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Junior Seau found dead of allegedly self-inflicted gun shot wound.

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Re: Junior Seau found dead of allegedly self-inflicted gun shot wound.

  • imagelarrysdarling:

    I don't understand why one can't have sympathy for both the deceased and his family members.  Obviously something was going on in his life that was so bad that he couldn't consider surviving for one.more.minute. How horrible that must be.

     And saying that someone who probably suffers from mental illness and commits suicide is weak is so beyond offensive.  People who suffer like that have to summon every ounce of strength they have to even get out of bed in the morning.  It's not called 'mental weakness', it's called 'mental illness'. It's a sickness so sick that many people don't even know they have it. 

    Right now, I'm reacting emotionally (shocker). My first instinct was to pick a side to sympathize with - and I chose to sympathize with his kids because they are suffering, and will continue to suffer, as a result of Seau's conscious act.

    I'm sure that I'll develop some sympathy for Seau once a certain amount of time has passed. And I'll agree with HAB that the sympathies in question aren't mutually exclusive.  

    When sh!t like this happens, we often pick a position immediately - ignoring the validity of other ones as a result.  That's what I'm doing here. I'm pissed at Seau for succumbing to a weakness at the expense of his kids.  

    Sure, maybe his kids are better off, or will be better off, without him.  No one can know that right now.  

    But when other people accuse me of being wrong for calling him weak, I will defend it because... sh!t.  Of COURSE he was weak!  We're all weak at many things, often. But his weakness took away their father.  I choose to be pissed at him for that.

    I'm sure I'll be accused of backpedaling a bit as a result of this post's implications, but I'm so okay with that. I reacted emotionally, and it's not the first time I did. But I'm convinced that once said time has passed that I'll still be of the mind that he was weak. And selfish. 

  • imagecaden:
    imageDylanite:

    Good one?

    It's a message board, filled with opinions. Accept it and move on. I'm not here, in this thread, to argue anyone. That's why I didn't come out and argue anyone here. But when you call bullish!t on a person who is the only one who knows where they're coming from, you kind of look silly.  But hey, maybe you have an anecdote to justify your speculating what's in my head. 

    Didn't you just tell me I can argue what I want? I don't have to accept anything you post. And you don't have to accept anything I post. Regardless of your intent not to argue (and really, this is you not arguing?), everyone here is free to respond to your posts. I called bullsh!t on your post because you said you were coming from a place of compassion for the kids, yet you have a very narrow idea of what they're experiencing. People have repeatedly tried to broaden your perspective on mental illness, and you blowing it all off while claiming the mantle of compassion begged for comment. But by all means, throw out some more names and go on rockin with your empathetic, non-arguing self.

    I said I didn't come out arguing.  Of course I later reacted to others that chose to argue. Read the words I type. It could help you for future reference.

    People trying to broaden my perspective on mental illness has nothing to do with my empathy for his kids. Nor should it.  

  • Would you say someone with cancer is weak? You sound woefully uninformed, at best, about the nature of mental illness. 

     

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  • I can't get behind calling it a weakness. Suicide is often a side effect and/or symptom of depression or other mental illness. I wouldn't call it a weakness to die of cancer.

    And yes, I understand that suicide is a willful act while succumbing to cancer is not. But suicide is often a willful act made under the pressure of illness. I'm not sure anyone who commits suicide, particularly in such a way has rationally thought everything out. Their thinking is disordered, usually due to the illness.

     



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  • imagelarrysdarling:

    Would you say someone with cancer is weak? You sound woefully uninformed, at best, about the nature of mental illness. 

     

    Would you say cancer is a mental illness? 

  • imageDylanite:

    People trying to broaden my perspective on mental illness has nothing to do with my empathy for his kids. Nor should it.  

    You can empathize with the children without wishing hell on their father.

    In any case, I hope both the departed and those left behind are able to find some measure of peace. I just can't fathom being that twisted up, that desperate only to die and find yourself just as desolate. It just seems cruel to wish upon someone a fate worse than the one that drove them to commit suicide in the first place.



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  • imagehindsight's_a_biotch:
    imageDylanite:

    People trying to broaden my perspective on mental illness has nothing to do with my empathy for his kids. Nor should it.  

    You can empathize with the children without wishing hell on their father.

    In any case, I hope both the departed and those left behind are able to find some measure of peace. I just can't fathom being that twisted up, that desperate only to die and find yourself just as desolate. It just seems cruel to wish upon someone a fate worse than the one that drove them to commit suicide in the first place.

    Well as I said, I'll probably loosen my criticism of him a tad with the passing of time.  And the fact that I don't believe in hell should take away some of the sting. ;) 

  • I hope that his kids realize one day how much he loved them and that the decision that he made this morning was not a reflection of their worth in his life.  

  • imageDylanite:
    imagelarrysdarling:

    Would you say someone with cancer is weak? You sound woefully uninformed, at best, about the nature of mental illness. 

     

    Would you say cancer is a mental illness? 

    I would have thought heart attack or stroke were more of a comparrison, for most (not all because sometimes genetics just suck) there is a lifestyle factor in which you can control, but we all know that's not as easy as it sounds...

    The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page.
  • imageDylanite:

    Right now, I'm reacting emotionally (shocker). My first instinct was to pick a side to sympathize with - and I chose to sympathize with his kids because they are suffering, and will continue to suffer, as a result of Seau's conscious act.

    Except that it most likely wasn't a conscious act, whether it be the result of mental illness unrelated to his career or because of brain damage.  Would you say the same thing about soldiers who commit suicide after suffering traumatic brain injury?  Because that's pretty much the same thing as what posters are speculating might have happened to Seau.

    I'm sure his kids really feel sympathy in your vitriol for the man they loved.

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  • This is just sad all around. 
  • imageDylanite:
    imageshopgirl_07:
    imageDylanite:
    imageshopgirl_07:
    imageDylanite:

    There's no excuse for him not to exhaust all options to deal with this - alleged - depression.  He had kids.  He was obligated to get 2nd, 3rd, 99th opinions to get him on a rough path to heal himself.  He was only 43. He obviously didn't take enough time to tackle (pun!!) his issues. 

    For the sh!t his kids must now deal with for the rest of their lives, I have ZERO sympathy for whatever mental illness he 'may' have been dealing with. If nothing else, kids should give one at least SOME/enough perspective amid this potential illness.

    ETA: He'll go down in history for being so dang tough.  When we all now know, he was really fvckings weak.

    This is the most ridiculous post I've ever read. So full of anger and no compassion or empathy.

    You should read up on CTE and the work that the BU CTSE program is doing.

    He was very likely brain damaged. He was most certainly mentally ill. You can't tell someone who's paralyzed to just get up and walk. And you can't tell someone who is brain injured or mentally ill to snap out of it and be normal. These people are living their lives in incredible pain. I can't imagine what it's like and I certainly can't judge.

    - '...Very Likely...'

    - Lazy analogy to paralysis

    - 'I can't imagine what it's like'

    Well done.  

    Did you know Junior Seau? Were you related to him? Did your Dad commit suicide? Because, if not, I can't understand why you're so angry about his suicide, which seemingly has ZERO effect on your life.

    No, no, and... None of your business..  The empathy I lack for Seau is compensated by the empathy I have for his kids.  But my answers to your questions should be irrelevant to you.  One doesn't have to be black to understand why the civil rights movement(s) are necessary.  It's funny that I'm told I lack compassion here when that is what's solely driving my position.

    I have to admit that my first reaction to D's comments was that he was looking to rile things up here....I know, hard to believe. ;-) Then, when I realized my initial reaction was wrong, I thought the level of anger towards this father made me think this touched a nerve with D...and if it did, then I think his reaction was probably understandable (ie. not saying I agree with it, but I can understand it).  Not my business for sure but that is what I thought.

    And so I say to you, you are Peter, and upon this Rock I will build my Church, and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it.
  • I thought about this post all night.  

    I will admit to my first thought being that suicide is a selfish act that impacts those left behind much more than the person who did the act.  Especially his children.

    I have no idea what his relationship was with his kids or how old they were, but they were my first thought when I heard that he had three.

    My kids would think that I was being selfish if I ever did something like that, I think it would be any childs first instinct.  It would take a very long time for them to forgive me if they ever did.

    BUT...I know that my last thought would be of my children and I also know that if my brain was overriding my children then I would have to be VERY VERY ill for me to go ahead and commit suicide.   

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  • imageoverture:

    I'm sure his kids really feel sympathy in your vitriol for the man they loved.

    Amen.

    My father committed suicide when he was 45 years old.  I was 18; my siblings were 19 and 16.  It was really freaking hard after he died to wonder how he could do that, in our family home, surrounded by pictures and reminders of his family he loved so much and worked so hard for.  We had a happy family life.  My parents had a good marriage.  But depression is a really strong disease. 

    I don't know Junior Seau.  He wasn't my father.  By all accounts, he was a good man and a loving father.  

    For me, it's so offensive to for someone to insinuate that my father's love for me or my siblings wasn't enough to keep him alive.  That...in a roundabout way...blames me for his death.  It's so offensive to call him weak for succumbing to his disease because the pressure to act so strong all the time is what kept him from getting treatment for his disease sooner. 

    My father fought and tried to stay alive.  He told my mom what he was planning.  My mom dragged him to the doctor, who told him he needed rest and a vacation.  At this point, he already had a plan.  He didn't need rest, he needed medical care.  He was dead within a week.  Who knows what Junior Seau did or who he reached out to or how he tried to stay alive?  We don't know the battles he fought and won, we just know the one he lost. 

    If he didn't reach out, it was probably for fear of being seen as weak, selfish.  Perpetuating this belief doesn't help keep people alive.  It shames them into hiding their disease.  I think the tough guy mentality is so dangerous here.  My dad was a tough guy - and I think part of that kept him from getting help for his disease sooner. 

    People don't kill themselves because of a relationship problems or problems at work or financial problems.  People kill themselves because depression robs them of the ability to react to these problems in a rational, healthy way.

  • I just SMH at the turn this thread took.
  • Overture, it's too bad you find offense in my calling Seau weak.  I'm most certainly not sorry though.

    ETA: that was meant for CallingAllAngels actually. 

    ETA2: Kinda interesting, this thread.  A lot of murderers turn out to be insane/sick, and I'm of the position in most of those cases that even the crazy suspect should be punished in full.  It's interesting that some of us (a few of us) are consistent there. 

  • imageKateAggie:

    Dylanite, I don't even know what else to say.

    I should save this thread for the next time someone says there isn't a stigma attached to mental illness anymore.


    :::nods:::

    Succumbing to a weakness, a lifestyle factor. Wow, it's too bad Jr was just pill popping for that over-diagnosed depression, right? 

    FWIW, Dyl, I do agree that many (most?) perpetrators of serious violent crimes are mentally ill. Like suicide, I don't believe a truly healthy brain is capable of murder, maybe save crimes of passion. I support a wider definition of the insanity defense and incarceration focused on rehabilitation, not punishment. But I know my position is rare, and I agree that it's inconsistent that sociopathy is not treated with the same compassion as other mental illnesses. 

     

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  • i'm very glad i missed the rampant ignorance of dylanite's argument yesterday. 

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  • imagelaurenpetro:

    i'm very glad i missed the rampant ignorance of dylanite's argument yesterday. 

    However ignorant it may appear to (or actually) be, I'm sorry that some people choose to be offended by mere speculation about an individual unrelated to their own experiences. I'll never understand why it's so common to strain one's self just so they can be offended by something that has nothing to do with them.

    Obviously that's not an apology for anything I've said, so I'm compelled to admit that it wasn't intended to be.

    Once we don't have to speculate (presuming facts come out to explain his train of thought and the reasons for them), I know my position will be forced to adapt to them.  I'll likely have a different position at that time.  But I'll be surprised if I cease from thinking he was weak for possibly succumbing to an illness that makes one weak. Weakness = weakness, no matter the cause.

  • imageMNVegas:

    I can't believe this, so sad. I really liked Junior and he had such a great smile.  Was just watching his mother speaking and could not help but cry.

    RIP, Junior. 

    I had to turn SportsCenter off because of this.  His mom made me ugly cry.

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  • imageodear:
    imageMNVegas:

    I can't believe this, so sad. I really liked Junior and he had such a great smile.  Was just watching his mother speaking and could not help but cry.

    RIP, Junior. 

    I had to turn SportsCenter off because of this.  His mom made me ugly cry.

    I heard her on the radio. Awful

  • I don't think there is anything wrong with calling it weakness.  I don't think weakness is necessarily a negative or positive thing; it just is.  We all have weaknesses, and we all sometimes succumb to those weaknesses.

    I tend to skew a bit toward Dylanite in this thread, which I'm sure will endear me to no one.  But I've had people in my life who have committed suicide, and I'm still angry, and I still think they were terribly selfish.  Particularly in the case of those who killed themselves in a gruesome way in the family home and left their loved ones to come home and find them; I find that unconscionable, and I don't care how ill they were.  My sister's FIL spent weeks updating his will and meeting with financial advisors and transferring bank accounts, planning for the well-being of his family after his death -- and then horrifyingly, shot himself in the face in the g*ddamn garage while his wife was out shopping, so that when she came home and opened the garage door, it was to discover blood and brains and gore covering the garage and her beloved husband sprawled headless on the f*cking floor.

    So yeah.  I judge.

    I have compassion for the deceased in that I hope they find peace, whatever the means; but I also have anger, and I also think the act of suicide is terribly and destructively selfish.  Particularly in the case of people who have support systems and families and therapists and any number of means for help at their disposal.

     

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  • LHC, your wording was much better than mine. I'm sure that has something to do with people's reaction to how I voiced my opinion. 
  • imageKateAggie:

    Adding to that, there is still a huge stigma when it comes to mental illness--and even moreso for men, who should just be able to power through it (in the eyes of many).

    It may seem selfish to you, but what I'm saying is that depression can push you to the point where you can't even acknowledge how your actions impact someone else, and it's not something you can control.

    Mental illness sucks, yo. 

    Yes. And it's a HUGE stigma in the African American community. Just pray. It'll be ok. Black folks are strong! Our ancestors survived slavery! You don't get to be weak minded. We watched a male friend of ours battle depression for almost two years. It was so hard to watch this once bubbly guy go to basically living in his car and being beyond slovenly. Like your H KA, thus guy's wife battled it with him. She made sure that he got on meds, checked him into a behavioral clinic. I shudder to think what would have happened if she didn't stand by him and made sure he got treatment.  

    image "There's a very simple test to see if something is racist. Just go to a heavily populated black area, and do the thing that you think isn't racist, and see if you live through it." ~ Reeve on the Clearly Racist Re-Nig Bumper Sticker and its Creator.
  • imagenitaw:

    Yes. And it's a HUGE stigma in the African American community. Just pray. It'll be ok. Black folks are strong! Our ancestors survived slavery! You don't get to be weak minded. We watched a male friend of ours battle depression for almost two years. It was so hard to watch this once bubbly guy go to basically living in his car and being beyond slovenly. Like your H KA, thus guy's wife battled it with him. She made sure that he got on meds, checked him into a behavioral clinic. I shudder to think what would have happened if she didn't stand by him and made sure he got treatment.  

    Yeah, black folks have a long way to go in acknowledging mental illness. For instance, my brother is diagnosed bipolar. My mom is a good mother and loves all of us but it simply never occured to her that his behavior were symptoms of mental illness and not just bad behavior. It never occurred to any of us actually. We just thought he was a stubborn kid and needed more discipline.

    As to LHC's point, yeah, it's definately a selfish act and I can understand the pain and anger people feel, particularly under the circumstances she related. I guess I just don't think suicidal people consider those things. There's something disordered and wrong in their thinking and you can tell that just by her example. There is nothing logical about taking care of the finances and putting your affairs in order and then leaving yourself to be found that way. None. My only explanation is that he obviously couldn't be thinking clearly.



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  • imagehindsight's_a_biotch:
    imagenitaw:

    Yes. And it's a HUGE stigma in the African American community. Just pray. It'll be ok. Black folks are strong! Our ancestors survived slavery! You don't get to be weak minded. We watched a male friend of ours battle depression for almost two years. It was so hard to watch this once bubbly guy go to basically living in his car and being beyond slovenly. Like your H KA, thus guy's wife battled it with him. She made sure that he got on meds, checked him into a behavioral clinic. I shudder to think what would have happened if she didn't stand by him and made sure he got treatment.  

    Yeah, black folks have a long way to go in acknowledging mental illness. For instance, my brother is diagnosed bipolar. My mom is a good mother and loves all of us but it simply never occured to her that his behavior were symptoms of mental illness and not just bad behavior. It never occurred to any of us actually. We just thought he was a stubborn kid and needed more discipline.

    As to LHC's point, yeah, it's definately a selfish act and I can understand the pain and anger people feel, particularly under the circumstances she related. I guess I just don't think suicidal people consider those things. There's something disordered and wrong in their thinking and you can tell that just by her example. There is nothing logical about taking care of the finances and putting your affairs in order and then leaving yourself to be found that way. None. My only explanation is that he obviously couldn't be thinking clearly.

    I don't know what his thought processes entailed, or whether or not he was thinking clearly enough -- but the fact that he was so meticulous, so detailed, about taking care of everything else, and then so callous and unthinking about the actual death makes me furious.

     

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  • imageKateAggie:
    Dylanite, with true sincerity, I hope you and your loved ones never have to deal with depression.  It's not always so fixable.

    KA, you are being far more understanding that I am right now.  Dyl, this is just uncalled for.  Maybe it's because I have a parent who made multiple suicide attempts but I find your comments callous and hateful.  Are you bored or something today?

    Go babies Caden!
  • imagelyssbobiss:

    imageKateAggie:
    Dylanite, with true sincerity, I hope you and your loved ones never have to deal with depression.  It's not always so fixable.

    KA, you are being far more understanding that I am right now.  Dyl, this is just uncalled for.  Maybe it's because I have a parent who made multiple suicide attempts but I find your comments callous and hateful.  Are you bored or something today?

    Maybe you found them callous and hateful because they were callous and hateful. I tend to be callous and hateful when emotionally reacting to things I hate.

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