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[–] 6447505? 0 points 5 points (+5|-0) ago  (edited ago)

It's hard for me as someone who has a history of mental illness to not stop and read this. You want to see yourself be someone as respected and admired as robin, but at what cost? I hope he's in a better place now.

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[–] Baconmon 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

Do you mean admired? "admonish" means to scold some one..

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[–] 6452808? 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago  (edited ago)

Yeah I do sorry. I don't even know how I know that word and the word I was looking for is adorned but that doesn't work as well as admired.

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[–] 6448095? ago  (edited ago)

According to the article, the disease seemed to have a very fast onset. The symptoms first really started to appear in October 2013, the mental fog got bad enough that he was unable to remember a single line for filming of Night at the Museum 3 in April 2014 (despite the fact that "just 3 years prior he had played in a full 5-month season of the Broadway production Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo, often doing two shows a day with hundreds of lines—and not one mistake"), and had apparently experienced "all of the 40-plus symptoms of LBD" (including hallucinations) before the disease ultimately made him take his own life.

He had decades of experience spreading happiness to those he met (and those who simply saw his performances) before this cure-less disease stole his mind.

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[–] Mr_Sir ago 

I do like the sound of static. Sorry, for your hard times, it sucks.