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Its not euthanasia, its suicide.

Mock Turtle

Oh my, did I say that!
Premium Member
I just wonder when someone with a spouse, a home, a pet, a job and her health thinks death would be better.

This makes absolutely no sense.

She has the will and reasoning skills to deal with her metal issues and imo is choosing not to.
Not to you perhaps but plenty do commit suicide even though they appear to have reasonable lives.
 

Rival

Diex Aie
Staff member
Premium Member
It does to me, if the person is in agonizing pain either psychological or physically, every day of his/her life. That takes a huge toll on a person.
My goodness you folks make out like the conditions she has are somehow like the mental illness version of childbirth.

There are many more people who live with these conditions and are able to live normal lives if given the right kind of help.
 

SkepticThinker

Veteran Member
My goodness you folks make out like the conditions she has are somehow like the mental illness version of childbirth.

There are many more people who live with these conditions and are able to live normal lives if given the right kind of help.
You don't think that physical and/or psychological pain and agony take a huge toll on people?
I know this to be true myself, from having to deal with debilitating panic attacks for two decades now. And I know there are conditions much, much worse than that.
 

Twilight Hue

Twilight, not bright nor dark, good nor bad.
Please copy paste the parts from your source you think support both your claims.
Because i do not see either claim being supported by the article you presented.
Conclusions and recommendations. Your just going to have to read it. It's all there.
 

Rival

Diex Aie
Staff member
Premium Member
You don't think that physical and/or psychological pain and agony take a huge toll on people?
I know this to be true myself, from having to deal with debilitating panic attacks for two decades now. And I know there are conditions much, much worse than that.
We are discussing the OP; she has 3 conditions that many people live with. They can be managed effectively if one is willing to try. She can take steps to mitigate that suffering instead of her seeming to wallow in it. She's not exactly suffering shell shock and facing the trauma of watching all her friends die horribly; she's fine.

I sometimes wonder than 21st century people have a much lower tolerance for suffering.
 

SkepticThinker

Veteran Member
We are discussing the OP; she has 3 conditions that many people live with. They can be managed effectively if one is willing to try. She can take steps to mitigate that suffering instead of her seeming to wallow in it. She's not exactly suffering shell shock and facing the trauma of watching all her friends die horribly; she's fine.

I sometimes wonder than 21st century people have a much lower tolerance for suffering.
I don't think we know nearly enough about the person in the OP to determine much of anything.
Nor to judge her. Nor to assume "she's fine" just because she didn't see her friends die horribly.

I do know that there are a certain population of people who suffer from severe, treatment-resistance depression, as I wrote a paper it many years ago now.
 

Rival

Diex Aie
Staff member
Premium Member
Consider the difference between living with endless emotional turmoil and an intense yet finite physical pain that ends with a wonderful reward.
I do, I do live with endless emotional turmoil with my own mood disorder; and I have considered killing myself several times.

But here I am.
 
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Secret Chief

Very strong language
I don't think we know nearly enough about the person in the OP to determine much of anything.
Nor to judge her. Nor to assume "she's fine" just because she didn't see her friends die horribly.

I do know that there are a certain population of people who suffer from severe, treatment-resistance depression, as I wrote a paper it many years ago now.
It's almost as if you're suggesting just because one person can cope with particular issue/s then everybody else should.

And one's internal life may have aspects hidden from other people, even one's nearest and dearest.

I'm quite gobsmacked at the "pull yourself together I'm coping" attitude. My choices about my life are my concern and no-one else.
 

Rival

Diex Aie
Staff member
Premium Member
That makes you one of the lucky ones.

Why should everyone else's despair be a reflection of yours?
I'm not lucky; I took charge of my own life with the help of both medication and lifestyle changes, changing my outlook and environment.

Everyone is capable of this if he has reason.
 

Twilight Hue

Twilight, not bright nor dark, good nor bad.
If someone in his late 20s believes he has no more chance at a fulfilling life, I think that person has incredibly poor reflection skills or is expecting things to be better immediately. She seems to want to quit before 30, when she's barely even lived, so I think she needs to do a whole lot more reflecting on this.
Agreed. Yet she's being told by so called professionals it's useless to continue.

That's the real tragedy of it.
 

Unfettered

A striving disciple of Jesus Christ
You know it seems every time I interact with health professionals, more often than not I get the distinct feeling of being nothing more than a big bag of money walking around than anything else.
I get the same feeling, except for the "big bag of money" part. When I interact with the medical service industry, I'm reminded that I'm a "little bag of money."
 

Unfettered

A striving disciple of Jesus Christ
That's one of the great things about your country though. Hail the untrammeled free market! We'll have none of that evil socialism here!
Well, no, the market here is a mess due to the imposition of socialist policies onto our free-market system. If it were untrammeled, costs would be more reasonable.

Either way, only compulsory socialism is evil. Voluntary socialism is morally benign.
 
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