Is suicide a sweet release or a tremendous mistake?
>>17494108
Why don't you try it out and see for yourself?
>>17494108
It is neither. Once you are dead there is no sweet release nor a pondering of mistakes. There's nothing.
Remember all the years before you were born? Kind of like that.
Is that some frog pocket? Anyway, suicide is being dead. It's real sexy and hurts real bad and then you stop thinking and start to rot.
Let me give you some perspective: My brother just killed himself this morning. I've seen everything on the internet and nothing could have prepared me for seeing my wailing mother pulled off of his lifeless body by the police. This is the 3rd person close to me that has done this. It's not good. It's not the answer, ever.
>>17494119
This.
Death is not a feeling.
It's not even nothing.
It's what you feel about 542 BC.
How did you experience those years?
You didn't. but it's as equally relevant as 2018 if you commit suicide this year.
Death is nothing. Forever and permanent
>>17494108
It depends. How old are you? How much have you experienced in life? What have you accomplished? What more can you accomplish? How much of an impact have you left on the world?
Essentially, the intrinsic value of life's inherent potential usually outweighs the benefit of death.
The thing I find most foolish about the internets' "kys" mentality is that most of the people that tend to spout suicide rhetoric are edgy teens and people in their twenties who haven't actually lost anyone important to them.
They see "rekt" threads, and they think they know what deprivation truly is. If you want to see the true depths of the depravity of our human condition, go volunteer at a local hospital. Sign up with the "No One Dies Alone" program.
>>17494108
On and on, the ride never ends.