Do you know anyone who has a chronic problem but who seems to actually WANT the problem to get worse, and even seems to WANT to be on disability?
Someone close to me is behaving this way and I've never felt so frustrated in my life. I have diabetes and I know how much you have to putz and fuss with diet and keeping track of meds and stuff but dang, I want to continue to BE healthy and to LIVE healthy, ya know?
Help me understand why someone wouldn't want to stay healthy......especially when this person is only 30 years old.
I find it very difficult to have compassion or sympathy for this person when all they're doing is making the problem worse than it has to be. They will die from this problem and it will happen much much sooner because they don't seem to give a doodle. I just don't get it.

I have an aunt that is like this. For years and years, she has had a problem with her weight and is quite a large woman. Granted, she does have some sort of very mild mental disability, but she can read, write, and attend to her own needs of daily living quite well; however, she lives with my grandmother (grandfather passed away almost 8 years ago) and needs someone to take care of her finances (she does not work and I'm not sure if she receives any sort of financial aid from the government).
She knows that eating junk is unhealthy, but she buys it anyway. My cousins and I would find junk food wrappers hidden under her bed. When she goes out, she buys junk food. She does not eat very healthy foods at family dinners. My grandmother's sight is very poor, so she does not see what is going on with my aunt. My grandmother, mother and aunt have devoted
countless hours taking her to doctors, specialists, the hospital...yet she continues to eat, not exercise and is basically killing herself. Her legs have become so bad that they have swelled to the point that she can barely walk, and her knees have suffered as well. She knows that she has family that cares about her, but she is very stubborn. It doesn't help that my grandparents basically coddled her her whole life (they both worked), and she does have that very mild mental disability, so I'm not sure if her "refusal" to help herself is because of that or because of some sort of psychological problem.
It is one of the most frustrating things I think someone can go through, seeing someone who is ill and refuses to help themselves. I have had relatives and friends diagnosed with various illnesses, and some of them fight tooth and nail for their lives, with all they have, only to slowly wither away and die leaving a spouse and 2 kids. Then, I see my aunt, who has a large,
very supportive family and, thanks to my late grandfather who owned a very successful business, the financial means to get better (so this is in no way about worrying if there is enough money). My mother probably cares more about her sister's health than she does, because my mother sees what toll this is taking on my grandmother, who will be 85 this summer and who basically acts as my aunt's nurse (again, my grandmother is of the mindset that "Family takes care of family" and will not hire a health care aide).
In the end, I guess I can only say that I just don't get it either. She is my aunt, my mother's sister, my granparents' daughter, but it is so hard sometimes to like her, seeing how she is slowly killing herself. I find it
very difficult to have any compassion or sympathy for her either. Would I ever not stand behind her when she needed help? No way; I would be there 100% because she is family. However, I think that, based on how she's lived her life, I have the right to be frustrated, whether or not that is warranted.