TAW122

TAW122

Emissary of the right to die.
Aug 30, 2018
6,819
I'd like to discuss about which people's (could be famous, or a nobody, or just anyone) quotes/ideas that you find inspirational or relevant that you'd like to adapt and put into your suicide note. The quote can even be paraphrased (not exactly word for word). There are a few for me, and one of them is Wilkes McDermid's quote, paraphrased from his original quote: (See near the end of his final blog entry)

"I can't stop people from lying to me for the rest of my life... but I can control how long my life will be and therefore how long I will have to suffer."

I like his quote and it makes sense. As an additional adaptation of it, I'd like to apply it to my situation as such, so TAW122's adaptation is:

"I can't control nor change how people will react and behave towards me, but I can control how much and for how long I am willing to put up with their bullshit."

My adaptation applies to my day to day life and my general life experience with how people IRL treat me, react to me, and their opinions. Now yes, ultimately, I am the one who lives my life, but I'm so sick of the way people treat me (condescending and patronizing, as well as irrational positivity, blind optimism, superficial concerns (oftenly for stroking their own egos), etc.), so having that in my note will explain at least how I feel towards the world in general.

What are your quotes, ideas, and/or adaptations of various quotes from others (could be anyone) that you want or considered for your suicide note?
 
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HereToday

HereToday

Arcanist
Dec 27, 2019
437
I only included this quote in my suicide note
 
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SlackJim

SlackJim

Nothing lasts, but nothing is lost
Sep 30, 2019
226
I like my signature, "nothing lasts, but nothing is lost" its a quote from Terrance McKenna. for me it can relate to a lot of things. Literally matter and energy cannot be lost, but only transformed, it can relate to life, life doesn't last, but when someone dies their life is not lost, it is just in the past. For me it will be like saying dont dwell on the "tragedy" of me taking my life (in ".." because thats not what it is to me) but rather remember my life was what it was and hasn't gone anywhere. Someday I believe we will look at all this outside the constraints of human perceived time and understand the bigger picture, in that sense, nothing is lost, everything just is. I dont know, it trips me out when I think about it thats why I like it
 
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H

Heart of Ice

Chillin'
Sep 26, 2019
362
Vince McMahon said it best:

"Life sucks, and then you die."

Personally I will try to limit the amount of quotes in my note. I will preferably have zero. I just find quotes from others rather... trite (?) in these types of texts. I'd rather have my note be 100 % personal, you know?
 
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enlightened_suicide

enlightened_suicide

How do you know, this isn't all a dream?
Jan 4, 2020
112
Live Asleep = Repeat History
Live Awake = The Astral Plains
 
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BPD Barbie

BPD Barbie

Visionary
Dec 1, 2019
2,361
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OneBigBlur

OneBigBlur

Experienced
Nov 30, 2019
231

Not sure I like this one, no offense. I just don't like someone chalking up my suicide to a magical illness rather than adversity.

"Nature is brutal. The weak do not survive, and neither do the strong. Life is a constant, merciless fight that everyone loses. -Christopher Thomas Knight

"Living happily" itself is a myth. Nobody on this floating rock is consistently "happy" every single day unless there is something seriously neurologically wrong with them that makes them that way. Life itself is inherently suffering - this isn't some edgy edict, it's the fundamental nature of the human condition; we are animals, and moreso social animals, which, not unlike elephants, zebras, dolphins, cows, or donkeys, are biologically wired and adapted to chasing short-term fulfillment, and avoiding pain and suffering - to the degree we experience and remember negative feelings and experiences far, far deeper and longer than we do positive experiences. This is the telltale sign of our inescapable animal nature - the hardwiring that makes suffering so inherently unavoidable, and pleasure seemingly so elusive.

Boiling the phenomena of NEETdom down to "mental health" is a reductionistic fairy tale that completely ignores the context of modern life in favor of hyperindividualizing the consequences of that context down to the individual and leaving it there. Speaking of context - the factors you mention are not as much of an immunological force as you imagine. Our society is one rife with celebrity suicides, who so many see as the "winners" of our silly game - they have money, prestige, recognition, fulfillment, endless fancy toys and achievements - and yet still cannot escape the call to the void - which, if anything, speaks to the fact we spend our lives chasing things that really do not make our lives all that worthwhile in the end. Sure, it's nice to be clock in to your 9-5 every day and pat yourself on the back and tell yourself you're doing the right thing like everyone else, but this is the life of an obedient somnambulant - one we are conditioned for in this society. You know the script - go to school, work until you're old, save and scrimp the whole way through, retire, and go rot in an old folks home using the money you've hoarded your whole life. This might be a fulfilling life for an inanimate machine part that cannot feel and is not alive, but for a social animal that needs environmental enrichment and belonging and meaning to feel any kind of consistent fulfilment, it is a slow death. This isn't to say NEETdom is some grand alternative - it is the final consequence of this meaningless life program - narcissized depression and almost total alienation, whereby one practically declares themselves dead to the outside world and escapes deeper and deeper inside themselves as a solace, until the crushing emptiness of isolation and loneliness destroys their ability to experience pleasure and often their will to live. This is typically because of the self-isolating shame that attaches itself to the status. As social animals, we need people in our lives to feel any degree of worthwhile. Interpersonal interaction injects our lives with a kind of meaning and fulfilment that all the technology, distractions and drugs cannot. Unemployment and NEETdom would not nearly be as bad if not for the immense social stigma, and if we could all expect to live in communities we felt a part of, or at the very least had friends who cared about us outside of our job title. Unfortunately, this is not the nature of our hyperindividualized, materialistic, and vain society whereby one increasingly derives their (narcissized) sense of self-worth and status from their ability to consume and brag about said consumption. Instead, we live in a time where over half of the population reports always feeling lonely and having few if any friends, 1/6 of us are on psychotropic drugs, and the suicide rate hasn't been this high in 30 years.

All the same - this doesn't make "successful" people failures. But it also doesn't make NEETs "failures", at least in any individual sense. The failure is society itself - in providing an insane sociocultural script that makes people incredibly sick; if I could call NEETdom anything, anything at all, I'd call it the canary in the coal mine for a society that is providing an age old lifescript that is no longer worthwhile, rewarding, or even meaningful in any sense - nor does it even guarantee the barest physical necessities for participation anymore; recall that wages have been stagnant for 40 years and we have wealth inequality levels that mimic those found prior to the Great Depression, what becomes all the more clear is that modern life is the new Great Depression. This is a dreadfully sick post-meaning society where mass shootings, panoptic surveillance, suicide, opiate abuse, loneliness, and alienation have become as commonplace as psychotropic drugs and psych diagnoses; which, if anything, says nothing more than that the very concept of "mental illness" is a desperate attempt by the system to hold on to it's collapsing validity by pointing at dissidents and shouting "they have some inherent biological illness that makes them this way!" As such, the realm of modern day psychology/psychiatry has become no more than another long arm of the corporatocratic, neoliberal police state, which has a part in allowing modern-day quality of life to continue it's decades long slow bleed to the sociopathic class - the wealthy and powerful.

We must think of NEETdom, depression, and a wide scope of psychological maladies as meaningful signals our bodies are sending us about the ways we conduct our lives nowadays, not as noise that is to be ignored and medicated away." -David Foxxxy

People in any civilization are inculcated with a set of beliefs just as members of a cult - they are raised with a rather static lens they are taught is the "correct" way to experience, perceive, and make sense of reality; this can be something as simple as "things fall down because of gravity", to "money is a very important pursuit in life", or "communism is evil". Taught repeatedly both explicitly and implicitly, one begins to lose themselves in these messages, and the differentiation between "self" and this static perception becomes very fluid - an attack on this perception, even in the form of a piece of information that creates a stark juxtaposition, triggers a fear response, much like that of an animal encountering a predator. The idea is, we may have incredibly advanced technology, but we still operate psychologically at the level of tribespeople; we become incredibly attached to cultural belief systems the same way we attach to our mothers and fathers as children, even if they abuse and berate us.

This comes to the heart of the problem, in my mind. Our cultural apparatus no longer seems to have answers for us, and the chase of money, status, materialism, et al - the hollow idolatry of late capitalism - is failing writ large to satiate our existential fears, if in large part because the system pumping it out has become so corrupt and inequitable that it is losing its legitimacy, and with it, its ability to hold us under the "civilized" spell. But even so, you have billions who have been raised to believe in its wicked fairy tale, to see and judge themselves and others through its objectifying, atomizing, reductionistic lenses, and for the most part know no other way to perceive reality. This is a large part of why "mental illnesses", suicide, and childlessness have skyrocketed and continue to - these are perhaps natural reactions to perceiving reality accurately, beyond any cultural spell.

This said, how does one continue to exist in a world that is not only rapidly changing for the worse - where an extinction crisis is looming large not so far over the horizon, where one is more likely than ever to be socially isolated, exposed to toxic levels of pollution, live in a terribly unhealthy fashion, work an unrewarding, mundane job that barely pays enough - and NOT want to kill yourself, or at the very least be chronically depressed?

Well, the answer, which also includes the answer to your question, is to double-down and become even more insane in the ways of the culture. The role of culture itself is transcendence - to deny death itself and give life a sense of permanency; culture becomes the self and the self becomes culture, but by becoming so intertwined, one becomes a part of its hypervigilant immune system. The problem is, no one really benefits from this arrangement in the long run; but in the short run, the constant denial of reality keeps one in a state of blissful, willfully ignorant cognitive dissonance. To anyone not insane in the ways of our culture, anthropogenic climate change is the Sword of Damocles hanging over life itself, making everything we need to do to sustain life in modern civilization seem absurdly Sisyphisean." -David Foxxxy
 
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Backwood_tilt

UnEnlightened
Dec 27, 2019
889
David Foster Wallace (death by suicide in 2008):

Infinite Jest: last paragraph of page 696:
" The so-called 'psychotically depressed' person who tries to kill herself doesn't do so out of quote 'hoplessness' or any abstract conviction that life's assets and debits do not square. And surely not because death seems suddenly appealing. The person in whom Its invisible agony reaches a certain unendurable levels will kill herself the same way a trapped person will eventually jump from the window of a burning high-rise. Make no mistake about people who leap from burning windows. Their terror of falling from a great height is till just as great as it would be for you or me standing speculatively at the same window just checking out the view; i.e. the fear of falling remains a constant. The variable here is the other terror, the fire's flames: when the flames get close enough, falling to death becomes the slightly less terrible of two terrors. It's not desiring the fall; it's terror of the flames. And yet nobody down on the sidewalk, looking up and yelling 'Don't!' and 'Hang on!', can understand the jump. Not really. You'd have to have personally been trapped and felt flames to really understand a terror way beyond falling. "

It's not going in my note, but i have discussed the idea with a couple of people.

My notes are going to be quite brief and personal - mostly wishing folks well, telling them i am so proud of what they have accomplished and asking them to seek grief counseling and whatever else they might need to heal from the consequences of my own weakness. I want to leave them something positive to think upon, rather than this idea of me slowly withering away in my final moments, alone, desperate, anxious, scared.

Death brings me serenity. I would like them to see that, even if they can't accept it right away.
 
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TAW122

TAW122

Emissary of the right to die.
Aug 30, 2018
6,819
All good quotes, really interesting ways to look at life and death.
 
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OneBigBlur

OneBigBlur

Experienced
Nov 30, 2019
231
She was completely alone in the world. There was no one at all for her. No one in the world who cared whether she lived or died. Sometimes the horror of that thought threatened to overwhelm her and plunge her down into a bottomless darkness from which there would be no return. If no one in the entire world cared about you, did you really exist at all? -Cassandra Clare

Anyone who's happy in a world this fucked-up has some serious psychological issues. You think I'm crazy because I see things as they are. You'd rather put on Disneyland goggles and watch TV and pretend it's fine. It's not crazy if I see monsters when I live in a fucking nightmare. -Leah Raeder
 
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BooGirl

BooGirl

Warlock
Jan 10, 2020
750
To be honest, I haven't even thought of what exactly I'm gonna put in my note. I just have this vague idea that I'll write one up.
 
WhyIsLife56

WhyIsLife56

Antinatalism + Efilism ❤️
Nov 4, 2019
1,075
I wouldn't write a ctb note but a good quote would be this

Best for men and women to die silenus quote full
 
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OneBigBlur

OneBigBlur

Experienced
Nov 30, 2019
231
"I have always felt that suicide was connected to communication. Not due to a lack of opportunity, but to an impossibility to communicate and be understood. It can be frustrating to try to share something with somebody, something important and real to you, and see in the face of another person that he doesn't care or, worse still, simply doesn't understand you. Of course, it is inevitable that this will happen from time to time, but imagine if it were always that way. Imagine if every time you tried to communicate and connect with another human being you fell short. If you never make any sense to anybody, if you never connect, you hold no value: you are truly alone. There are those who can survive as genuine outsiders, and then there are those who can't." ― Alan Emmins

"I have a soft spot in my heart for suicidal people. I know that others make presumptions about suicidal people, painting them with the darkest of paints; but the way that I see it, these are people who look out into the world and see how broken it is and they look into their lives and they remember all the people they've hurt and then they look into themselves and they are faced with how ruined they are and they think that if they can't make anything really better then they just shouldn't exist anymore. It's not a form of selfishness or mental illness. It's a form of extreme state of empathy and selflessness. Suicidal people really are the best kinds of people. But they need to know that this world has a place for them, that this world needs the kind of light that they carry with them as they walk through it, they need to know that they have a home. That their type of darkness is like the darkness of the universe: it's the type of darkness from whence comes forth the light! Some people are just okay with everything, they don't feel the pain and the guilt that comes with the way that this world is. And I don't think that the lack of feeling makes anybody healthier in the mind. Our world is sick. And some people know that. These are not the sick people, these are the beautiful creatures!"― C. JoyBell C.
 
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C

ctbUniquectb

Pariah
Jan 7, 2020
489
I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. M1 tanks on fire off the streets of Baghdad. I've watched tracers glitter in the dark near the FOB (redacted) gate. All these moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.

thank you, Roy Batty
 
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NumbInHouston

NumbInHouston

Ready to go
Sep 24, 2019
1
My notes are going to be quite brief and personal - mostly wishing folks well, telling them i am so proud of what they have accomplished and asking them to seek grief counseling and whatever else they might need to heal from the consequences of my own weakness. I want to leave them something positive to think upon, rather than this idea of me slowly withering away in my final moments, alone, desperate, anxious, scared.

Death brings me serenity. I would like them to see that, even if they can't accept it right away.
[/QUOTE]

This is my approach as well. I just don't want anyone to blame themselves. I know some in my family will, but I want to explain and convey best I can that death is only peace, there is no refuge for me in life.
 
C

ctbUniquectb

Pariah
Jan 7, 2020
489
Ultimate troll suicide note would be quoting Chris McCandless:

"I HAVE LIVED A HAPPY LIFE AND THANK THE LORD!"
 
P

PDAnnie2610

Waiting for my bus.
Oct 27, 2019
701
Remember that I (we) have lived, loved and laughed - shutter island.
 
Fiadh

Fiadh

Member
Dec 12, 2019
35
"Though my soul may set in darkness, it will rise in perfect light;
I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night." - Sara Williams

I think this poem is beautiful.
 

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