
Un-
I'm a failure. An absolute waste. A LOSEr.
- Apr 6, 2021
- 652
I'm probably mistaken, but I think that people against suicide get the idea of suicide being a temporary problem because people with stories related to suicide frame it weirdly, in some sense.
Like, how many times in a movie have you seen someone supposedly suicidal "saved" by the protagonist - often times easily. Maybe I'm not making sense, but like look at these:
It's just.. I hate to fucking say it because it sounds like I'm gatekeeping shit, but genuinely, it's usually the people who didn't really want to die in the first place - or not seriously, at least - that's shoved everywhere, y'know?
I don't have a problem with it, other than it creates a false misconception of "You really don't want to die if you're suicidal", or "You're not logically thinking out your problems", etcetera. And that's false. We have different reasons, and they're valid - I'm not saying they aren't.
I'm just saying that if Jimmy goes ahead and stars in 50 articles, talking about how the death of his pet puppy made him almost hang himself, but then he remembered that he doesn't want to die because he wanted to see Morbius that weekend.. It's gonna.. Y'know, people are gonna start thinking that something similar applies to a lot of people. People DO think that way. It's why there's such resistance against suicide, because people.. Just don't really understand that just because Jimmy didn't actually want to die, it doesn't mean every other suicidal person is the same as him.
Maybe I'm not making sense. It's just something that's been bothering me lately. How often do you come across an article or something, and the suicidal dude says "Y'know what? I really, really wished I had died. I only failed - literally - because my mom came in the wrong time. I tried kicking her off, and to this day I hate that she's called a hero. I wanted to die. I still want to die.".. You probably won't ever come across something like this. Or I haven't at least.
Like, how many times in a movie have you seen someone supposedly suicidal "saved" by the protagonist - often times easily. Maybe I'm not making sense, but like look at these:
It's just.. I hate to fucking say it because it sounds like I'm gatekeeping shit, but genuinely, it's usually the people who didn't really want to die in the first place - or not seriously, at least - that's shoved everywhere, y'know?
I don't have a problem with it, other than it creates a false misconception of "You really don't want to die if you're suicidal", or "You're not logically thinking out your problems", etcetera. And that's false. We have different reasons, and they're valid - I'm not saying they aren't.
I'm just saying that if Jimmy goes ahead and stars in 50 articles, talking about how the death of his pet puppy made him almost hang himself, but then he remembered that he doesn't want to die because he wanted to see Morbius that weekend.. It's gonna.. Y'know, people are gonna start thinking that something similar applies to a lot of people. People DO think that way. It's why there's such resistance against suicide, because people.. Just don't really understand that just because Jimmy didn't actually want to die, it doesn't mean every other suicidal person is the same as him.
Maybe I'm not making sense. It's just something that's been bothering me lately. How often do you come across an article or something, and the suicidal dude says "Y'know what? I really, really wished I had died. I only failed - literally - because my mom came in the wrong time. I tried kicking her off, and to this day I hate that she's called a hero. I wanted to die. I still want to die.".. You probably won't ever come across something like this. Or I haven't at least.
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