Editorial: Suicide
A week or so ago I was reading about the life of Vincent van Gogh and about his suicide attempts. He initially tried to eat his paints. They were poisonous back then. They're only toxic nowadays. That didn't work very well so he went out into a field and shot himself in the heart. Only he bungled that, too. So he walked back to the inn where he was staying and laid down on the bed without telling anyone. They found him lying in a pool of blood, called the doctor who tried to save him, and van Gogh suffered a seizure which finally did him in--two days after the attempt. Or was that a successful suicide.
This caused me to start thinking about suicide. No, not that way. I'd prefer to live an extra few thousand years, learn all the stuff I'm curious about, visit all kinds of places, and relearn everything I've forgotten. I personally think committing suicide is stupid. I also feel that being stupid is neither a sin nor against the law.
Poor ole Vinnie didn't get a funeral because, well, the Catholic Church can be cranky about suicides from time to time. Was it really a suicide? Although I'm sure Nirvana fans would call it a murder (small joke), the question is, what was the real cause of death--the seizure, the loss of blood, or the gunshot wound? Suppose he didn't shoot himself, but the seizure killed him because of left-over toxins from the paint several years earlier? Suicide or no? Is there some kind of statute of limitations between attempts that contribute to death and the death itself? Three days? A fortnight? No expiration? Does anyone wish to volunteer a cut-off time? What about complications arising from suicide attempts? What about unintended results? Is dying from a game of Russian roulette considered a suicide? Or an accident? Is it true that every year in the US, there are 400,000 tobacco-related suicides and murders?
And why are we having this discussion?
If someone's affairs are in order, bills paid off, family set up with financial security, and funeral expenses paid in full--what's wrong with suicide? Maybe the person's family doesn't want it, but are their desires that significant? There are divorces against people's desires on a daily basis. There are other kinds of death against people's desires on a daily basis. Sure, maybe suicide really is "self-murder," and maybe it is a sin (contrary to my beliefs), but wouldn't that be an issue between the person and God? Why should we as a society get involved over someone else's personal decision, if society is not affected by it?