seems to be full of BS with all the eternal heaven/hell and original sin, etc.
I mean I get that suffering is part of the human experience, but the potential for suffering seems to be infinite while our capacity for absorbing it is definitely finite. I think in my case it's not that the pain is constantly unbearable, it's just the complete helplessness in fixing.
I'm sort of in a bad spot in that I'm afraid to CTB but also terrified at the thought of living for decades more with the illness. It's at the point of getting random panic attacks here and there at being stuck in this situation - I'm sure many of you are in a similar boat.