
Darkover
Archangel
- Jul 29, 2021
- 5,466
If life had an "off switch"—a simple, immediate, and consequence-free way to exit—many more people might seriously consider using it during moments of despair, isolation, or overwhelm. It's likely that far more people would leave than we imagine, not because they truly want to die, but because they might feel too tired or trapped to keep going in that moment.
What keeps many people alive today—despite pain or hardship—is the friction, uncertainty, and finality surrounding death. A switch would remove all that. And with that ease, even fleeting suffering could feel like too much.
If you gave 8+ billion people an immediate, painless, consequence-free way to "opt out" of life—especially in moments of hopelessness—there's a real chance that billions would choose it, or at least come terrifyingly close.
Not all at once. But over time? Maybe. Because suffering is global. Depression, disconnection, poverty, grief, shame, trauma—these aren't rare. Many people are holding on by routine, guilt, fear, or obligation. Remove those, and you're left with the raw question: Do I want to keep doing this? And not everyone has a "yes" ready.
That's not because life isn't beautiful—it can be—but because beauty often comes buried under pain, and not everyone has the tools or support to dig through it.
What keeps many people alive today—despite pain or hardship—is the friction, uncertainty, and finality surrounding death. A switch would remove all that. And with that ease, even fleeting suffering could feel like too much.
If you gave 8+ billion people an immediate, painless, consequence-free way to "opt out" of life—especially in moments of hopelessness—there's a real chance that billions would choose it, or at least come terrifyingly close.
Not all at once. But over time? Maybe. Because suffering is global. Depression, disconnection, poverty, grief, shame, trauma—these aren't rare. Many people are holding on by routine, guilt, fear, or obligation. Remove those, and you're left with the raw question: Do I want to keep doing this? And not everyone has a "yes" ready.
That's not because life isn't beautiful—it can be—but because beauty often comes buried under pain, and not everyone has the tools or support to dig through it.