B
bri89
Guest
I am very interested in how living without “dignity” can affect the psyche; I genuinely believe that for some, prolonged humiliation can be psychologically unendurable, while others can abide it. I was strongly impacted by a story I once heard of how a Russian man who lost his livelihood chose to starve to death in the snow rather than beg for food. Beggary was too much of an affront to his dignity that he chose death instead. For me I am almost certain that I would commit suicide if I ever became homeless because of the subhuman way I would be regarded by others as well as the humiliation of having to scavenge or beg for food and having no access to showers or toilets. Could you endure the undignity(is that a word?) of begging for change in raggedy rank smelling clothes on a crowded street in a large metropolis? Could you endure the undignity and humiliation of a skin disease on your face that caused you no physical pain but was merely disfiguring and elicited stares everyday of your life? I know these are extreme states that are hard to imagine for some people, but please try to go there mentally.