For example, if 2 people are in a situation where only one person will be able to survive and one of them decides that they are too young to die, or they just don't want to, and decides to save themselves, that person would still be alive.
but living with the guilt of not saving the other person. At that moment, the person who
survived shouldn’t be held accountable for saving himself/herself because the other person most likely would’ve done the same thing but just didn’t act fast enough. The person who survived would be very glad he/she survived, but have had an extreme feeling of guilt. This makes one regret what they did immediately and wish that they could go back and save the other person. The thing is, we can’t. At the moment, you don’t think about your choices and …show more content…
The bystander is most likely going to pick the person he knows better. He can’t really be blamed for it, because either way, someone has to die, and he’s just making sure someone survives, and he’d rather it is one of his close friends. He most definitely feels guilty and like he
made the wrong choice guilty, but at the end of the day, he at least saved one instead of letting them both die because if he wasn't there, they probably would’ve both died. The person who was in the situation that survived, also most definitely felt guilty because he survived and not the other guy. Even though it was nobody’s fault, people tend to feel guilty and