I knew a guy with no lower jaw....at the time he lived with his suicide attempt for over 20 years...quite the punishment.
we are not punished for our sins but by them.
we are not punished for our sins but by them.
I knew a guy with no lower jaw....at the time he lived with his suicide attempt for over 20 years...quite the punishment.
we are not punished for our sins but by them.
Yeah, for those that try to commit suicide and fail they should get the death penalty, that'll show'em
In another day and time maybe...not today. I know this one by very recent experience as well, bankruptcy does *not* cover student loans unless you can prove extreme hardship, and that is a separate undertaking all its own. I don't know how it used to be, and not suggesting what you say is untrue, but I can say emphatically and for the record that it is no longer an option to declare bankruptcy after school to cancel student loans. I would encourage anyone who may disagree with me to check the federal regs on this one before jumping to any conclusions.A thing that Juantoo3 mentioned about student loans got me thinking about what I have observed a lot of people who become judges, lawyers and doctors do, they go to University on student loan and get their degree and then when they get out, they declared bankruptcy and wait out the 7 year period.
I knew a guy with no lower jaw....at the time he lived with his suicide attempt for over 20 years...quite the punishment.
we are not punished for our sins but by them.
Thoughts of death are part of the process of living, but when you're down and out you get very close to death in your heart. It is best to think of it as a rite of passage. (I really think that it is part of the 'Human' package.) Everything looks bleak and all around is failure; but that bleakness is a natural perception block, so you can't see the way forward. It is like having a crush and your brain is totally wired to put you through a very sad and difficult time. Without this thing in our brains, I think humanity would never have achieved what it has and would destroy itself. If you survive, you will regain your appreciation for living but with a new consciousness gained. That is the only good thing about it. I am not saying that staying alive is necessarily worthwhile individually but if you find value in being a better person, that is where this natural process takes you.Magnianhk said:You have looked for a job for the last 6 months. You are unskilled. You are depressed and employers can sense that something is wrong. You can't seem to nail an interview. You lost your car about 4 months earlier, making applying for jobs (and getting to them) much more difficult. You feel like you have nothing good to say and that you bring others down.
Well first of all, you have a mature and thoughtful discussion on the topic of suicide. I've noticed that the majority of websites, blogs, and forums that I find on the subject are predictably anti-suicide. They house contrived and pretentious arguments for not doing so.
Well, I can't seem to find much discussion exploring suicide as a real option. Let me ask you all a question. But you must consider it fully without distraction. Just take an honest look inside and be aware of your true feelings when considering --
Say you are to become homeless because you cannot find a job. You like your home, your possessions. You like what you've created there. It is peaceful, with a nice private back yard, a cat, an inviting kitchen and a comforting vibe.
You have looked for a job for the last 6 months. You are unskilled.
You are depressed and employers can sense that something is wrong. You can't seem to nail an interview. You lost your car about 4 months earlier, making applying for jobs (and getting to them) much more difficult. You feel like you have nothing good to say and that you bring others down.
Money is getting ridiculously tight for you. The only way you eat is because you are on food stamps. Your family cannot help you. You have too much pride, and you would feel too bad asking a friend to loan you money. In fact, you only have one friend who has a schedule, and a life. That friend is going somewhere, and you aren't. Whenever you see that friend you bring them down because you only have bad things to talk about. You cannot sell anything else on Craigslist. At least, not anything that would feel nothing short of losing a limb.
You can't make new friends because you cannot afford to be social. Transportation is a chore, not a privilege.
You feel that you have worked for where you are in life. That you have come so far and have grown so much since some moment in your past when you decided to live life being awake and present. To go backwards in life is incomprehensible. By going backwards, I mean losing everything that you know and have worked for. Why should you suffer just to keep the few people who know you from grieving for a temporary time? I mean let's face it: You'd be dead and they'd still be alive. They would get over it - they are living, breathing, moving forward in a life that makes sense.
You ask yourself: What is the point of living if you can't really live?
What is your option? You know no one to move in with. How would you move anyway? Moving costs money - something that you don't have. How would you transport your possessions to a storage locker, even? That would take renting a truck. Do you give up your possessions? Burn them? Give them away? Sell them for dirt cheap? What's the point in that - why sink so low when you could just walk away from it? At least in a will you could decide who receives what item.
You have no quarrels with God.
You start to decide that ending your life is just the natural order of the world. That perhaps, God's plan for you is to be a statistic, or an example. You have to die so that others may learn. You are a sign of the times, meant to be a tragedy, meant to signal and highlight the flaws of the world.
You watch a monk ignite himself on fire to protest the Vietnam War. You believe that your death is no less symbolic. You believe that you weren't meant for the world. Your soul found the wrong vessel and now you must cast yourself back into a more pure existence.
The ironic part is that your Father gave you a gun when you were 18, when you moved out. You've always shunned weapons, believing them to be evil incarnate. It's why you can't join the military to get out of your predicament. But now, it just may be your salvation. All of the bad in the world came together and culminated, and inhabited this weapon that you are holding. It's a perfect description for the cycle that will now end this chapter, and complete the circle.
Your's is a tale that can't be told, and freedom you hold dear.
So. After taking the time to remove yourself from your comfortable environment, and considered everything above, how do you feel?
every moment of consciousness arises conditioned by the previous one, if we want to break the chain all we need do is conceive a new thought.
metta,
~v