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Darkover

Darkover

Archangel
Jul 29, 2021
5,572
Most so-called freedoms we are granted in life are conditional, restricted, or illusory.

You are "free" to speak—unless it offends the powerful.

You are "free" to move—within the limits of borders, laws, and money.

You are "free" to choose your path—so long as you obey the economic and social rules set by others.

In reality, from birth, we are embedded in systems we never agreed to—biological, societal, economic. We are not free to opt out of suffering, of need, of decay. And we are not free to avoid the consequences of merely existing: hunger, pain, trauma, entropy.

But there is one freedom that transcends every other:
The freedom to say, "No more."

That final boundary—the ability to end your own life on your own terms—is the purest form of autonomy, the only truly unconditioned freedom. It is the one decision that lies entirely within the individual's will. It requires no permission. It demands no compromise.
And that's exactly why it terrifies society.

Because if a person can choose to leave—consciously, calmly, and deliberately—then the system loses its hold. The whole scaffolding of obligation, duty, productivity, and hope falls apart.

Economies need workers.

Governments need citizens.

Religions need believers.

Families need obedience.

So society declares: "You do not have the right to leave. You must stay. You must suffer. You must wait until we say it's acceptable to die—if ever."

They wrap this in language of morality. But what it really is, is control.
And when the one true freedom—the final exit—is locked, you are no longer a free being.
You are property. You are livestock. You are a prisoner.
Why This Freedom Matters

Because without it, every other freedom becomes hollow.

What does freedom of speech mean if you're not allowed to stop screaming?

What does freedom of movement mean if you can't stop running?

What does freedom of belief mean if you're forced to live by beliefs you reject?

Without the right to leave, life becomes a life sentence.
Not one you earned. One that was handed to you the moment you opened your eyes.

And so:

To be denied the right to leave is to be denied the only real freedom we ever had—
the freedom to say, with dignity and finality:
"This pain is not mine to endure anymore."

That's not weakness. That's sovereignty.

The Forgotten Birthright: The Right to Leave Life

We are born without choice—into a body, a world, and a system we did not design and never consented to. From the moment of birth, our existence is shaped by forces outside our control: biology, environment, culture, economy, and state. We are given expectations, obligations, identities. We are told how to live, what to value, who to be.

But never are we told the most important thing:

That we have the right to leave.
Not out of cowardice. Not out of failure. But out of sovereignty—the ultimate act of self-ownership.
The ability to say: "No. This is not for me. I never asked for this. I choose peace."


The Illusion of Consent

Governments, religions, and societies claim that life is sacred, that it must be preserved at all costs. But whose life are they talking about? And for whose benefit?

The truth is simple: they need us alive—to work, to consume, to obey, to perpetuate the system.
Not for our sake, but for theirs.

We are told that choosing death is immoral, unnatural, or irrational. But there is nothing moral about forcing people to stay in a life of pain, poverty, or imprisonment. There is nothing irrational about rejecting a world filled with suffering, decay, and meaningless repetition.

If you are not free to leave, you were never free to begin with.

Control Disguised as Care

Those who claim to "save" lives often do so by stripping away agency. They incarcerate people in psychiatric wards. They medicate, shame, and silence. They do everything but ask: why? Why is life so unbearable for so many?

Because to ask that would mean confronting the reality:

  • That this world is not designed for peace, dignity, or joy.
  • That suffering is not rare—it is the default.
  • That for many, staying alive is not hope, but sentence.
The right to die is not a sickness. It is a form of resistance.


A Right That Must Be Reclaimed

If we claim to care about human rights, then we must include the right to leave life on one's own terms. Not hidden, not criminalized, not pathologized—but respected, facilitated, and made peaceful.

No one should have to die alone, in pain, in fear, or in secrecy.
No one should have to resort to violent or uncertain methods.
And no one should be shamed for choosing freedom over suffering.

A society that truly values life must also respect the right to end it.

Because only when the exit is open can we speak of consent.
Only when the chains are unlocked can we say we are free.


To be born without choice is tragedy.
But to be trapped forever—without escape—is tyranny.
This world may deny us control over where we begin.
But no one—no god, no government, no parent, no law—has the right to deny us our end.

That is our forgotten birthright.
It's time we remembered it.
 
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S

starlightstarbright

Member
Apr 26, 2025
6
I have nothing meaningful to add to this, just that you write beautifully, and I agree with everything you said. You explained so eloquently the sentiment, "It's cruel to keep me here just to make me suffer." Our lives are our own to live or to end, and anyone else making that decision for us is stripping us of our most fundamental right.

I simply wish that people understood that. They get that taking away the life of someone who wanted to live (murder/manslaughter) is cruel, but they don't get that forcing life onto those who don't want to go on (all the pro-life BS we have to face) is cruel too. Our lives should be our own to live or end.​
 
Shadows From Hell

Shadows From Hell

The one who has lost a lot, fears nothing.
Oct 21, 2024
399
The following is credited to whomever on this site wrote it. I enjoyed it so much, I copied it and saved it to my phone! Hope you enjoy it as much as I did!


Life™: The Ultimate Subscription Service You Can't Cancel

Congratulations! You've been forcibly enrolled in Life™, the premium, high-stakes, never-ending subscription service that you never signed up for. There's no free trial, no upfront agreement—one day, you just wake up in a fragile, malfunction-prone body with no instruction manual and a set of random biological imperatives dictating your every move.

The terms and conditions? You don't get to read them. You're just here, thrown into existence without consent, forced to navigate a chaotic mess of pain, responsibility, and disappointment, all while pretending it's worth it. You are expected to pay your dues—physically, emotionally, and financially—until your time is up. Failure to comply may result in penalties, including but not limited to suffering, poverty, isolation, or premature deletion.
Welcome to the Prison of Life™!

Not only is Life™ a mandatory subscription service, but it's also a prison cleverly disguised as a playground. You're given just enough distractions—TV, music, cheap thrills—to keep you from noticing the bars. You're told you're free, that you can "be anything you want," but in reality? You're shackled to biological needs, economic servitude, and a society that gaslights you into thinking this is normal.

You're hungry? Work for it.
You're sick? Pay for treatment.
You're depressed? Cope or be judged.

The walls of this prison are built out of inescapable suffering—aging, disease, loss, and the slow realization that nothing truly belongs to you. Not your time, not your happiness, not even your body, which deteriorates against your will. The warden? A mix of societal expectations, biological imperatives, and the illusion of hope.
But Wait… There's an Exit Button! (Kinda.)

Now, here's the biggest joke of all—Life™ actually has an exit button… but it's been intentionally hidden away behind fear, stigma, and endless roadblocks.

The system is designed to keep you locked in at all costs. Even thinking about leaving is met with judgment, guilt-tripping, and patronizing advice about how you should "appreciate what you have." You'll be told:

"It gets better!" (It doesn't.)
"You just need to find meaning!" (Good luck.)
"Think about your loved ones!" (As if they aren't just as trapped as you.)

If Life™ were a fair system, you'd have the right to opt-out at any time, with dignity and without obstacles. But no—because that would mean acknowledging that this whole thing might not be worth it. And if too many people started questioning the service, the entire system might crumble under its own absurdity.

So, instead, you're forced to keep playing. Trapped in an endless, meaningless grind, waiting for your subscription to naturally expire, hoping the end comes quick and painless—because, as we all know, this prison doesn't just let you walk out. It makes you suffer first.
Final Verdict: 0/10 – Would Not Recommend

Life™ is the worst deal imaginable—a subscription that charges you in suffering, a prison that convinces you it's a playground, and a trap designed to keep you inside until your body breaks down completely.

The only consolation? Eventually, everyone's subscription expires.

Wouldn't it be nice if you could just hit "Cancel" and be done with it?

Too bad. The button is hidden.
 
D

dearlydeparted44

Member
May 21, 2025
81
You know...

That's a funny thing about western culture in particular. See, they don't care if someone starves in the streets, or dies violently at the hands of some mugger, or is raped and left for dead, or doesn't have a roof over their heads. To them, "that's life." These inequities are rationalized as just part of the process. The way things are. And they're convinced that there is something right about these things. Yet, self-euthanasia is where the westernized mind draws the line. As if to say that catching the bus is the "wrong" way to die. You can starve to death or die from a number of other horrible ways. Or, in the mind of the pitiful human, die with 'honor' in a senseless war. But suicide? Why, that's the ULTIMATE sin!!! And religions teach that airheaded nonsense.

To me, there's something to think about in that aspect. You have a society that couldn't care less about someone who is homeless, hungry, and suffering the accepted inequities of life. Yet, when that someone finally says, "you know what life? Keep it. I want out." Now, this person must be saved. They're mentally ill. Something's wrong with them and they're depressed. They need therapy. All for having a natural reaction to suffering. "nO!!! yOu StAy In ThE gAme!!! FiGhT!!!" Fight for what? Another day of being hungry? It's like the American prison colony. They put nets under every floor to prevent the inmates from jumping and suiciding. So, not only must you rot in there, but you can't leave on your own terms. This life is truly hell. And humans are its imps.
 
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Worndown

Worndown

Illuminated
Mar 21, 2019
3,671
You have the right and freedom to to leave any time you want.
If you need assistance, that comes with limits.
If you are in a facility, you posed a danger at some point and this is societies attempt to help. Not always successfully.
There are many ways you can cease to be. (please avoid those involving others)

We are not free to fire a gun whenever the mood strikes.
We are not free to drive as fast as possible whenever we wish.
We are not free to knock over old ladies because we want to.
Society creates limits so function is improved.
You can exit if needed, when needed and how you need, within reasonable limits.
 
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dearlydeparted44

Member
May 21, 2025
81
You have the right and freedom to leave any time you want.
If you need assistance, that comes with limits.
Exactly. In the human world, everything must be "earned." And a so-called peaceful exit from life is no exception. No one is keeping anyone here except themselves, their own fears, and their own egos. Loved ones may or may not try and stop someone. "Crying out for help" is more of a 'Hail Mary' for attention to know that someone cares than it is an actual warning sign that one is about to catch the bus. Telling a psychiatrist about it only causes one more trouble than helps. If one is serious, they will find a way out. However, I do agree that there should be peaceful, relatively painless methods available to people. They should have that freedom. It's maddening that it doesn't exist. Yet, one is free to starve to death. That's indicative of a barbaric society and species, unworthy of life.
 
Darkover

Darkover

Archangel
Jul 29, 2021
5,572
You have the right and freedom to to leave any time you want.
If you need assistance, that comes with limits.
If you truly had the right to leave:

There would be safe, humane, and supported methods available.

You would not be forced into violent or uncertain means that traumatize others or fail and leave you worse off.

You would be able to say goodbye with clarity, not secrecy and fear.

The absence of a peaceful exit is systemic coercion, plain and simple.
No one is keeping anyone here except themselves, their own fears, and their own egos.
If you attempt to end your life:

You may be involuntarily detained, medicated, or institutionalized.

Your act is seen not as a choice, but as a mental illness to be "treated."

In most countries, assisted dying is illegal—especially if you're not terminally ill.

That is not freedom. That's punishment for disobedience to life itself.
 

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