@Tally and Xervello - heh, thanks, I was happy to write it.
I suppose I got a little caught up on the nature of these jobs and explaining why the guy's a jerk and how at the end of the day, other folks don't have a whole lot of reason to care about you. I think it's important not to blow him off as just another a-hole - and I'm glad some folks agree I'm not totally crazy for thinking that. I've said my piece on all this, I think (and coyote and Lea said it better than I, anyway).
So onto this blaming the victim thing. Again, without caveat - this is a dangerous mentality.
Some people do threaten or attempt suicide solely for attention, it's true. But by my understanding, at least,the
vast majority of the time, it's a decision predicated on false premises, and often in a less-than-rational state of mind. To me suicide is an acute result and while,
in a purely physical sense it's the fault of the victim, the important part is how they arrived at that intent.
That brings us to depression. It seems to be a common human quality to pretend that we're completely in control at every moment and that we know ourselves as the sum of our experiences, but that's not how it works. It's both easy and common to get caught up in the moment, assume the decision is a good one, and carry it out. With suicide that's always tragic.
The more I think about it, the more strongly I feel that playing the blame game is self-defeating. It seems to me that if one can recognize that one is suicidal or depressed, they are the
only person who can be at all expected to seek help. It is then upon them to accept that help and attempt to change - and I know how hard it can be to change oneself, and I can only imagine how much harder it is if one is insecure. If one fails to do that, do you call that the fault of the person, or the fault of their depression?
I'm not seeing an answer I can get behind. The two are just so intertwined.
As Tally said, there is a LOT of work to do... And that's all that matters. The only blame that'll really help is placed on brain chemistry, thinking patterns, or whatever you can change to fix it. Either you find it in you to work through all that, or you avoid it.
Finally;
Tally_Lyra said:
I guess I am too sensitive, too easily swayed, and not as able to think for myself as I thought, because I doubt myself too much. Not that I can't form an opinion, but the problem comes when I find I question that opinion endlessly.
From what I've seen, you're perfectly capable of thinking for yourself. I imagine that you really and truly do doubt yourself too much, but my opinion on opinions is they should rarely be set in stone. A lot of people cling to them far too dearly because thinking about them is inconvenient, hurtful, or whatever other unpleasantness. You shouldn't be completely wishy-washy, of course, and you clearly weren't - faced with this, you sought out more opinions, considered it, and (I assume) came to a conclusion that's a little less bleak and hopefully a lot more realistic.