lol.
some cops showed up today to talk about my
suicidal facebook messages. but, the context in the messages is very
clear - i'm not currently suicidal. such an autonomous decision is
dependent upon the outcome of the odsp evaluation in september. i was
posting to prepare others for the eventuality. further, while i'm fairly
certain of the outcome, i'm actually holding out hope that it will be
extended. how can i be suicidal if i'm mutedly optimistic about the
future, and merely planning for the worst case should it actualize?
i've already posted my logic.
it's
always interesting explaining my coldly rational, detached perspective
to people that seem to think they have the ability to magically project
their desires onto reality.
but, you're giving up too soon! you're young!
it's
not a question of giving up. that's a subjective perspective. i'm about
analyzing data and coming to objective conclusions. my attitude doesn't
affect the data, which clearly demonstrates that my chances of finding
employment are exceedingly low. it has nothing to do with how i feel,
it's just what the data states.
but, you haven't tried.
sure
i have. that's how i built up my data set. why try further when the
data projects a high probability of failure? it would be *this*
behaviour that would be insane.
but that was in ottawa.
the
conditions here are worse than in ottawa. that's why i moved here. it
follows that i should spend even less time trying here.
you're just focusing on numbers and statistics, you just need to think positively and...
no.
i need to focus on data. your arguments are not convincing, because
you're not challenging the data, you're merely asking me to ignore it in
favour of magical thinking.
*frown*
i
tried to explain it, but they didn't get it. they did, however,
convince me to allow a nurse to come later today to talk to me.
btw:
the correct mathematical argument against my data-driven deductions is
to question whether employment data is dependent. if each process is
independent of the next, my conclusions collapse.
i
think there is some argument for this. in fact, it even follows that if
each process is independent then the probability of eventually finding a
job approaches one (because any non-zero probability implies at least
one success in infinitely many trials).
however, i'm
convinced that the challenges are related to personal character traits,
which makes each trial dependent on the last.