Hi all,
I would like to goto sleep, and stay that way... nodding off from Fent may just be the most peaceful way to go...
I see no reason to continue on... Believe me, I've tried, look at my prior posts... Almost a year ago, same place, although this time seems to be much worse....
Sorry to bother you all... Peace...
Molly,
I haven't posted since switching to 'done from H around 2009, but your post is such a preventable tragedy waiting to happen that I couldn't say nothing after reading it. I know you've heard all the aphorisms about 'a permanent solution to a temporary problem', and the reason that sounds like BS to most people in your position is that often it doesn't
feel like a temporary problem.. That, for lack of a more succinct way of phrasing it, is your brain fucking with you. Humans have an amazing ability to persevere (often even when we feel like we don't, or don't want to).
I won't pretend to know exactly what's going on right now that's stressing you to this point, so I'll spare you any "This too shall pass"isms. Instead, I'll relate my experience:
I went through a period in life when I was adamantly suicidal. I didn't even have a specific reason, I just felt like all the effort was pointless (classic Major Depressive Disorder, I know) - I felt, on a very basic philosophical level, that it just wasn't "worth it". I was of the mindset that we all spend such a short amount of time on Earth anyway (and my brain is hard wired in such a way that I simply cannot believe in any sort of consciousness/existence/life after death), that to me, it was like "Why put the effort in?".
I couldn't even tell you what changed, or when, but if you give it the chance (and aren't afraid to ask for help - posting your true intentions here is a great sign, to start with), it's likely that days, months, or even years from now you'll look back and thank yourself for the time - even if some (or most) of it was spent struggling. For me, my own rationale turned against me: "We spend so little time here to begin with - why intentionally cut it short? In the scheme of things, I'll be gone in the blink of an eye anyway - let's see what I can see of the world before that happens." In short, the mindset that caused my suicidal thoughts also ended them. I can't say whether it will happen exactly this way for you, but I can say that the rest of your life will be filled with tiny little moments that, as a whole, make up a world worth sticking around to see. In the darkest moments, which it sounds like you're already familiar with, those times won't seem like enough. In the brightest moments - and these are as inevitable as the dark ones, even for depressives - it will strike you that being born in the time and place you were put you right in the middle of one of the most scientifically advanced, fascinating eras in human history. Out of the trillions of tiny rocks floating around space, you happen to exist here and now. Sometimes it feels like a blessing, sometimes a curse, but as David Foster Wallace brilliantly (and life-changingly, for me at least) said to a graduating class at Kenyon College: "
This is water" (context in link). Ironic, I know, using the words of a man who ended up taking his own life to encourage someone to the contrary, but in his 46 years, he changed more lives than 99% of people can hope to reach in twice that amount of time, and hence made his abbreviated life as valuable and irreplaceable as anyone can hope to have their time on Earth be.
I'm genuinely sorry you're going through this at the moment. Just remember, all life is is a series of moments. Philosophers have argued that there is no "now", since by the time our brains have processed signals and sorted them into something we can comprehend, it's already in our short-term memory, and a new "now" is being processed. The "now" you're experiencing right now is miserable - not knowing you, I have no idea what the catalyst for this feeling is (and feel free to contact me at skabbo AT gmail.com for any reason) but even if it has been going on for years, it is no guarantee it will continue this way. When enough "Nows" have changed to "thens", you may feel totally different - our personalities continue developing until the day we die (with the tragic exception of brain damage and Alzheimer's patients), and through pain, loss, tears, love, laughter, a sense of cynicism and a sense of wonder, you will, during at least one of the "nows-to-come", be ok, if not happy, with the fact that you're here to experience them.
I apologize for the length of this, but I've been going through a stressful time as well, and thinking about these things a lot, so your post hit me at just the right time to really stimulate the empathetic side that we all possess. I've intentionally avoided the tired (but true) cliche that suicide hurts those who care about you far more than it does yourself, because I know that guilt doesn't help anything. That being said, I don't know you at all - didn't even know your screen name when I woke up this morning, yet it would matter to me if you were to end your own life. To me, that kind of instinctual human connection is one of the things worth sticking around for. You'll find your own, in time.
I mean it when I say to contact me any time if you feel like talking to someone. I'm not a professional, just a fellow human who happens to be alive during the same little sliver of time that you are (and on the same forum, no less). Continue reaching out, and the number of understanding, caring strangers you come across will amaze you, and maybe even convince you that our little blip of an existence is worth seeing to its natural end.
Thanks for reading this far, and more importantly, thanks for posting.