- #1
Thread Owner
My thoughts:
I don't think it is. It comes with our human rights to detach ourself from life if we so prefer. Narcissistic or selfish? Everything we do is ungenerous & egoistic, is for our own part so why would committing suicide suddenly be excluded from that fact? If someone is primed to hop off a building or put a gun to their head, their current life situation must be so horrible that the damage to their relatives and friends would be nothing in comparison to the damage the person would cause to himself/herself by living on with life.
There is a story of a guy who had an intense sickness, he was more or less a vegetable (couldn't move or act whatsoever). He begged the government to let one of his doctors to give him the a death injection, but they wouldn't let him. A couple of months ago he did the accomplishment himself.
Often people fail to recognize we as outsiders just have no idea how a person is doing/living. We all have our own unique biological makeup (i.e. neurochemistry), our own unique environment, our own unique experiences, and what comes with all this individual uniqueness is how people cope with stressors.
What are your opinions in the matter?
I don't think it is. It comes with our human rights to detach ourself from life if we so prefer. Narcissistic or selfish? Everything we do is ungenerous & egoistic, is for our own part so why would committing suicide suddenly be excluded from that fact? If someone is primed to hop off a building or put a gun to their head, their current life situation must be so horrible that the damage to their relatives and friends would be nothing in comparison to the damage the person would cause to himself/herself by living on with life.
There is a story of a guy who had an intense sickness, he was more or less a vegetable (couldn't move or act whatsoever). He begged the government to let one of his doctors to give him the a death injection, but they wouldn't let him. A couple of months ago he did the accomplishment himself.
Often people fail to recognize we as outsiders just have no idea how a person is doing/living. We all have our own unique biological makeup (i.e. neurochemistry), our own unique environment, our own unique experiences, and what comes with all this individual uniqueness is how people cope with stressors.
What are your opinions in the matter?