> Again, there is literally no thing on Earth that can stop you from acting with dignity.
Nothing except serious illness.
Involuntarily vomiting your guts out is not dignified. Being paranoid and acting on your bizarre delusions is not dignified. Ranting on and on about the same things every few minutes because your short-term memory is gone is not dignified.
Maybe your definition is different from mine. Try to apply it the next time you see and smell a homeless person mumbling to themselves in public.
My statement was overly general; when something affects your mind, that's a whole other area - life advice is necessarily useful only to those who can act on it, unfortunately. There are also those who have been so forgotten by society that they have no dignity left, and that's our failing collectively.
However, with something like disease that leaves your mind unharmed, I suppose the dignified way to go is assisted suicide, though honestly I probably wouldn't choose to act with dignity in that situation. Though it's clear that many people do, since assisted suicide is even a topic.
Nothing except serious illness.
Involuntarily vomiting your guts out is not dignified. Being paranoid and acting on your bizarre delusions is not dignified. Ranting on and on about the same things every few minutes because your short-term memory is gone is not dignified.
Maybe your definition is different from mine. Try to apply it the next time you see and smell a homeless person mumbling to themselves in public.