Foreigner
Bluelighter
Likewise, there are plenty with things such as survivors guilt from an exact scenario and become suicidal as a result. Some may fear death- innately we all do, it's how we are wired as a species and have made it thus far along the chain of evolution, but it isn't those innate survival instincts that drives someone to suicide. I believe it's largely processed in the frontal cortex, where the brain seemingly ironicly overcomes its survival instincts out of some means of desperate self-preservation(removal from pain). It's usually not so much about not fearing death as it is not having a reason to live, or having a reason to want to die. I think it's a bit of a generalization to assume all who claim they don't fear death are liars, especially considering potential intoxication. I believe people are fickle in general and perhaps in the heat of the moment a statement like that might be entirely true.
I believe I mentioned other examples of people who claim they fear death, and not just the liar example. I'm not sure about the frontal cortex correlation, I'd have to read more about that... but removal of pain is certainly involved.
The people trying to escape suffering would also probably be high on the list of those likely not to fear death. But as far as suicide being a cowards act- I don't think I said that although perhaps implied it. Regardless, I don't really think the coward part to be true, as a coward probably wouldn't take the final step. But I do think it's a way of escaping one's own responsibilities, particularly in the situation that you mentioned of a trader gone wrong. Not really the best example, as that trader could just take a normal job and live near or below the poverty line like a large percentage of the world. I've heard of almost identical stories except they ran up their credit before exiting the world, leaving their family to take on the financial burden. So it's not clear it's the pain of poverty these people are trying to escape- it could easily be the fall from grace and the embarrassment of doing so. Which, was the point I intended to make... very rarely does one commit suicide without passing on the pain to those closest.
It's easy for an outsider to look at an inside situation and accuse someone of cowardice, but the mechanism of suicide is always the same. Coping structures are insufficient for an adverse event or condition. You can accuse someone of not taking responsibility all you want but if the person lacks the structures to distribute the suffering, then they will have nothing to fall back on to support them in a crisis. Suicide is always a teeter totter of severity of adversity vs. coping structures.
Someone with family, a partner, a good job, a meaningful, money, resources, little or no pre-disposing health conditions, etc... is going to have more fallback structures if one of those things get picked off, compared to someone who has fewer.
And sometimes, a person may have all those things but the adverse event is still beyond their capacity to cope. It's hard to predict, which is why I don't like the accusation of cowardice. No person really, truly wants to do it if there is a real, viable solution to their pain that they can be convinced will carry them out of the darkness. Most people want more life but don't know how to get it.
To be fair according to this study, suicide rate is substantially higher for people living in poverty, but imo that has a lot more to do with the bs that come with poverty, so if we are not speaking on OP's situation, then no suicide isn't always hedonistic. Even still, I'd find it hard not to argue that it's passing on the pain maybe with very rare exception(terminally ill).
I'm not sure about passing on the pain. It causes pain but it's not pain transference like how energy transfers. When a person dies, the root of their suffering is gone because the mechanism that suffers - the life form - is extinguished. People who experience trauma because the person dies are experiencing their own discrete version of events based on their unique configuration of factors. People who knew the deceased experience pain but it's hard to argue that it's the pain that the suicidal person had.
The majority of suicides in the world are minorities (racial, sexual, etc.), the poor, the disabled, and men. It's no secret why. I feel that the guilt-tripping narratives about cowardice and whatever else are foisted on the disprivileged by the privileged so that the disprivileged will keep playing the game and live in a ponzi scheme that serves somebody else. If we really cared about people killing themselves - or any mental or physical illness caused by society - then humanity would be rooting out those systems. Instead, we ignore the conditions that cause most treatable mental illness, and act like it's a big mystery when someone kills themselves.
People commit suicide because human life is mostly hell. The only way it's not hell is when a person has resources and structures to shield them against the hardships of life, and even then there are no guarantees. I'm not saying we shouldn't try to prevent suicide - I think that's why it's illegal, to enable prevention mechanisms - but humans are no different than other animals. When parrots are neglected and have no social bonds, they start plucking their feathers out. Self-mutilation is common among social species that are deprived of structures and resources that they need to thrive. People don't kill themselves when they have those connections.
Our human society has major, major problems in terms of how it is structured. Many of the structures are violently oppressive. For example, if you don't have money, you suffer terribly. Human supports disappear. You lose everything, your home, etc. You end up on the streets. So the system coerces people with violence to make money, and usually that money is acquired by means that require an insufferable daily toil. We are in end stage capitalism where that suffering is reaching all time highs. I believe the suicide rate in the U.S. was much higher this year. We don't have a system that provides basic care for people. In the U.S. they would call this socialism and it would never happen -- this myth persists in one of the wealthiest nations in the world, that helping others is commie brainwashing. So people keep shooting up schools, malls, sporting events, and people kill themselves in droves yearly (5th most common cause of death in the U.S.) because their daily toil is impossible to reckon with.
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