viljalauss
he/they 21
- Aug 22, 2023
- 169
hi beloved sasu it's been a long time. i am still alive unfortunately
i'm pretty much not allowed to die, not at this point. my bf has provided and continues to provide a home for us (we live together) meaning i don't have to live with family anymore. all of changing my name and eventually getting a GD diagnosis / changing name on passport, etc. is realistic, for one, but also realistic in the very near future. also my parents are both dealing with their parents having quite serious health issues -- though i don't think any time would be good for my parents to have me die, so the first point is more compelling. there is so so much i can be grateful for that has happened in the last 4-5 months. compare that to 8+ years of suicidality, and i don't know if it's just because it's more recent but the last 3 years have felt pretty brutal. not to mention if i ctb now, unlike in june where we lived with friends, my bf will be completely alone and i am as scared of the result of that as he has voiced he is for himself
but how on god's green earth am i meant to cope with this. how do people cope with it. the fact that they have to stay alive. not even necessarily (or not as much) the idea that there are so many uncertain things that life can throw at you depending on how long you stay on its course, but even just the cycles that keep happening -- [months], death-days of people i know
i at least in part came here because i know people have come not from a default position of 'oh, you just have to' but either haven't questioned it or, if they have, can't admit to others that they can't find an adequate answer
the title can be taken in two ways, both of which i wanted to address - the first is the above, that i'm finding the idea of recovery really difficult to cope with, the idea that i'll have to stay alive indefinitely
the second being that as "committed" as i am (i.e. staying alive even though i often really do not want to) i'm not using the time i have or the better mental state (compared to before june/july; change in circumstances and probably also lamotrigine coming in clutch) i have to do anything better, really. a lot of the time i have is taken up by job applications (or, rather, the fact that i'm so slow at doing them) - but the rest of it i could fill with so much that's better, or even just more varied. as it is i tend to just go between writing music and sudoku games, because they feel easiest, until both feel stale, as everything does eventually, except the eventually isn't a few months or days, it feels like every few hours. i think that, far more often than i'm tired in the sense that i want to sleep (though that is pretty often), i don't mind being awake but i also don't want to do anything. or interact with anything consequential or even interesting. but also if i don't do anything i get into my thoughts which, as it turns out, is not a good place right now because i end up thinking about how / how deeply i want to not do anything and it scares me
and i sort of know that you can build better habits and how to do it and how long for (apparently 22 days is a false figure and way too short), all these steps you can take, but i can't bring myself to want to. i want to crawl into a hole and curl up and sleep and not wake up
""It's okay, day after next, we'll make all these arrangements to change, you can better yourself" / I know I'm wasting my breath as I inhale" - ruby <3
so yea . i can't say with full honesty that i wanna get better and commit to life but 1) i wanna know how one would hypothetically do both and 2) use that to help me be better while on this earth, even if i've well overstayed my welcome. i imagine the second will be answered well if i look properly through the recovery section, but in order to get anything out of it i really do just need to commit to life and i don't know how i can bring myself to do that )): any replies are welcome but this has been a vent
i'm pretty much not allowed to die, not at this point. my bf has provided and continues to provide a home for us (we live together) meaning i don't have to live with family anymore. all of changing my name and eventually getting a GD diagnosis / changing name on passport, etc. is realistic, for one, but also realistic in the very near future. also my parents are both dealing with their parents having quite serious health issues -- though i don't think any time would be good for my parents to have me die, so the first point is more compelling. there is so so much i can be grateful for that has happened in the last 4-5 months. compare that to 8+ years of suicidality, and i don't know if it's just because it's more recent but the last 3 years have felt pretty brutal. not to mention if i ctb now, unlike in june where we lived with friends, my bf will be completely alone and i am as scared of the result of that as he has voiced he is for himself
but how on god's green earth am i meant to cope with this. how do people cope with it. the fact that they have to stay alive. not even necessarily (or not as much) the idea that there are so many uncertain things that life can throw at you depending on how long you stay on its course, but even just the cycles that keep happening -- [months], death-days of people i know
i at least in part came here because i know people have come not from a default position of 'oh, you just have to' but either haven't questioned it or, if they have, can't admit to others that they can't find an adequate answer
the title can be taken in two ways, both of which i wanted to address - the first is the above, that i'm finding the idea of recovery really difficult to cope with, the idea that i'll have to stay alive indefinitely
the second being that as "committed" as i am (i.e. staying alive even though i often really do not want to) i'm not using the time i have or the better mental state (compared to before june/july; change in circumstances and probably also lamotrigine coming in clutch) i have to do anything better, really. a lot of the time i have is taken up by job applications (or, rather, the fact that i'm so slow at doing them) - but the rest of it i could fill with so much that's better, or even just more varied. as it is i tend to just go between writing music and sudoku games, because they feel easiest, until both feel stale, as everything does eventually, except the eventually isn't a few months or days, it feels like every few hours. i think that, far more often than i'm tired in the sense that i want to sleep (though that is pretty often), i don't mind being awake but i also don't want to do anything. or interact with anything consequential or even interesting. but also if i don't do anything i get into my thoughts which, as it turns out, is not a good place right now because i end up thinking about how / how deeply i want to not do anything and it scares me
and i sort of know that you can build better habits and how to do it and how long for (apparently 22 days is a false figure and way too short), all these steps you can take, but i can't bring myself to want to. i want to crawl into a hole and curl up and sleep and not wake up
""It's okay, day after next, we'll make all these arrangements to change, you can better yourself" / I know I'm wasting my breath as I inhale" - ruby <3
so yea . i can't say with full honesty that i wanna get better and commit to life but 1) i wanna know how one would hypothetically do both and 2) use that to help me be better while on this earth, even if i've well overstayed my welcome. i imagine the second will be answered well if i look properly through the recovery section, but in order to get anything out of it i really do just need to commit to life and i don't know how i can bring myself to do that )): any replies are welcome but this has been a vent