Dec 9, 2015 I consider you a good user but that post felt extremely demagogic @Zlitchufdux Maybe that was the intention but this is not the answer
Dec 9, 2015 Not the intention to be any way like a demagogue. I went through this with an encouraging outlook. I know how we can drown in our surroundings and truly not really see how good our life is. We forget everything outside of our own little bubble. But sometimes we need to know our life really isn't so bad and we need to appreciate it more often. I understand that there is influence surrounding people and getting into their head. Ideas, worries and so on. But life isn't all that bad. It is truly worse that what we have. Like I mentioned to him, I've been to the bottoms of the dirt and back and even then I appreciated what I had and for what little I did have, it pushed me to be better and build myself. Suicide is far from the answer. I need him to see that. I also tried to cover the bases because I know that suicide comes from multiple thoughts from multiple angles and whatever is tackling him, it is good to see that it is temporary and not as bad as he thinks because some people live in permanent bad situations. Maybe I went a bit overboard, but when I was writing it, I wrote with only the best intentions. I don't know him, but if he asked, I would skype that dude right now and lose sleep to help the guy.
Dec 9, 2015 Post got deleted due to some adsense stuff. Well, d---, I figured he was young, not that young though. Regardless, life isn't as bad as he thinks. He has to break out of that bubble of his. He has to see things he hasn't seen before (not as graphical as I posted) but, go look at the homeless in his town or poverty areas. I am sure he passes them sometimes somewhere. It is just learning to appreciate what we have and who is in our life is an important milestone to reach. We see that we do have things and people to live for and that we are being relied on by others in life.