Even in suicide or attempts at suicide, men are more violent than women. Men resort to guns, hanging, and leaping from buildings, while women tend to rely upon the less painful devices, such as sleeping pills, gas, and the like. That women generally don't want to succeed at suicide is evident: Out of the one hundred thousand unsuccessful attempts annually made in the United States 75 percent are by women. The female's attempt often dramatically represents a desperate cry for sympathy and understanding.
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Men are more impatient than women, and want to get things over in a hurry, presumably before reason sets in.
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The evidence indicates that in all times and in all societies the suicide rates have generally been significantly higher for men than for women. Women value life more than men do. Men, we have already seen, are likely to resort to more violent means of solving problems than women, and obviously this fact doesn't render them the better solvers. Women look to more reasonable means for the solution of their problems, with heart and compassion, completely contradicting the myth that females are emotionally weak.
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In the matter of who faces death with greater equanimity and genuine courage, Sergeant John Fiano, who for many years worked on death row at Sing Sing, is on record as saying, "Always, when there was more than one to be executed in one night, the weakest went first. The person with the strongest will goes last. In all my years at Sing Sing, women are always the last to go. They were much stronger emotionally than men."
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In studies of the fear of death that use self-rating scales, it has been found that women have a higher fear of death than men. This has been interpreted at its face value, but as Lester and Levene have pointed out, what may in fact have happened is that on these self-reporting scales men deny their fear of death, whereas women are more honest, or are more conscious of the fear of death than men. In an actual test, women show less fear of death, perhaps because they have less fear than men, or perhaps because, having faced the fear more honestly or consciously, they are able to cope with it more adequately. 14
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Medical men of considerable experience know that women bear pain much more uncomplainingly than men, and I have heard many surgeons remark that women make better patients
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