bin
Member
- May 1, 2024
- 14
after an inpatient stay at a mental hospital last november i was enrolled in a "partial program", 6 hours of classes in DBT and CBT topics for 10 days total. surprisingly i was quite enjoying myself in the classes, and despite the subject matter coming off as pretty obvious if you just thought about it for 2 minutes, we always had some great peer discussions as a group.
2 days into the program and my beloved girlfriend broke up with me, seemingly out of nowhere. i held on for a day or two, using prescribed amphetamines at a non-prescribed dosage in order to keep calm and hold off the imminent implosion of my mind. i think it's somewhat of a vice to identify too strongly with psych diagnoses but since this story i've learned that i'm afflicted with BPD.. so yeah i've got a shamefully high sensitivity and low tolerance for heartbreak. and the breakup just sent me from 0% to 90% suicidal real fuckin quick.
back at the partial program 2 days post-breakup and one of the classes is based on the topic of "chain analysis", basically choosing a problematic behavior from your life and mapping out the events/choices leading up to it and the consequences leading from it, the conclusion of the lesson being basically "consider how the consequences of an action will affect your life before executing it". i'm thinking, yeah, no shit lol. so teacher asks us to come up with an example behavior from our own lives to share with the class so we can analyze it together and demonstrate the framework. so i spoke up and said what was on my mind, that i had been considering suicide. teacher told me that this was an absolutely inappropriate topic for discussion and that i needed to leave the class… that made me feel pretty shitty since i was really hoping to get something of consequence out of that program, i really wanted to put my ideas up for scrutiny and maybe learn something :-(
so my "stunt" ended up getting me section 12'ed, that is forcibly readmitted to the inpatient hospital, which turned into another 4 week stay. fucking shitty. plus i get to pay off the bills from that useless stay over the next several years, lovely!
anyway, the chain analysis thing ended up sticking in my mind and i've thought about it within the context of suicide. given that the framework centers around a single and continuous subject that lives through the events before and after the action, the logic of weighing the decision based on its outcomes really falls apart if that action is suicide. because, subjectively, there are no consequences to consider. actually the word "subjectively" doesn't even make sense in that sentence, given that death means the dissolution of the subject altogether.
everyone on this forum has heard this phrase before: "suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem". as annoying as it is, the phrase does hit a valid point, assuming that human suffering is predictable as ocean tides. but i think that it totally misses another, much more consequential point, that suicide is not only a permanent solution to temporary problems, but a permanent solution to the set of all possible problems, past, present, and future. a problem cannot exist until some subject realizes something as problematic. remove the subject from the equation and there is no way for new problems to be created or past problems to persist.
i do realize that all of this philosophizing comes off as pretentious and very self-centered.. it doesn't consider how one's suicide could affect the people that know/love them. it takes as fact that consciousness ceases with death. it's just something that's been taking up space in my mind lately and it's kind of cathartic to write down and share it to you guys.
i'm wondering if you guys have anything to counter any of what i said or anything to add that i haven't considered?
- bin :-)
2 days into the program and my beloved girlfriend broke up with me, seemingly out of nowhere. i held on for a day or two, using prescribed amphetamines at a non-prescribed dosage in order to keep calm and hold off the imminent implosion of my mind. i think it's somewhat of a vice to identify too strongly with psych diagnoses but since this story i've learned that i'm afflicted with BPD.. so yeah i've got a shamefully high sensitivity and low tolerance for heartbreak. and the breakup just sent me from 0% to 90% suicidal real fuckin quick.
back at the partial program 2 days post-breakup and one of the classes is based on the topic of "chain analysis", basically choosing a problematic behavior from your life and mapping out the events/choices leading up to it and the consequences leading from it, the conclusion of the lesson being basically "consider how the consequences of an action will affect your life before executing it". i'm thinking, yeah, no shit lol. so teacher asks us to come up with an example behavior from our own lives to share with the class so we can analyze it together and demonstrate the framework. so i spoke up and said what was on my mind, that i had been considering suicide. teacher told me that this was an absolutely inappropriate topic for discussion and that i needed to leave the class… that made me feel pretty shitty since i was really hoping to get something of consequence out of that program, i really wanted to put my ideas up for scrutiny and maybe learn something :-(
so my "stunt" ended up getting me section 12'ed, that is forcibly readmitted to the inpatient hospital, which turned into another 4 week stay. fucking shitty. plus i get to pay off the bills from that useless stay over the next several years, lovely!
anyway, the chain analysis thing ended up sticking in my mind and i've thought about it within the context of suicide. given that the framework centers around a single and continuous subject that lives through the events before and after the action, the logic of weighing the decision based on its outcomes really falls apart if that action is suicide. because, subjectively, there are no consequences to consider. actually the word "subjectively" doesn't even make sense in that sentence, given that death means the dissolution of the subject altogether.
everyone on this forum has heard this phrase before: "suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem". as annoying as it is, the phrase does hit a valid point, assuming that human suffering is predictable as ocean tides. but i think that it totally misses another, much more consequential point, that suicide is not only a permanent solution to temporary problems, but a permanent solution to the set of all possible problems, past, present, and future. a problem cannot exist until some subject realizes something as problematic. remove the subject from the equation and there is no way for new problems to be created or past problems to persist.
i do realize that all of this philosophizing comes off as pretentious and very self-centered.. it doesn't consider how one's suicide could affect the people that know/love them. it takes as fact that consciousness ceases with death. it's just something that's been taking up space in my mind lately and it's kind of cathartic to write down and share it to you guys.
i'm wondering if you guys have anything to counter any of what i said or anything to add that i haven't considered?
- bin :-)