Ehwmatt wrote:
Like I said, what I gather from these stories about Delp is that he was a pussy his entire life. I get the image of a guy who let people walk all over him over a 50+ year life. Even in death, he let those same people walk all over him by just resigning to taking a gas nap rather than risk a "dreaded" confrontation to assert himself. If you are unhappy in your job/band, leave and find something else. If your alleged fiancee gets deepdicked by another dude, kick that bitch to the curb for the utter disrespect and move the fuck on. No wonder the guy was unhappy. Being a pushover is no way to live life - not with your friends, spouses, children, parents, or coworkers.
I agree with this, but it's easier for some people than others. More often than not, the fear of the confrontation is worse than the confrontation itself.
Ehwmatt wrote:I really wish we could try a social experiment: Instead of coddling and pitying these types of cases in the media, we should universally decry these acts and their perpetrators as pussies, quitters, cowards, and weaklings. I guaran-fucking-tee you that the number of suicides linked to depression (and probably any other cause) would exponentially decrease. Think of it as a parallel to law enforcement not wanting to publicize the name/face of criminals who commit the most heinous/notorious crimes/terrorist acts... let's cut down on the inspiration for copycats.
I'm not sure you exactly understand depression in the true sense of the word. A fair number of people have suffered through some short version of being depressed. I lost someone once and there were times I wasn't sure how I was going to get through the next ten minutes....getting through the rest of the day wasn't even considered. It was simply unlike anything I have ever experienced, and it's almost impossible to explain if you haven't experienced it for yourself. For about a week, I was very raw emotionally. Like most people though, I pushed on and eventually, life returned to "normal". Did I think of any drastic solutions? No, but I realized that it will eventually pass.
For people with chronic depression, the problem is that it takes a lot longer to get back to normal. Regardless of how strong you are, everyone has a breaking point. Once you have gone for six months or maybe even years at this stage of trying to get through the next day or the next 10 minutes with no end in sight, you eventually wear down. At this stage, you are not thinking normally--trust me. You might be able to pull over a facade so that most people won't realize it, especially if you are a private person normally. I can't even imagine the burden after months to years of feeling this way. I consider myself a strong person, but at some point, I honestly don't know what I would do.
For someone in that state, you can ridicule and try to embarrass them all you want. It will NOT work. When you have someone that is that depressed, emotionally compromised, and barely able to push through with normal life activities, I can guarantee you that they could care less what anyone else thinks of them. Been there, done that. It doesn't work. You'd be surprised the number of things that I told people that I would
never say under normal circumstances. Think of going through life where you can say anything you want without fear of the consequences, and couple that with very raw emotions which makes you have a "hair trigger". That's pretty much the state you are in with depression. If anything, your theory would do the exact opposite and increase the number of suicides as it would be yet another thing weighing down on you. That is the LAST thing you need in that situation.
It's very sad for anyone who has to deal with deep depression and suicides. It's hard on the person and the family. Don't ask why someone would be so selfish to do that. Ask what happened to make them think they had no other choice.