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Sadbanana

God doesn't care
Aug 20, 2024
248
I'm planning to do it one day either way, whether I manage to cure my depression or not.

I don't like the idea of clinging to my life as I will age, my body will be growing old and everything will hurt. Not when I have ability to prevent all this suffering by deciding to die sooner.

Why should there be anything wrong in taking your death into your own hands instead of relying on unpredictable biology. It's cleaner and less cruel that way.

It's the ultimate agency I have. I couldn't decide my parents, my genes, my life conditions. But at least I can opt out when the time is right.

So when I get to the point where there is really just too much suffering and nothing positive, I will do it.
 
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Macedonian1987

Macedonian1987

Just a sad guy from Macedonia.
Oct 22, 2025
1,103
I see suicide as an exit point in life when it becomes unbearable. The ancient Greeks, Romans, and Egyptians were wiser than we are 2000 years ago, they granted euthanasia to people who suffered for years from illnesses of the body or mind (or both), and they did not view suicide as a sin or frown upon it.
 
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S

Sadbanana

God doesn't care
Aug 20, 2024
248
I see suicide as an exit point in life when it becomes unbearable. The ancient Greeks, Romans, and Egyptians were wiser than we are 2000 years ago, they granted euthanasia to people who suffered for years from illnesses of the body or mind (or both), and they did not view suicide as a sin or frown upon it.
Yeah, our current culture's view is just toxic positivity and forced compliance.

It's funny how this narrative can quickly shift when there is war. Suddenly the intrinsic value of life narrative disappears and it's good to die for your country or ideology or [insert abstract concept].
 
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X

xhersekk

Member
Apr 22, 2026
12
It's a gift because we are going to die anyway.. Whether by suicide or naturally.
 
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starboy2k

starboy2k

“I’ve been digging my own grave for years”
May 21, 2025
558
"If life is a gift, then my suicide will be the receipt….time to make a fucking return."

-Me
 
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FuneralCry

FuneralCry

Just wanting some peace
Sep 24, 2020
48,449
It'll always be to me as well, for me ceasing to exist is the positive solution to find true permanent peace from the suffering, torture and evil of existing where there is no limit as to how much one can be tortured. All I want is to be permanently unconscious, ceasing to exist solves everything for me as after all there are no disadvantages to never suffering again, existing truly is torture and I find it so horrible how the torture can continue for decades longer just for one to face the terrible extreme agony of old age and cease existing anyway.
 
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violetforever

violetforever

Paragon
Dec 24, 2025
901
Why should there be anything wrong in taking your death into your own hands instead of relying on unpredictable biology. It's cleaner and less cruel that way.

It's the ultimate agency I have. I couldn't decide my parents, my genes, my life conditions. But at least I can opt out when the time is right.
i agree but not everyone sees it that way.
It's funny how this narrative can quickly shift when there is war. Suddenly the intrinsic value of life narrative disappears and it's good to die for your country or ideology or [insert abstract concept].
good example.
 
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Shadows From Hell

Shadows From Hell

There's someone in my head but it's not me
Oct 21, 2024
657
This reminds of a post I saw on here some time ago, and I enjoyed it so much that I copied it and saved it to my phone. So the credit goes to whichever SaSu poster wrote this ...

Life™: The Ultimate Subscription Service You Can't Cancel

Congratulations! You've been forcibly enrolled in Life™, the premium, high-stakes, never-ending subscription service that you never signed up for. There's no free trial, no upfront agreement—one day, you just wake up in a fragile, malfunction-prone body with no instruction manual and a set of random biological imperatives dictating your every move.

The terms and conditions? You don't get to read them. You're just here, thrown into existence without consent, forced to navigate a chaotic mess of pain, responsibility, and disappointment, all while pretending it's worth it. You are expected to pay your dues—physically, emotionally, and financially—until your time is up. Failure to comply may result in penalties, including but not limited to suffering, poverty, isolation, or premature deletion.
Welcome to the Prison of Life™!

Not only is Life™ a mandatory subscription service, but it's also a prison cleverly disguised as a playground. You're given just enough distractions—TV, music, cheap thrills—to keep you from noticing the bars. You're told you're free, that you can "be anything you want," but in reality? You're shackled to biological needs, economic servitude, and a society that gaslights you into thinking this is normal.

You're hungry? Work for it.
You're sick? Pay for treatment.
You're depressed? Cope or be judged.

The walls of this prison are built out of inescapable suffering—aging, disease, loss, and the slow realization that nothing truly belongs to you. Not your time, not your happiness, not even your body, which deteriorates against your will. The warden? A mix of societal expectations, biological imperatives, and the illusion of hope.
But Wait… There's an Exit Button! (Kinda.)

Now, here's the biggest joke of all—Life™ actually has an exit button… but it's been intentionally hidden away behind fear, stigma, and endless roadblocks.

The system is designed to keep you locked in at all costs. Even thinking about leaving is met with judgment, guilt-tripping, and patronizing advice about how you should "appreciate what you have." You'll be told:

"It gets better!" (It doesn't.)
"You just need to find meaning!" (Good luck.)
"Think about your loved ones!" (As if they aren't just as trapped as you.)

If Life™ were a fair system, you'd have the right to opt-out at any time, with dignity and without obstacles. But no—because that would mean acknowledging that this whole thing might not be worth it. And if too many people started questioning the service, the entire system might crumble under its own absurdity.

So, instead, you're forced to keep playing. Trapped in an endless, meaningless grind, waiting for your subscription to naturally expire, hoping the end comes quick and painless—because, as we all know, this prison doesn't just let you walk out. It makes you suffer first.
Final Verdict: 0/10 – Would Not Recommend

Life™ is the worst deal imaginable—a subscription that charges you in suffering, a prison that convinces you it's a playground, and a trap designed to keep you inside until your body breaks down completely.

The only consolation? Eventually, everyone's subscription expires.

Wouldn't it be nice if you could just hit "Cancel" and be done with it?

Too bad. The button is hidden.
 
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