To be fair, you made a claim that "mental health treatment has come an incredibly long way". And the only evidence you have offered to back that up is a vague personal anecdote.
The poster was simply providing their viewpoint on the state of mental health that differs from yours.
I understand these things can cause strong emotions, but you don't do yourself or your stance any favors by letting it get the best of you here.
I did something similar, but in reverse. Rather than give myself an arbitrary "death day", as the author did, I instead chose to make a life clock. It's just a display of my age in years, months, days, and seconds.
The advantage of this is that it is 100% true. There are no mental tricks you can play. Things like: I know my clock says 8500 days, but I'm sure I have more than that.
I find I get much the same feeling watching the values ever increasing as I would watching some arbitrary number increase. You're watching the grains of sand fall through the hourglass.
Let's take this idea to the extreme for a moment and see if you agree that it's a problem.
A new device is created that alerts 50% of the US population that they have a condition that needs to be treated. Only 10% of those cases warranted further action.
Do you imagine there would be adverse side effects of hospitals being overrun with patients that didn't need to be there?
How can you utterly fail to see a problem with an influx of false positives to an already overloaded healthcare system?
It sounds like you're the type of person to blame external factors for your own issues. Nothing you're saying counters the original advice.
Additionally, in the guitar example, you learned how to play and learned what it meant to own a decent guitar. Then, when presented with the opportunity to buy a new guitar: bought a crappy one, ignoring everything you had already learned about the instrument.
Given that you were so easily discouraged from learning the guitar, it's also equally likely that it wasn't something you were truly passionate about and gave yourself an excuse at every turn as to why you weren't progressing.
> You don't have much freedom if your lungs don't work.
Freedom and safety may not be polar opposites, but there's certainly tension between them. Many believe that you should have the freedom to decide what to do with your own lungs. The idea that you lose freedom because your lungs don't work seems to be a willful misinterpretation of the idea of freedom from government.
And did you expect asking this question here on HN to get you a real answer to your question? Or did you just feel like getting a quick internet ego massage?
Which part of it was historic? The part that we'd already done before, or all of the other parts that we'd already done before?
I guess if you consider funding coming from a source other than the government historic, then the launch was borderline mind boggling.
Agreed about "Bob and Doug". But then again the bravery, training, and talent of the astronauts weren't the focus of this launch. This was all about Elon and SpaceX.
Do you even understand the statement you're making?
By your account, the astronauts to knowing the controls of the spacecraft by heart is a negative. You honestly believe that a CHANGING INTERFACE is less of a cognitive load on an astronaut than a fixed, tactile one?
You also then must believe that we're sending human being s into space without them knowing the controls of the vehicle by heart. Does your mental model of spaceflight coincide with what it's like to learn how the HVAC works a new car when you buy it from the dealership?
The poster was simply providing their viewpoint on the state of mental health that differs from yours.
I understand these things can cause strong emotions, but you don't do yourself or your stance any favors by letting it get the best of you here.