• UK users: Due to a formal investigation into this site by Ofcom under the UK Online Safety Act 2023, we strongly recommend using a trusted, no-logs VPN. This will help protect your privacy, bypass censorship, and maintain secure access to the site. Read the full VPN guide here.

  • Hey Guest,

    Today, OFCOM launched an official investigation into Sanctioned Suicide under the UK’s Online Safety Act. This has already made headlines across the UK.

    This is a clear and unprecedented overreach by a foreign regulator against a U.S.-based platform. We reject this interference and will be defending the site’s existence and mission.

    In addition to our public response, we are currently seeking legal representation to ensure the best possible defense in this matter. If you are a lawyer or know of one who may be able to assist, please contact us at [email protected].

    Read our statement here:

    Donate via cryptocurrency:

    Bitcoin (BTC): 34HyDHTvEhXfPfb716EeEkEHXzqhwtow1L
    Ethereum (ETH): 0xd799aF8E2e5cEd14cdb344e6D6A9f18011B79BE9
    Monero (XMR): 49tuJbzxwVPUhhDjzz6H222Kh8baKe6rDEsXgE617DVSDD8UKNaXvKNU8dEVRTAFH9Av8gKkn4jDzVGF25snJgNfUfKKNC8
L

Lifeaballache

Student
Aug 28, 2022
163
I see this phrase bandied about every now and again. People saying that parents shouldn't Bury their children. But at the same time is it easy for children to Bury their parents?

I don't think so...
 
FuneralCry

FuneralCry

Just wanting some peace
Sep 24, 2020
43,247
Some people view death as tragic and see life as something that must be prolonged as much as possible. In reality death is only sad for those left behind, not the person who has died. If a child dies before their parents people see this as sad as they believe that the child has missed out on life.

These people are clearly delusional as they believe that life has value and is beneficial but the truth is that life is completely unnecessary and staying alive has no purpose, it's just passing time until we inevitably die. Dying younger prevents all the suffering that the person would have had to experience if they stayed alive. Only the living are capable of suffering and all problems belong to the living, not the dead. Non existence is ideal.
And anyway, we all have the right to exit at a time of our own choosing and nobody should be guilt tripped and forced into staying here against their wishes by others.
 
  • Like
Reactions: thelookingontheway, Justnotme, Astral Storm and 1 other person
StolenLife

StolenLife

Warlock
Sep 19, 2022
740
I guess there isn't one clear correct answer... But they say that the loss that causes the most emotional pain is the loss of a child. I'm not a mother so I wouldn't know, but it might be because our dna has programmed us to care for our offspring in order to reproduce, setting aside how many people aren't good at fulfilling the parental role. Society also deems loss of a young life more tragic than the loss of someone in their 40s or 60s. Another factor might be that old age, while already miserable, is even worse to deal with if there is no one to help you or to keep you company. As one reaches old age, they can't spend time with their friends like they could in their younger years, and since their parents are most likely dead by this point, the only ones left to care about them is their offspring. Though I guess there is also an option of a nursery home, but a lot of elderly people can't afford that.
In conclusion, old age without anyone to help is a nightmare, and the emotional pain of that loss is too much to bear. But in my opinion any loss of a loved one is unbearable, no matter the age of the deceased.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ncmxm, thelookingontheway and Forever Sleep
notlongnow

notlongnow

Student
Aug 16, 2022
138
A mother or father will always be distraught if their child passes, very rarely if open and honest enough some acknowledge their struggle and almost but never fully accept. Its human nature for a carer and guardian to always suggest a fix but when those that need it want no more struggle, its only fair to consider them at peace when no longer here. Just my thoughts. For the record I'm not a parent!
 
LaVieEnRose

LaVieEnRose

Angelic
Jul 23, 2022
4,349
Parents' passing before their children is seen as the natural order of things even though it's really only a modern conceit that that is the case. For most of human history up until relatively recently infant and child mortality were very high no matter what your station in life was (one example that stands out is Queen Anne who had like 20 pregnancies none of which produced an adult heir. If one had world history might have been very difficult). This is why the average life span was so slow and why the birth rate declines as a country develops. With greater quality of life and better health outcomes for children there is less of a need to have a bunch of children to ensure at least some survive (which is how orgabisms normally operate).

That said, of course no parent wants, then or now, to see the death of a child. From a certain matter-of-facf standpoint raising children represents a massive investment and a lot of opportunity costs so having one die means that investment is wasted.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ncmxm, thelookingontheway and GrumpyFrog
theboy

theboy

Illuminated
Jul 15, 2022
3,174
It is not wrong. It is sad
 
  • Aww..
Reactions: Un-
F

Forever Sleep

Earned it we have...
May 4, 2022
12,096
I think (good) parents have a natural instinct to want to protect their children. Plus, I suppose it's always a shock when the older generation outlives the young. In general, I think it's a statement given more to natural deaths. My Mum died at 40 and my Nana died in her 80's. She was devastated when my Mum died. We all were. It's that idea of being 'taken' before your time- before you've had the chance to fulfill your potential I suppose.

I agree though- it doesn't take into consideration that person's quality of life. A young death can be seen as tragic but a life lived in misery is also terribly tragic where death seems like the only way out. Death is surely a release in that case.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Un-
GrumpyFrog

GrumpyFrog

Exhausted
Aug 23, 2020
1,913
It is not easy for anyone to bury our loved ones. It's just that seeing your parents pass on one day is normalized in our society, it's a universal experience most people will eventually go through. Losing a child wasn't always seen as a unique tragedy, there was a time when it was relatively normalized too, but in modern world it is more or less expected that under normal circumstances people live until old age, so when people die young it comes as a shock to everyone, and their loved ones are seen as unusually affected by grief.
 
  • Like
  • Informative
Reactions: rationaltake and Zhendou
G

gimzero

Student
Aug 15, 2022
148
And if that happen then its imposibile to die its like others choose the time for us.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Zhendou
LakatosDiogenesz

LakatosDiogenesz

I can tie a noose with my eyes closed
Nov 21, 2020
143
According to western culture, everyone has to be alive for as long as possible and lead a socially acceptable life. You may only die once you lived for at least 60-80 years. Consequentially, people can't die before their parents do because doing so would mean that they had a lot of potential years left.
Anyway, it's not considered right for someone to bury their child because it deviates from the lifescript that everyone's expected and pressured to follow. Sure it's sad to see a family member die, but a large part of it is cultural. Back when stillbirth and infant mortality were common, they weren't made out to be the worst tragedies that one could experience, like today.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ncmxm

Similar threads

S
Replies
11
Views
442
Suicide Discussion
EmptyBottle
EmptyBottle
S
Replies
7
Views
235
Suicide Discussion
SilentSadness
SilentSadness
Fadeaway_bankz
Replies
5
Views
143
Suicide Discussion
NikolaiK
N
LostLily
Replies
4
Views
209
Suicide Discussion
onmywaytothebusstop
onmywaytothebusstop