I think the term 'abuse' implies intent. Not necessarily to die, though.
It's like someone thinking they can fly so they jump on a cliff. They didn't intend to die, but it certainly wasn't accidental that they jumped.
I would equate it more with driving too fast. Your
intent is to get where you're going. Not to lose control of the car, not to crash, and not to kill yourself or someone else. It may be risky, it may even be none too smart. But it's certainly not delusional (like thinking one can fly & jumping off a cliff.) And
probably 99 times out of 100 you'll get away with it and reach your destination with no harm done. After all, you've driven the route, at that speed, 100 times, you know every curve & bump, it's a chance you're willing to take.
And then there's that
one time -- the one time an animal darts in front of you, you hit a spot that looks wet but is really black ice, another driver stops short in front of you, you cough, you sneeze, you're distracted by your phone ringing or something your passenger says...etc., etc., etc..........and you lose control & wreck your nice car. Maybe you die. Worse, maybe someone else dies. Are you
responsible for what happened? Of course! But by no stretch of the imagination is it
deliberate. That's why they're called "accidents!"
I didn't know Heath Ledger. I certainly don't know his parents, or his history. But it's entirely possible that he knew what sleep problems he was having, and
thought he knew how much of whatever meds it would take to knock himself out for a few hours. Maybe it was the same combo he took 99 times before. And then there's that
one time -- maybe he had a cold or a stomach virus. Maybe he took one extra pill. Maybe it was a new prescription and the dosage had been raised & he didn't realize it (that actually does happen, more than you know.) It could have been any one of hundreds of things that made this that
one time he fell asleep and didn't wake up. Responsible? Sure. Accident? Yes!
About 10 years ago I was having frequent, horrible headaches. They came with a greenish aura, tunnel vision, & extreme sensitivity to sound. My mom has a history of migraines; my sisters have a history of migraines; mine must be migraines, right? They all take Imitrex with good results; ought to work for me, right? So, I come down with the headache one day at work, and a good friend lets me try her Imetrix. I went home sick at lunchtime & lay down to try to sleep off the headache, after taking Cathy's Imetrix. Well, I went to sleep all right! For about 20 minutes. Then I woke up in terror realizing I had stopped breathing! I don't know for how long. I was also aware that my heart rate had dropped (can't remember the actual number now, but it was pretty damn slow.) I forced myself to stay awake and called my husband. He came home from work a little early & sat & watched me until the effects of that damn pill wore off. I made the poor man
watch me sleep and make sure I kept breathing!!! And wake me up every half-hour. BTW, -- it did get rid of the headache, but what a price to pay!
I finally went for a checkup & told my doctor about the headaches, & about my bizarre reaction to the Imetrix. She told me that drug can have side effects that mess with the heart in some patients (actually, I already knew that but never thought I'd be one of those patients!) She examined me & found out that my blood pressure was pretty dangerously high. So, she put me on the proper meds & got my blood pressure under control. And guess what? Those horrible headaches went from one or two a week to one or two a
year! And I can tell you that no matter what kind of headaches I get, I'll never take an Imetrix again!
But if the worst had happened & I hadn't woken up, it would still have been an
accident! Abuse? Well, yeah -- I took a medication prescribed for someone else, intending to cure a headache. Oh....my doctor also said she might have tried me on Imetrix for the infrequent migraines I still get, if we didn't already know that I have severe side effects! Now -- if I'd taken it as a
prescribed medication, as directed, and suffered a fatal side effect -- I guess that would have been accident but no abuse. Same unfortunate outcome though!
to moving the family to a different city to force a change in friends the child hangs around with (I talked to people who have done this). I wouldn't say a parent who didn't take the radical action such as moving are poor parents, but if a child continued to associate with the wrong crowd and ends up getting in trouble or killed, that parent should understand that it was an option that they didn't take.
Do you truly not realize that you can find "the wrong crowd" just as easily on Park Avenue as on a park bench?????? If a kid is looking for trouble, it'll find him/her! The main difference is that the kids from Park Avenue have more $$$$$$ and get into a more expensive brand of trouble! And I don't just mean $$ or "the better neighborhood" or 'burbs vs. city or private school vs. public. I won't get into another
long personal story, but I can assure you I did learn this from experience, as did my parents.
One thing I will say about sending your child to "a nice private (or a nice religious) school" to get them away from that proverbial "wrong crowd" --a goodly number of the
other kids at that "nice school" are there for
the same reason!!! Honey, we
were the wrong crowd, and proud of it
And I was smart enough to do a lot of that unwise stuff in a way that my parents wouldn't have been able to have one clue at all.
LOL, I have a sister who was like that. She got up to way more stuff than I
ever did, but was much more discreet. She was picked up several times for skipping school/underage drinking. Back then, it was just a fine, no real bad repercussions like loss of driving*. So, she marched on up to the local deli & got herself a job as a waitress. And got her older married sister (me!) to drive her up to the District Court to pay her fines. My parents were so proud of their smart enterprising daughter, going and getting a job to earn her own spending money! To this day, our mom doesn't know about all those fines she had to pay. Sis is paying for it now in Karma though; she has a pretty wild teenage daughter! And not a clue how to deal with the open rebellion (more my style back then), because her own rebellion was much more sneaky. BTW, about halfway thru her freshman year of college she slowed way down on the partying, and is now in her late 40s a very moderate drinker.
*One more short story -- I did a lot of my own underage drinking with kids from the School for Blind Children (my boyfriend's roommate was legally blind & a graduate of there.) I always wonder how the heck the state would punish
them for underage drinking, if this were occurring today instead of 30-some years ago! Obviously, suspension of driving privileges would be out of the question!
ETA: I was probably in the process of writing this when BIT posted his good/bad drivers analogy. I did not see his post till I was finished. Great minds 'n' all that!