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  LiveWire / Teen Forums / The Intellectual Forum / Viewing Topic

Who is the selfish one when suicide is involved?
Replies: 51Last Post Aug. 12, 2008 6:58am by Loud Dog
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Web Resources: Suicide Myths Dispelled, Suicide Information
USA Suicide Hotline: 1-800-SUICIDE (1-800-784-2433)
Web Resources: Drug Myths Dispelled, Drug & Alcohol Information
USA Drug Abuse Hotline: 1-800-662-4357
exceedinglyrare


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Quote: from Nikki at 7:00 pm on July 15, 2008

I'm going by the dictionary definition, but I don't believe Suicide is a primarily selfish act. People want to get rid of their pain. That's not selfish.

Sure it is, if they're more concerned with getting rid of their own pain than with the pain they'll cause others. Again, I'm not saying that this is a good or a bad thing, but it is inherently selfish, as selfishness is defined by the dictionary.

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iimjustbadnews


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The government, in some traditions a person's body is owned by the state, therefore, it is not yours to kill. The right to die is a complicated issue. On one view, we want to help out the suffering of people who are chronically ill, in severe pain, with no hope of recovery. On the other hand, we don't want an prospective aid, strong young person who is upset to commit suicide. Generally speaking there is no 'law' that prevents you from killing yourself- it would be foolish to classify attempted suicide as a crime, unless you recklessly endanger others since it would only upscale the person's problems. If there were a law against suicide, how would the person who committed suicide be prosecuted? Trial after their dead? It is not illegal to kill yourself, it is illegal assist another in killing themselves.

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tearsinheaven


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I believe suicide is the single most selfish act a person can ever do. I've lost someone to suicide, and the pain it causes those that are left is unreal. It's so selfish of the deceased to inflict that upon their loved ones.

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sami sam


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i think it really in the end depends on the situation, personally in most cases i find the person committing suicide is the selfish one. this is what has been the main reason stopping me in the past from committing suicide the fact that it wouldnt be fair to those that actually DO care about me, but suicide in that case is me being unhappy with my life and how its going. if someone is having a slow painful death i can see how the person wouldnt be considered this selfish.... kind of an example could be my gram who was on life support for over a month and it was just the only thing keeping her alive, she wanted to be taken off of it she was in pain and couldnt talk and could hardly write i mean her communication was virtually non existent and my grandfather for the longest time kept her on it just because he didnt want to let her go, i was about 11 then and i thought he was doing the right thing but now that im older i see him as being a bit selfish because of the pain and suffering my gram was going thru while he kept her on life support.  

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Quote: from tearsinheaven at 7:58 pm on July 17, 2008

I believe suicide is the single most selfish act a person can ever do. I've lost someone to suicide, and the pain it causes those that are left is unreal. It's so selfish of the deceased to inflict that upon their loved ones.

Did he kill himself because he was depressed and lived a miserable life?  Because if so he probably felt emotional pain every day of his life until he could finally not take it anymore.  I'm sorry that your friend killed himself, but he was suffering internally, and some people just can't handle it.

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Death is the ultimate experience. The last thing to die is hope.


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Feminawesome


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No matter how dismal the future looks, it's still possible to be happy. Even if you're missing an arm or a leg, you can still lead a perfectly fulfilling life. The brain can manufacture happiness-- it's evolutionarily trained to.

(http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/dan_gilbert_asks_why_are_we_happy.html)

So, if it's circumstantial suicidal tendencies, then it is foolish to throw your life away when things will be better in a year. But if it's depression, without a trigger, then your brain probably has problems manufacturing happiness ANYWAY, so it's a trickier issue.

Anyway, I think that suicide is often the wrong choice-- an overcomplicated solution to something that could easily be fixed.

And a lot of the time, the person committing suicide doesn't really want to. They feel hopeless and don't know what else to do. But if they were in therapy, they might learn how to better cope with their problems.

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«If I can stop one heart from breaking,
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allsmiles


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Having lost a friend to suicide, I have to say... it's the ones that forced her to endure her issues for 9 whole years who were the selfish ones. Sure, they mourned her when she died, I did and still do also, but I'm now so happy for her because I saw how none of these so called treatments did anything for her. I saw the pain she was in, the pain she's no longer in. How can allowing someone you love to live as such make you feel any better than them being dead?

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Quote: from allsmiles at 5:58 am on July 26, 2008

Having lost a friend to suicide, I have to say... it's the ones that forced her to endure her issues for 9 whole years who were the selfish ones. Sure, they mourned her when she died, I did and still do also, but I'm now so happy for her because I saw how none of these so called treatments did anything for her. I saw the pain she was in, the pain she's no longer in. How can allowing someone you love to live as such make you feel any better than them being dead?

I am so in total agreement with you.  That's just how I would have said it had one of my friends being a victim of suicide.

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exceedinglyrare


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Quote: from allsmiles at 8:58 am on July 26, 2008

Having lost a friend to suicide, I have to say... it's the ones that forced her to endure her issues for 9 whole years who were the selfish ones. Sure, they mourned her when she died, I did and still do also, but I'm now so happy for her because I saw how none of these so called treatments did anything for her. I saw the pain she was in, the pain she's no longer in. How can allowing someone you love to live as such make you feel any better than them being dead?

Here's the question, though: how do you know that they were forcing her to live with their issues to avoid their own pain? Couldn't it also have been that they simply wanted her to get well for her own sake?

Regardless, even if they were being selfish in encouraging her to keep living, do you honestly think that she killed herself not because of her own pain but because of the pain of others?

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allsmiles


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Quote: from exceedinglyrare at 1:27 pm on July 27, 2008

Quote: from allsmiles at 8:58 am on July 26, 2008

Having lost a friend to suicide, I have to say... it's the ones that forced her to endure her issues for 9 whole years who were the selfish ones. Sure, they mourned her when she died, I did and still do also, but I'm now so happy for her because I saw how none of these so called treatments did anything for her. I saw the pain she was in, the pain she's no longer in. How can allowing someone you love to live as such make you feel any better than them being dead?

Here's the question, though: how do you know that they were forcing her to live with their issues to avoid their own pain? Couldn't it also have been that they simply wanted her to get well for her own sake?


I don't. I'm not going to speak for them, just speak my opinion. If nothing else, they were emotionally blackmailing her into putting off (successful) suicide for as long as she did. If they wanted what's best for her, after seeing how the shrinks were doing nothing, the drugs were doing nothing, and the institutions were doing nothing, except helping her spiral down, I wouldn't keep telling her not to commit suicide. It cannot be totally selfless to make someone endure.


Regardless, even if they were being selfish in encouraging her to keep living, do you honestly think that she killed herself not because of her own pain but because of the pain of others?

When did I say that? She definitely did it for her own pain, her last words made that absolutely clear.

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Majo


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Technically, both sides are being selfish, IMO.

The one committing suicide is taking his/her life without taking into account the pain he/she will cause others.

The family members and friends of him/her are being selfish by asking him/her to ignore his/her own pain and to think of theirs instead.

Having said that, I still think the suicidal person is more in the right. You can't live your life constantly worrying about what other people would want you to do.

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5:43 am on Aug. 8, 2008 | Joined May 2005 | 287 Days Active
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Quote: from exceedinglyrare at 8:27 am on July 27, 2008

Quote: from allsmiles at 8:58 am on July 26, 2008

Having lost a friend to suicide, I have to say... it's the ones that forced her to endure her issues for 9 whole years who were the selfish ones. Sure, they mourned her when she died, I did and still do also, but I'm now so happy for her because I saw how none of these so called treatments did anything for her. I saw the pain she was in, the pain she's no longer in. How can allowing someone you love to live as such make you feel any better than them being dead?

Here's the question, though: how do you know that they were forcing her to live with their issues to avoid their own pain? Couldn't it also have been that they simply wanted her to get well for her own sake?

Regardless, even if they were being selfish in encouraging her to keep living, do you honestly think that she killed herself not because of her own pain but because of the pain of others?


It's still something they want so they're still being selfish to an extent.

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"Under the hardness of her facade a woman's heart is still beating."


5:44 am on Aug. 8, 2008 | Joined May 2005 | 287 Days Active
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person11988


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If you love someone, you should make sacrifices for them if you have to, if that means just living, then you're lucky that's all you have to do. However, you should have a right to die, but it's very very hard for me to understand why anyone would want to do this because your life can always get better. But it's your prerogative.

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exceedinglyrare


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Quote: from Majo at 8:44 am on Aug. 8, 2008

It's still something they want so they're still being selfish to an extent.

Wanting something for someone else isn't selfish. Wanting something for yourself is.


I don't. I'm not going to speak for them, just speak my opinion. If nothing else, they were emotionally blackmailing her into putting off (successful) suicide for as long as she did. If they wanted what's best for her, after seeing how the shrinks were doing nothing, the drugs were doing nothing, and the institutions were doing nothing, except helping her spiral down, I wouldn't keep telling her not to commit suicide. It cannot be totally selfless to make someone endure.

Again, you can't say that with certainty. Personally, were I in that situation, it wouldn't be my own pain I'd be trying to avoid. I can't speak for them either, but I doubt that they were entirely selfish in their desire to keep her alive either.


When did I say that? She definitely did it for her own pain, her last words made that absolutely clear.

Ergo, because she was only considering herself, while they were considering both themselves and her, she was the more selfish one. Logic ftw.

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Let yourself be enchanted,
You just might break through
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12:58 pm on Aug. 8, 2008 | Joined Oct. 2005 | 919 Days Active
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Majo


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It doesn't matter if you want it for someone else, you, yourself, still want it, too.

"I want for you to want to get better."
"I want you to get better."
"I don't want you to die."

It's all the same...I want.

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"Under the hardness of her facade a woman's heart is still beating."


6:52 pm on Aug. 8, 2008 | Joined May 2005 | 287 Days Active
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