
sweetbraid
Member
- Apr 15, 2018
- 60
please tell me your thoughts on the following situation, from an ethical point of view:
okay, so, lets say you've been suicidal for a long time, let's say several years. you have some good, trusted people in your life, who you care about, and they care about you as well. in the past, you have been very open with them about your suicidal ideation. the past few weeks though, you haven't told them straight up 'i want to kill myself', and they havent asked that question directly - the reason for them not asking you 'are you okay' or 'are you still having these thoughts' being that they trust that if you are still seriously considering suicide, that you will tell them so. but you haven't done that in a little while. are you breaching their trust by not volunteering that information? are you betraying them by not telling them? because once youre dead, they will say, 'why didn't they tell me? why didn't they talk to me?' regardless of the reason for you not telling them youre going to kill yourself, what do you think?
thanks <3
okay, so, lets say you've been suicidal for a long time, let's say several years. you have some good, trusted people in your life, who you care about, and they care about you as well. in the past, you have been very open with them about your suicidal ideation. the past few weeks though, you haven't told them straight up 'i want to kill myself', and they havent asked that question directly - the reason for them not asking you 'are you okay' or 'are you still having these thoughts' being that they trust that if you are still seriously considering suicide, that you will tell them so. but you haven't done that in a little while. are you breaching their trust by not volunteering that information? are you betraying them by not telling them? because once youre dead, they will say, 'why didn't they tell me? why didn't they talk to me?' regardless of the reason for you not telling them youre going to kill yourself, what do you think?
thanks <3