Yeah, I didn't really get the significance of the title either - unless it has to do with life being a (temporary) prison for the victim?Is anyone else confused about the title of the episode though?
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Yeah, I didn't really get the significance of the title either - unless it has to do with life being a (temporary) prison for the victim?Is anyone else confused about the title of the episode though?
Yeah, I didn't really get the significance of the title either - unless it has to do with life being a (temporary) prison for the victim?Is anyone else confused about the title of the episode though?
Oh yeah the Danny/Flack take downs are getting a little played.
*sigh* What a guy wouldnt do for the girl he loves....:adore:he would in no way compromise an investigation if it involved someone he cared about. :guffaw: Seriously, Mac. Did you not chase Stella to Greece, barge in and take over a case where they had clear jurisdiction and then allow Stella to get rid of evidence???
Or a coworker with whom he has been FRIENDS for years.
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Originally Posted by Perfect Anomaly
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Originally Posted by Lori K.
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he would in no way compromise an investigation if it involved someone he cared about. :guffaw: Seriously, Mac. Did you not chase Stella to Greece, barge in and take over a case where they had clear jurisdiction and then allow Stella to get rid of evidence???
*sigh* What a guy wouldnt do for the girl he loves....:adore:
Or a coworker with whom he has been FRIENDS for years.
exactly.
Sometimes it is as simple as getting put on the right medication. I was diagnosed with depression 11 years ago after two suicide attempts and therapy was zero help. I've been on Zoloft/sertraline since. I haven't really seriously considered killing myself in years now. I went off my meds once and even my grandmother noticed that my behavior was changing. Depression often is just genetics (my mother thinks her mother suffered from a less severe form of depression), it's an imbalance of chemicals in the brain and medication can for the most part help to correct the issue.Fixing depression and suicidal behavior isn't as simple as going to the doctor and getting some pills. Sure, the pills can definitely help regulate brain chemistry and stabilize moods, but most folks need more intensive help than that, and often, finding the right dosages of the right medications takes time. You don't just take a pill and feel better in the morning, lalala. It takes time and determination, dedicated doctors, and support from family and friends, and poor Eduardo, who saw how his image-conscious mother reacted to his father's suicide, and who was ignored by everyone when he tried to discuss his own depression, certainly didn't have that. Even his girlfriend, who loved him very much and tried to support him and encourage him to seek help fell into the trap of "You're young and sexy and successful, so what's wrong with you?"
In most cases, suicide isn't a snap decision. It's one that bubbles at the base of the brain for a while, where it grows and takes root until the depressed person is pushed past the point of no return. It's the smothering weight of years of feeling worthless and loveless and hopeless and the horror of knowing you could live like this for the next fifty years. I had a moment like this in college. I was twenty years old and struggling with the cold reality of my disability, and it suddenly struck me that I was going to have to live with that reality for the next thirty, forty, fifty years. No respite, no days off, no possibility of getting better. The weight of those long years was crushing, and I dissolved into hysterics in my dorm room. I wasn't sure I could do this, or if I even wanted to. Fortunately for me, the girl across the hall was a paraplegic who knew exactly what I was going through, and she was there for me that night. She let me vent and give voice to that rage and fear. Who knows what might have happened if she had ignored the sounds coming out of my dorm room, what awful, stupid, pain-wracked ideas might have taken root?
And that's wonderful for you, but it doesn't work that way for everyone, and for Mac to handwave away the complexity of depression and suicidal thoughts as nothing more than a moral failing was ridiculous and inexcusable.
If Mac's middle American commonsense morality, which seems petty to some, but is a breath of fresh air to others, is used to counterbalance TPTB's message, which seems to be to allow suicide minded people to just kill themselves instead of trying every sort of intervention including being institutionalized in order to help protect themselves from themselves, then I say more power to HIM (Mac, that is).
If Mac's middle American commonsense morality, which seems petty to some, but is a breath of fresh air to others, is used to counterbalance TPTB's message, which seems to be to allow suicide minded people to just kill themselves instead of trying every sort of intervention including being institutionalized in order to help protect themselves from themselves, then I say more power to HIM (Mac, that is).
Mac is hardly pompous; he is the salt of the earth, a down to earth person, a man of integrity. I admire him.
But these scenes of NYC ? Probably could find the same sort of clubs in major cities in Europe as well. When I try to look at them from an outsider's view they seem to be representative sadly of the all the criticism about decadence and degeneracy that outsiders claim that they don't want in their countries...