What I got from this is some people I leave behind will always find a way to make it about themselves with no regard for me and what my situation was like when I was alive?
Yes- I believe so. Partly because they seem unwilling to accept how bad your situation is.
When you think about it- most grief/ shame/ guilt is about our own needs- not the thing we're feeling those things after. We don't want to feel grief but that's unavoidable with a loss. Plus, we want to be forgiven if we feel guilt or shame but that's not possible either if the person has gone.
By taking your own life, you will be proving that your problems WERE serious and that they ought to have been recognised as such. (Not trying to make you feel guilty now- just saying- people must consider this when a suicide takes place- they surely can't chalk it all down to some impulsive act.)
There's this idea of tragedy also when people die- especially when they die young or through suicide- before their time as it were. Although again- this tends to be a viewpoint from a positive person- 'They had so much to live for' blah, blah, blah. Rather than a thought out response that the person in question was suffering unbearably (if they took their own life.)
We grieve for people who die of natural causes too- even though it may have been a happy release for them. We're not really thinking about them when we do this- we're imagining the happier times when they were well and wishing them back again. Sadly, life doesn't work like that. Sometimes, I truly wonder whether- if someones grief is actually more selfless- that they feel like that person missed out by dieing- then surely- they're seeing us differently than how we actually are. I think this comes into play also.
The problem with suicide is- it's a choice- we choose to go- knowing the aftermath it may cause. I think people get angry at the thought that they weren't 'enough' for the person in question to stay for. Plus, if they know in their heart that they could have been more supportive- they likely don't want to feel that guilt that they could have done more.