Feralucce wrote:
DVCal wrote:
Have some compassion. She is obviously very ill mentally right now, depression and bi polar are very serious things. What is needs is some compassion, not disgust. So I have to agree with your friends.
I don't have it in me. Weakness and selfishness to the point of LITERALLY destroying her husband's world is not something I can summon compassion for.
Suicide is a consequence of
severe mental illness. Not everyone experiences suicidal ideation to the same degree, so you can't really compare how easily you shook it off to someone else's experiences. It's not a matter of weakness or selfishness. It's the consequence of cognitive distortions, almost delusional beliefs about yourself and the people around you. Someone at the point of suicide might even think they're being selfless, and may see themselves as a cause of pain for everyone around them. Further, attempting suicide is not an act of weakness. Actually pushing yourself to take action to kill yourself tends to take a
lot of mental effort. Instinctually, people want to live, and negating that is not easy, even when in the depths of suicidal ideation and the urge to just die.
You said that you misjudged her in that you thought she met the standards of what you consider a friend, but right now, you are seriously failing at being her friend, as well as her husband's friend (if you consider him one as well). If you insist on expressing disgust and disappointment about this woman's life-threatening illness, you will likely push everyone who cares about her away from you, and deservedly so.
I do understand what it's like to be suicidal enough to attempt it, because I
have attempted it. I haven't tried in 15 or 16 years, but I remember what it was like to be in that frame of mind. I also often experience bouts of intense suicidal ideation even now (but fewer than even two years ago), and I just do not get how people leap to such judgmental assumptions about attempted or completed suicides.