February 2013 Moms

playing peace keeper

Can we all just cool it

obviously this is a very deep issue for many and one we people have very clear thoughts/opinions on.

this just maybe a topic we need to "agree to disagree on"
I don't want to see anyone get there feeling hurt and leave

just saying

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Re: playing peace keeper

  • My other BMB just divided and blew up today after over 4 years so I'd really like to not witness that again in one day! So yea, I'd like to cool it as well. I know little about this topic (thankfully) and am deeply saddened for those that leave and are left that way. That is all. Things like this don't ever make sense.
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  • I have personally dealt with it.

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  • DC2London said:

    Sterling is welcome to correct me if I'm wrong but I didn't get the impression that she intended her thread to be a call-out, in any way.  I thought she was starting a new thread to contradict and bump down the thread whose title she found offensive.  

    This, exactly.

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  • @tarheelmama202, I agree with a lot of what you said. But a line was also crossed the other way. Someone accused adamwife of abandoning a friend in need when she was recovering herself. How is that okay?
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    First round of Clomid in May 2012= BFP #1, DD born January 2013 
    BFP #2 in January 2014, DS born September 2014

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  • ally2011ally2011 member
    edited August 2014
    The Matt Walsh blog did not say that Robin Williams was selfish. I just read it in its entirety and his response to critics which I am linking. Both of my parents have lost a parent to suicide, and I have no issue with his points. If others do, let's discuss, but only after reading the actual posts. www.themattwalshblog.com/2014/08/13/depression-isnt-choice-suicide-response-critics/

    We are so thankful that our second daughter, Lillian Elizabeth "Lily", was born healthy and happy on February 11, 2013.  We love her to pieces.  

    We lost our first daughter, Hannah Grace on May 4, 2011.  She was buried on May 14 during a beautiful service at my home church. We are grateful that if she could not be here with us, that she is healed and whole with the Lord. We look forward to the day when we will get to meet her. We love her so much.


  • A facebook friend posted a link to the Matt Walsh blog that started a lot of this discussion, claiming that Robin Williams was selfish for taking his own life. 
    I'll just repost my comment here since I don't feel like restating all of it: 
    Here's my problem with that original post: Yes, suicide is a choice you make. To family members and friends left behind it seems like an incredibly selfish choice. But to someone who is depressed, it doesn't look that way. I have struggled with depression for a good portion of my life. It got even worse after both of my children. It was deep, it was dark, and it was lonely. But the most striking thing about depression is not necessarily the sadness, but the irrationality. You have thoughts, terrible thoughts. And sometimes, on good days, you can tell the difference between what is real and what is just the depression talking. But on those really really bad days, the days where it physically hurts you to get out of bed, you can't tell the difference. You are completely out of focus and out of touch. You can't be happy like everyone wants. You feel like you are burdening them because you can't feel things in a normal way. At that point, taking yourself out of the picture seems rational, even thoughtful. I honestly thing rhetoric, like that in Matt Walsh's original post, comes from a place of misunderstanding and distance. Depression is a very very difficult disease to understand if it isn't something you have gone through on your own. It's not just sadness. It is an all-consuming disease. It can't be willed or rationalized away and I think it hurts a lot of people very deeply when someone implies that it can be. That we just didn't try enough, pray enough, think enough. It would be wonderful if it really were that simple and I think a lot of people (myself included) really wish it worked like that. For me it has been years of struggle and it will probably continue to be. This is something that I will probably have to live with for the rest of my life. When you combine that realization with the irrational thoughts that depression can cause, it becomes at least a little easier to understand why suicide may seem like a good idea.

    Hugs to you, I am sorry for your struggles. I did just want to say that if you read the follow up piece, I don't think you are in conflict with the blogger for the most part. I thought his commentary about the choice of suicide was empowering and I am posting it here, but read the whole link above. You may disagree with some of it, but a lot of what is repeated is just a caricature if the actual post. "There is no doubt that suicide, by definition, is a willful act. If it wasn’t, it wouldn’t be suicide. It is a choice. That’s why we call it suicide. Suicide: the intentional taking of one’s life. There is no debating this. To say suicide is not a choice is to speak nonsense. It’s to say suicide is not suicide. Now, do I call it a choice in order to “shame” the suicidal? Do I say it to “blame” the dead? No, I say it because those on the brink need to be empowered, not told that they have no chance and no choice. I say these things for the living, not the dead. Many intelligent folks have pointed out that suicide is a choice, but one made by a mind submerged in an unspeakable darkness. Suicide is a choice, but one chosen under great duress. To these people, let me offer this stipulation: of course. Yes. I never said otherwise. But ALL destructive choices are made under these circumstances. ALL. Every single one. The more destructive the choice, the more troubled the mind. We should realize this, certainly, but should we then deny the will itself? Should we tell the destructive man that he has no power and no options? If suicide is not a choice, why do we tell people not to do it? Why do we tell them to get help? Why do we try to stop them?"

    We are so thankful that our second daughter, Lillian Elizabeth "Lily", was born healthy and happy on February 11, 2013.  We love her to pieces.  

    We lost our first daughter, Hannah Grace on May 4, 2011.  She was buried on May 14 during a beautiful service at my home church. We are grateful that if she could not be here with us, that she is healed and whole with the Lord. We look forward to the day when we will get to meet her. We love her so much.


  • DC2London said:
    While Matt Walsh's post on Williams wasn't entirely without its valid points, the first half of it makes me want to scream.  And he was an entitled, arrogant chauvanist long before that post.  I would cite specific examples here but I'd rather not contribute to any more traffic to his blog.

    Then that makes it kind if hard to discuss....

    We are so thankful that our second daughter, Lillian Elizabeth "Lily", was born healthy and happy on February 11, 2013.  We love her to pieces.  

    We lost our first daughter, Hannah Grace on May 4, 2011.  She was buried on May 14 during a beautiful service at my home church. We are grateful that if she could not be here with us, that she is healed and whole with the Lord. We look forward to the day when we will get to meet her. We love her so much.


  • Just skimmed again and am truly not sure what you mean.

    We are so thankful that our second daughter, Lillian Elizabeth "Lily", was born healthy and happy on February 11, 2013.  We love her to pieces.  

    We lost our first daughter, Hannah Grace on May 4, 2011.  She was buried on May 14 during a beautiful service at my home church. We are grateful that if she could not be here with us, that she is healed and whole with the Lord. We look forward to the day when we will get to meet her. We love her so much.


  • ally2011ally2011 member
    edited August 2014
    @ally2011‌ did he post one entry then a follow up? I'm at work and don't have time to read the links right now.

    Yes. This is the original, the above is the follow up. https://themattwalshblog.com/2014/08/12/robin-williams-didnt-die-disease-died-choice/

    We are so thankful that our second daughter, Lillian Elizabeth "Lily", was born healthy and happy on February 11, 2013.  We love her to pieces.  

    We lost our first daughter, Hannah Grace on May 4, 2011.  She was buried on May 14 during a beautiful service at my home church. We are grateful that if she could not be here with us, that she is healed and whole with the Lord. We look forward to the day when we will get to meet her. We love her so much.


  • DC2London said:

    While Matt Walsh's post on Williams wasn't entirely without its valid points, the first half of it makes me want to scream.  And he was an entitled, arrogant chauvanist long before that post.  I would cite specific examples here but I'd rather not contribute to any more traffic to his blog.

    Yeah, I've read a number of his posts in the past but I just can't even go there anymore. Even when he has a valid point, most of the time he expresses it in a way that is hateful and/or inflammatory. He's clearly not going to change the mind of anyone who already disagrees with him, and even when he would make a point I agreed with, the way he went about making it almost made me change my mind because of how he said it.


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  • I'll read them later, but from what you posted here's my two cents: yes, fundamentally suicide is a choice. But not a rational one. Not one a healthy person makes. For those who do it, it doesn't feel like a choice, it feels like the only way out. Depression crushes logic and free will, and in my option free will is what makes us human. Depression robs us of our humanity. It crushes us. So to say it's like any other bad choice we make or equate it with a sin (which I assume that's where he was going) is wrong. It's so far beyond that.

    He doesn't equate it with sin.

    We are so thankful that our second daughter, Lillian Elizabeth "Lily", was born healthy and happy on February 11, 2013.  We love her to pieces.  

    We lost our first daughter, Hannah Grace on May 4, 2011.  She was buried on May 14 during a beautiful service at my home church. We are grateful that if she could not be here with us, that she is healed and whole with the Lord. We look forward to the day when we will get to meet her. We love her so much.


  • DC2London said:
    ally2011 said:
    DC2London said:
    While Matt Walsh's post on Williams wasn't entirely without its valid points, the first half of it makes me want to scream.  And he was an entitled, arrogant chauvanist long before that post.  I would cite specific examples here but I'd rather not contribute to any more traffic to his blog.

    Then that makes it kind if hard to discuss....
    I'm ok with that.  I think we've discussed the "suicide is a choice" point as much as we can

    That was not the only take away from the article. I didn't bring the post up, vero stated that he said Robin Williams was selfish, which he didn't. Then there was name calling of the blogger, so I went to see what the fuss was about. When I found no issue with either post, I was honestly curious what posters here were upset about.

    We are so thankful that our second daughter, Lillian Elizabeth "Lily", was born healthy and happy on February 11, 2013.  We love her to pieces.  

    We lost our first daughter, Hannah Grace on May 4, 2011.  She was buried on May 14 during a beautiful service at my home church. We are grateful that if she could not be here with us, that she is healed and whole with the Lord. We look forward to the day when we will get to meet her. We love her so much.


  • Well that's good. I have heard that argument before.

    As have I and it is irrational. BTW, you could have read both pieces by now if you'd quit reading and posting here ;) I am headed out in a minute, just teasing you.

    We are so thankful that our second daughter, Lillian Elizabeth "Lily", was born healthy and happy on February 11, 2013.  We love her to pieces.  

    We lost our first daughter, Hannah Grace on May 4, 2011.  She was buried on May 14 during a beautiful service at my home church. We are grateful that if she could not be here with us, that she is healed and whole with the Lord. We look forward to the day when we will get to meet her. We love her so much.


  • I think there needs to be a distinction between depression and suicide. I feel like the two were made to be almost the same thing during some of this discussion. Depression is not a choice. Suicide is a choice, but the people who are at that point do not view it as selfish (I'm not inside the minds of everyone, but at least I don't think most of them view it as selfish). As I shared before, when my DH was suicidal, he thought the opposite way: he was convinced everyone would be better off without him, so suicide, in his opinion, was very unselfish because he thought he'd be doing everyone a favor. When I asked DH last night if he thought suicide is a choice, he said yes. I asked him, "Even though you felt there was no other way out?" He replied, "I didn't think there was any other way out, but I still chose not to do it." 

    I actually really like the way Matt Walsh put it as quoted above. Knowing that suicide IS a choice is empowering to those who are contemplating it and could encourage them to get help. There IS another way out, there IS hope. It doesn't have to happen. I think these thoughts are what kept my DH barely hanging on a few months ago: the faint glimmer of hope that maybe things wouldn't always be that bad, and that he didn't HAVE to take his own life. 
    PCOS with long, irregular cycles
    First round of Clomid in May 2012= BFP #1, DD born January 2013 
    BFP #2 in January 2014, DS born September 2014

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  • @luxannie‌ lol. I love all of those things. So much. I will try to join your next bump party. I'm on the west coast though so I'm not sure how well that will work. But I will try
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