

This doesn't really do much in terms of answering the question. Then there are the fantasies about doing some sex stuff before your life is painlessly extinguished-a heart attack at the orgasmic conclusion of a blowjob, say, or (as in the video above), being chased off a cliff by topless models (spoiler).
#EASIEST WAY TO KILL YOURSELF REDDIT MOVIE#
First of all there's the one in which a person dies gloriously in battle-a notion so silly it has an entire movie genre dedicated to criticizing it. It's tough to nail down what people mean when they talk about the "best" way to die, but I'll start by entertaining some of the popular fantasy death notions. NSFW Warning: The video above features the naked boobs of human women

But what's the best way to go? Naturally, by asking that question in the title, I'm begging to be accused of exploiting the googling habits of the severely depressed. It turned out it was basically anything that's slow and leaves you in a hospital bed for your final days. So what is it?Ī few months ago, our colleagues at Motherboard tackled the opposite question, asking what the worst way to die is. There must be a better way to leave the world behind. Cancer eats your body away from the inside and leaves you a husk of a human. Seemingly everyone in the entire world, many of whom have seen someone die horribly of cancer, immediately called Smith an idiot. You can say goodbye, reflect on your life, leave last messages, perhaps visit special places for a last time, listen to favorite pieces of music, read loved poems, and prepare, according to your beliefs, to meet your maker or enjoy eternal oblivion. Richard Smith wrote on the British Medical Journal website that dying of cancer-of all things-was the best way to go. Naylor, a psychiatrist at the University of Illinois at Chicago, said the site could persuade some posters that suicide is an acceptable solution to their problems.Last week, Dr. A few days after posting those words, he pointed a shotgun at his head and pulled the trigger. Sometimes I feel so alone, but I feel a little better reading other people's posts,"* wrote 26-year-old Andrew Kurtz in October 1996.

In an effort to force some posters to reconsider a permanent solution to what may be a temporary problem, Wiser sends them gory photos of suicide victims and engages other newsgroup participants in private e-mail and phone conversations. Often you find that these people are just reacting to the moment and they want someone to talk to."Ī survivor of two suicide attempts himself, Wiser says he believes suicide is acceptable in certain circumstances, but does not approve of what he calls the "cavalier attitude toward death" some younger Ashers exhibit. "Other people on the group just second their opinion and don't question their motives. "The gripe with me is that I ask questions, I want to know why they want to die," said Doug Wiser, a 60-year-old retired businessman from Southern California. The one Asher - as newsgroup regulars call themselves - who confronts other posters about the reasons they want to die is consistently scorned.
