Stubbornness Is Not Freedom — When Mental Illness Steals the Chance to Live

As Christmas approaches, many of us begin reflecting on family, loss, and the meaning of life. This year, I found myself thinking not about clinical diseases—the ones we can see in blood tests or scans—but about a different kind of illness. One that hides behind emotions, beliefs, spiritual confusion, and fear.

I’m talking about mental illness.
About the invisible forces that distort reality, alter priorities, and sabotage life-saving decisions.

This year, I learned this lesson in the hardest, most heartbreaking way.


2025: The Year I Couldn’t Save Someone I Loved

Someone very dear to me was diagnosed with cancer.
A disease that, with the right doctors and treatment plan, is often survivable.

They had access to good medical care.
They had the right medications, a supportive oncology team, and a healthcare system ready to help.

But none of it mattered.

Because what we don’t talk about enough is this:

Cancer is treatable.
Delusion is not.

When a person’s mind is clouded by paranoia, fantasies, fears, spiritual confusion, or emotional turmoil, even the clearest medical facts become impossible to accept.

And I watched this unfold in real time.


When Delusions Become “Freedom”

We live in a culture that glorifies absolute personal freedom — even when it becomes self-destructive.

But stubbornness rooted in mental instability is not freedom.
It is a pathological form of freedom that comes from a mind detached from reality.

True freedom requires:

  • mental competency
  • rational thinking
  • the ability to understand consequences
  • the capacity to make informed decisions

Without these, “freedom” becomes a form of illness.

And sadly, someone always takes advantage of those who are mentally fragile.

Always.

This is not God’s will.
This is human manipulation, fear, and exploitation.


The People Who Encouraged Her Delusions

What hurt even more was seeing certain people around her encourage the delusions — sometimes out of denial, sometimes for selfish reasons.

They supported ideas that were not grounded in reality.
They minimized medical facts.
They fed the fantasy because it served them.

This isn’t love.
This isn’t support.
This is neglect wearing a mask of compassion.

Their influence didn’t heal her.
It killed her.


In Another Society, She Might Have Lived

I can’t stop thinking about this:

Would she still be alive if she lived in a society that protected vulnerable people better?

A society:

  • without corruption
  • without manipulative family dynamics
  • without predators hiding behind religion or business
  • without the stigma around mental illness

In a healthier environment, she might have accepted treatment.
She might have fought.
She might still be alive.

But instead, toxicity consumed her — and she died believing she was making a “free choice.”


A Light in the Darkness: Spain’s Healthcare System

Despite everything, I want to acknowledge something important:

Spain has one of the best healthcare systems I’ve ever encountered.

The medical teams were:

  • highly professional
  • coordinated
  • compassionate
  • equipped with excellent resources
  • dedicated to saving lives

They were ready to help her.
But you can’t treat someone who refuses treatment — even when their refusal is shaped by mental illness.

The law protects autonomy, even when that autonomy is distorted by delusion.


The Painful Truth

You can fight cancer.

You cannot fight a mind lost in delusion.

You cannot force someone to choose life when their illness convinces them otherwise.

And you cannot save someone who interprets dying as freedom.


Stubbornness Is Not Freedom

I know what freedom is.
I know what it isn’t.

Freedom is:

  • making informed decisions
  • understanding reality
  • choosing life when life can be saved
  • protecting your future

Anything else is not freedom — it’s suffering disguised as independence.

And it can cost a life.

When Cancer Meets Mental Health in a Broken System: A Story of Love, Pain, and Urgency

This is the story of my sister, battling cancer and mental illness in a toxic family and broken healthcare system. A story of love, heartbreak, and the urgent need for advocacy and support.

Have you ever cared for someone battling both cancer and a mental health condition?
Have you ever watched a loved one — someone whose history, pain, and messy life you know intimately — slip through your fingers, trapped by disease, manipulation, and neglect?

If you have, then you know what it feels like to live in HELL.

I come from a country where healthcare is still crippled by corruption, neglect, and underfunding. Oncology and mental health care barely exist in a professional, reliable form. Vulnerable people become prey, and predators — narcissists, manipulators, and psychopaths — thrive.

This is not abstract. This is my reality.

My mother died in such a system — fragile, sick, manipulated, abandoned. And now my sister is facing the same cruel intersection: cancer, mental illness, and a toxic family ready to exploit her vulnerability.


When Two Battles Collide

Cancer is devastating. Mental illness is overwhelming.
But when both exist in one person, the suffering multiplies.

My sister needs professional cancer care and mental health support to survive. She could have it here, in a healthcare system built for fairness, safety, and compassion.

But she refuses. Her mental struggles push her to deny reality, cling to the comfort of “home,” even though home means neglect, abuse, and inevitable decline.

She chooses comfort over survival — and the predators around her encourage this choice.

I have watched this pattern before, with my mother. I fear the same outcome: a slow, preventable death in the hands of those who pretend to care.


Two Paths. Two Fates.

There are two possible futures:

  • Path one: Stay in her home country, surrounded by toxic family and a broken system. She may die in her home, clinging to a delusional version of happiness.
  • Path two: Stay here, where professional care is available. But survival would mean humility, therapy, renting a home, accepting help, and confronting her fears. She refuses this path because it feels too foreign, too hard, too humbling.

And so I watch her drift toward the first fate — toward the same outcome as our mother.


The Heartbreak of Witnessing

As a nurse, I know the path to survival.
As her sister, my heart shatters every day.

Who am I to decide what is right for her? She has the right to live her life, even if that life leads to denial and exploitation.

But how can I stand by and watch history repeat itself? How can I watch her walk into HELL — the same HELL that claimed our mother?

Narcissistic predators will never help their victims.
A corrupt, broken system cannot protect them.

And yet, here I am, powerless.


The Truth About Mental Health

Let me say it clearly:

Mental illness is not freedom. It is not a separate world. It is a disease of the brain — anatomical, functional, or both — and it can be treated.

A healthy family and a strong healthcare system can lift someone from despair.
A toxic family and a broken system will destroy them.

People struggling with mental health deserve dignity, care, and protection, not manipulation.


What Can We Do?

I do not have all the answers.
I am torn between the professional knowledge of a nurse and the heart of a sister watching someone she loves suffer.

All I can do sometimes is sit with a coffee, talk to rational people, and remind myself: I am not alone in this fight.

If you are reading this, here’s what we can do together:

  • Share stories. Awareness is the first step toward change.
  • Speak with healthcare professionals. Honest conversations can open doors to real care.
  • Join support networks. Cancer and mental health communities offer guidance and strength.
  • Contact advocacy groups. NGOs amplify voices and fight systemic injustice.
  • Reach policymakers. Letters, petitions, and calls highlight the need for systemic reform.
  • Build community. Together, we protect the vulnerable.

Silence protects abusers and broken systems. Speaking up protects those who cannot protect themselves.


Resources That Can Help

🌍 Mental Health Support

🎗️ Cancer Support

📢 Advocacy & Human Rights


A Call to the Heart

Yes, this story is painful.
Yes, it is filled with loss, injustice, and despair.

But it is also a call to action.

A call to speak.
A call to act.
A call to build systems where those with cancer and mental illness are treated with dignity — supported with care — and never abandoned.

💡 Let us create a world where mental illness is treated, cancer care is a right, and no one has to choose between dignity and survival.

We may not save everyone, but we can raise our voice for those who cannot.

Human Population in a Crazy World

Today, I looked around at every single person around me, including myself. WE ARE CRAZY! A whole population of crazy people. How do you feel about it?

Take the list of mental disorders in the DSM-IV and DSM-IV-TR and attach a people name to each one.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mental_disorders_in_the_DSM-IV_and_DSM-IV-TR

You will see that WE ARE ALL CRAZY.

Print this list and walk on the street, at work, at school, with your friends, doctors, lawyers, teachers, police officers, workers, social staff, politicians, talk with them, look at them and you will see EACH AND EVERY ONE OF THEM IS CRAZY! Including YOU!

Photo by Lu00e9o Vinu00edcius on Pexels.com

How do you feel about it?

Your doctor is anxious, your shrink is psychopathic, your surgeon has alcohol dependence, your nurse has C-PTSD, your care aide is bipolar, your intelligence officer is suicidal, your father is narcissistic, your mother is depressive, your teacher has Tourette’s, the police officer has OCD, and the social worker has gender dysphoria. The customer service worker is drug addicted.

How about your top ranked political leaders? Or about your church leaders? Or your Generals? NAME IT!

We are CRAZY. Because we NORMALIZED SOCIAL CRAZINESS.

And the population is going down because we are crazy. And it is NOT our fault.

We were born NORMAL. The family group and this MESSED UP society with normalized craziness did it!

Fix the society, and it will fix people. HOW can we fix a CRAZY society, where craziness is NORMALIZED?

Unless you want babies conceived in vials and grown in artificial wombs and educated by human algorithms, please save NORMALITY and humanity.

Photo by Chokniti Khongchum on Pexels.com

Craziness is not normal.

We need NORMALITY! And we need to groom, promote and develop NORMALITY, not CRAZINESS.

See the link. Print it and look around you. How many crazies do you spot around you today?

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