@RuffledFeathers I just saw your response, you do not have to apologize, not at all. I hope you are feeling a bit better. :hug:
It occurred to me, and after seeing something on tv today I will say it: I think there is something not everyone understands, or thinks of from their experiences: with rejection or abuse or lack of care or connection to a FOO (or no family at all); with losses and limitations occupationally, personally, physically; with the knowledge of having no chance to have a spouse, to grieve not being able to have children, to suffer physical pain, chronically, to suffer emotional pain, and insomnia and nightmares and FB's, and anxiety, fear or horror, +/or depression, to feel no sense of a future, to mistrust the simplest of things, inside and out, to suffer survivor's guilt, or moral injury, and perhaps be even unable to self advocate for the simplest of realities many take for granted, makes for a great 'alone'-ness: if one cries, it is alone, suffers it is alone, fears there is no comfort. Sometimes, or often, or always, no one is there. Certainly never there 'within one's head', to the frequency these things have to be faced, or surface. We as people say we care, but do we really? And do others care for us? (This forum is an example of where people do, and put the presence in.)
On top of it I read one of the greatest sufferings is to feel one's life has no meaning.
Fighting through these things, I don't believe, can happen with logical arguments, since it really isn't a logical argument that decreases that perception (perceived reality) of alone-ness, with the exception of people who've come out the other side (and often still battle with it every day- even if others see them laughing, and believe what they will, or judge harshly; I think it doesn't cross the mind of most of the cumulative effects and pain of so many losses). Which is why I think the majority of people who request it are in hospice (proposed as one alternative solution). Yet no one I've been with, present with, has ever voiced it. Maybe because they weren't alone. Idk. In hospice they aren't alone per se, either, but just how worthwhile do they feel?
I suppose what I'm trying to say (but missed the edit window), after another story on the news today, is that the arguments are always for or against, but there's never mention really of the what and why's and where for's of why and how a person comes to that point. And beginning by listening, and understanding.
It occurred to me, and after seeing something on tv today I will say it: I think there is something not everyone understands, or thinks of from their experiences: with rejection or abuse or lack of care or connection to a FOO (or no family at all); with losses and limitations occupationally, personally, physically; with the knowledge of having no chance to have a spouse, to grieve not being able to have children, to suffer physical pain, chronically, to suffer emotional pain, and insomnia and nightmares and FB's, and anxiety, fear or horror, +/or depression, to feel no sense of a future, to mistrust the simplest of things, inside and out, to suffer survivor's guilt, or moral injury, and perhaps be even unable to self advocate for the simplest of realities many take for granted, makes for a great 'alone'-ness: if one cries, it is alone, suffers it is alone, fears there is no comfort. Sometimes, or often, or always, no one is there. Certainly never there 'within one's head', to the frequency these things have to be faced, or surface. We as people say we care, but do we really? And do others care for us? (This forum is an example of where people do, and put the presence in.)
On top of it I read one of the greatest sufferings is to feel one's life has no meaning.
Fighting through these things, I don't believe, can happen with logical arguments, since it really isn't a logical argument that decreases that perception (perceived reality) of alone-ness, with the exception of people who've come out the other side (and often still battle with it every day- even if others see them laughing, and believe what they will, or judge harshly; I think it doesn't cross the mind of most of the cumulative effects and pain of so many losses). Which is why I think the majority of people who request it are in hospice (proposed as one alternative solution). Yet no one I've been with, present with, has ever voiced it. Maybe because they weren't alone. Idk. In hospice they aren't alone per se, either, but just how worthwhile do they feel?
I suppose what I'm trying to say (but missed the edit window), after another story on the news today, is that the arguments are always for or against, but there's never mention really of the what and why's and where for's of why and how a person comes to that point. And beginning by listening, and understanding.