To complete anything is an accomplishment. Suicide should not be an accomplishment.
It can't be. As I said before. It's death. One can only recognise an accomplishment after completing the trial/ordeal/project/work. Which the dead cannot do, because they are dead.
You'll also note that I am in favor of using "commit" only to people who die. I prefer "initiate" to those who don't succeed. It means to start, but not necessarily to finish.
This doesn't make sense to me either. Death is the finale. It's not a beginning. There's no proof that something occurs after death, or if there is any form of concious recollection, should such a state exist.
When one commits a felony, they have done it, not attempted to do it.
Since we are discussing words as they apply to other's.
Convicted, would be what a felon would be referred to as. Otherwise they would be alleged. As they are supposed to be innocent until proven guilty.
I don't think his statement is unique in any way for those so lost.
You're right, it's not.
It's a mechanism found commonly among people who suffer from depression. If you pay attention to someone who is in this frame of mind, it is not limited to suicidal actions, but everything they do. If they can find a way to put themselves down they do.
I do.
for such people the idea that at least they can "successfully complete" *something* in their lives may drive their determination.
How? If they succeed, they won't know it. A subsequent successful attempt, is still only to end their own suffering. What
@joeylittle said, is quite correct. The self preservation instinct is still very much present in a suicidal person. Hence why most attempted suicides fail.
A person who is not in a heavily altered mental state has no desire to die. It is a drastic action from a desperate person, to end unbearable suffering.
They're dead, they're not going to be hurt by the negativity of the term. I think enforcing that killing oneself is a bad thing should be implemented to try and cut back on suicides.
I see where you're coming from. But it's a very fine line between damning the act and the thoughts which precipitate it, from the person who is thinking and doing it.
When someone in that state of mind gets the idea in their heads that the people whom they're reaching out to for help think them bad people. Well... they won't bother reaching out again.
We will never be able to fully police statements, and while there are such things as hate speech laws (with varying degrees of prosecution) they're about as observed as jaywalking offenses.
True. But, we can give any ample reason to shut their mouths. But we can never stop the thoughts that become unfavourable speech. So at best it can swept under the rug until no one is looking, then it simply resurfaces.
Words however, are the core of our communication-body language varies across cultures, but if we speak the verbal language we can still make ourselves readily understood.
So if two people who speak two very alien languages are locked in a room together with a puzzle to solve, they will actually just shout at each other in jibberish, rather than point at something?
While I understand the notion of "this is how it is and I don't think it needs to/I don't want it to change" we are also a race that is in constant flux. Change for the better, however minimal should always be encouraged.
So, some people like blue better than green. Should we spend millions of dollars in infrastructure changes and advertising campaigns to turn all the green traffic lights in Canada from green/amber/red to blue/amber/red?
It won't be harmful, won't be better. Just a change for the sake of change?
So I don't sound too patronising. The country I grew up in. Still uses MPH despite the metric system being implemented for use nationwide. Why?
Simple. The home office decided that the people were too stupid to understand the difference between MPH and KPH. They would have a huge percentage of the population accidentally killing themselves and everyone around them, driving at 100mph on the A-roads.
I know that Canada also made the switch from Imperial to metric.... Hmm... No massive death toll...
I'm all for change, when it's actually practical.
I am fine with "completed" when doctors and clinicians are talking among each other to describe an event. Not so much when talking in common parlance with patients or others who may be affected. In that case, it is coldly accurate, and clinicians and doctors need to be professionally detached for so many reasons. The language they use among themselves should always be a different manner than they approach clients lest they alienate and give the wrong impression to those dependent upon their aid.
I used to be an EMT. There is a fine line between being too "technical" and "condescending". It's different from patient to patient. Some people would call a broken arm a fractured humerus (which no one finds very funny). Some would say "dey broke der' arm bone" both are accurate. Both understand the problem. And are communicating with the way they are most comfortable.
If I were to say... Get a call for a kid who has just taken a whole bottle of aspirin (That doesn't work very well, by the way)
I am going to speak to him in whatever way I think has the best chance of getting through to him. Why?
Because I give a shit. The worst thing anyone could do would be to tie my tongue with silly language standards, because I would then be forced to silence, or further alienation of a person who desperately needs to be listened to. Someone who probably doesn't want to be spoken at like a child.
For a subject as fraught as suicide, I would think that it would be worth the effort on the part of professionals, to minimize the damage.
You're damned right it is. It's also damned difficult to talk to somebody in that position. Education and training on
what to say, is far more valuable than what
not to say. That's what I'd rather see the effort put into. Imho
But again, it is a case by case thing. There are no one size fits all answers.