dsheinem wrote:Nothing against you, but this kind of sentiment always irks me as a form of public remembrance - especially for cases of suicide. He was in a place where people around him loved him and where there were options for help that he apparently opted not to take or that gave up on. Now he's not. Saying he's somewhere "better" supports the logic that taking one's life as a way to end suffering and get to heaven (a concept we don't even know if he believed in) is an understandable (if not excusable) decision.TheSegaSaturnGuy wrote: but he is in a better place now.
Sorry, I don't mean to rant - but it's important in cases of suicide not to tacitly condone the action by suggesting that he's "better" off now than he was. It's a narrative that perpetuates the tragedy.
Perhaps he was in a place where he was loved (we don't know and can't assume that), but to have reached that frame of mind he must have felt very alone. Suffering takes many different forms, and what we can glimpse on the outside does not paint the entire picture. Sometimes those surrounded by people are the loneliest, sometimes those that appear to be the happiest are actually the saddest. No matter why he chose to take his own life, "he's in a better place now" is a polite sentiment that no matter what his suffering was, he no longer has to endure it. It is not for us to condone or not to condone.dsheinem wrote:Nothing against you, but this kind of sentiment always irks me as a form of public remembrance - especially for cases of suicide. He was in a place where people around him loved him and where there were options for help that he apparently opted not to take or that gave up on. Now he's not. Saying he's somewhere "better" supports the logic that taking one's life as a way to end suffering and get to heaven (a concept we don't even know if he believed in) is an understandable (if not excusable) decision.
Sorry, I don't mean to rant - but it's important in cases of suicide not to tacitly condone the action by suggesting that he's "better" off now than he was. It's a narrative that perpetuates the tragedy.
We have the freedom to choose, even when the decision is the most profound we can make. Whether or not you or whatever religious beliefs you hold agree with suicide as an exit strategy is immaterial, and your opinion on it has no place amongst a discussion of remembrance. Perhaps your own soapbox/thread is in order to espouse (or not) the ramifications of suicide as an acceptable (or not) choice.
Sorry for MY rant, but I felt that what you said was both inappropriate and unnecessary.