To Those Left Behind After a Suicide - Anxiety and Depre...

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To Those Left Behind After a Suicide

jimstitzel profile image
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So a little context here -- I wrote this a couple of months ago after a series of three suicides in a short period of time touched my life. Having been suicidal myself and nearly taking my own life 2.5 years ago, my brain started spinning and I ended up composing a large chunk of the following letter in my head while I was driving. I felt compelled to write it down as soon as I got home and ended up with what you're about to read. The crazy thing is, I wrote it with the surviving family members of a suicide victim in mind as my target audience, but a dear friend of mine reached out to me today -- one who struggles herself with severe depression and suicidal ideation and who is finding both made all the worse due to a friend of hers that recently took her own life -- and thanked me for writing the letter because it clarified for her something she'd never been able to express to her fiance or family. So I wanted to share it here with the hope that it will continue to help others. Feel free to share it as far and wide as you'd like, but if you do please include the link to the original post on my website (included at the end of the letter). Thanks for reading.

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To Those Left Behind After a Suicide,

First, please allow me to offer my sincerest condolences. It’s never easy to lose a loved one, whether it be illness or accident. It’s harder still to lose someone when it is a result of their own personal choice. That choice, that decision, feels like a betrayal — a betrayal to you, a betrayal to your family, a betrayal to everyone who ever cared about your loved one.

Maybe you’re still struggling through the shock of the incident. It’s not uncommon that suicide comes as a complete blindside to everyone. There are rarely ever any indicators, any tells, that give away the fact that a loved one is about to end their own life. You may be plagued with thoughts that if only you had paid more attention or listened more carefully or been available at a critical moment, all this pain could have been avoided because you could have gotten your loved one the help they desperately needed before it had come to this. Please try to assuage yourself of any such feelings of guilt or responsibility. Victims of suicide are masters of deception (and I don’t say this in a negative tone but merely as a point of fact), hiding any depression, anxiety, or other mental health condition they have dealt with that led to their decision to step away from life early.

I know you may also be angry with your loved one, furious even. It may be that you feel like their decision to take their own life was a personal attack on you, that they didn’t love you enough to stick around or trust you enough to come to you for help, that they dropped this mess right in your lap, expecting you to clean it all up. That is a perfectly normal and natural feeling. It’s part of grief. It’s part of loss. And it’s particularly poignant in the case of suicide because you suddenly feel abandoned by this individual you loved.

But, as someone who once very nearly took his own life, let me tell you that those who choose suicide rarely, if ever, do so as a way to attack or punish their own loved ones. They see ending their life, not as a betrayal, but as a deliverance. Their own suffering has been so great and so prolonged that they can’t help but feel like the greatest burden that could ever be placed upon their family and friends. They feel worthless and unlovable. They loathe and despise themselves, partly because this is what their brain has been telling them for years (and therefore feels like the most true thing they know) and partly because they have never been able to get over the hurdle of their own condition, no matter how hard they have tried. By this point, they have very likely been to counseling or therapy. They have tried medications, some of which might even have made them feel worse instead of better. They may have been institutionalized. Multiple times. Maybe they have tried self-medicating with drugs and alcohol. Or looked to hobbies or entertainment to stave off the suffering they feel, or at least distract them somewhat from it.

But ultimately, nothing has helped. They continue to suffer, often in silence, because they don’t want to talk about it. And not because they don’t want help. They do. They desperately want relief. But they also don’t want to be a burden. They already feel like a burden just for existing. This pain, it is their entire life, from start to finish. It is with them from the moment they wake up until the moment they drift into uneasy sleep. And even in sleep, it often follows them. To talk to others about it to the extent to which they experience it, well, in their opinion it would be an unconscionable burden to place on someone else’s shoulders. And so they don’t talk. They don’t share. They keep it to themselves, hidden inside. And they continue to suffer. In silence. Until they can bear it no more. Until they are certain that they are as much of a burden on everyone they care about as they are upon themselves. They become convinced that they are an anchor, an unbearable weight, and their mere presence is enough to drag their loved ones down into the same depths of pain and suffering they live with on a daily, hourly, minute-by-minute basis.

This is something you must understand in order to understand the reason why your loved one chose to leave the world, and you, behind forever. Unfortunately, this is not some great revelation that will ease your own pain right now. It will not change your feelings of betrayal or anger or resentment toward your loved one. But it might help place everything into a proper context and help you along the next days, weeks, months, and years as you try to make sense of this and heal.

Your loved one chose suicide over survival to find relief from their own suffering, yes — but also because they wanted to spare you additional pain and suffering. It is nearly impossible to think clearly in the depths of depression, of anxiety, of any mental health condition. Caught in those deep, dark depths, in those caverns of hopelessness, it feels perfectly and completely logical that taking one’s own life is the perfect solution. It relieves them of the burden of their own suffering, and it relieves the ones they love from the burden of themselves. They believe that in taking their own life, they are actually doing you a favor, and that can often be the tipping point that cements the choice to end their life.

It’s easy to call suicide a selfish act. It certainly feels like one to you, here and now. It feels to you like a coward’s way out. But I assure you it is nothing of the kind. It is desperation to find a solution for pain that has lasted for years — and nothing more. It is not intended to be a personal attack on you or on anyone else. It is, in fact, intended to be the exact opposite — protection for you from themselves. It’s deliverance for you from a burden you never asked for, a burden your loved one assumes you don’t want, certainly one you don’t need. By alleviating you of the burden that is themselves, they are freeing you up to live the life they feel like you should have, a life full of potential and possibilities without the anchor of their own presence and condition holding you back.

So please try not to think of suicide as an act of selfishness or cowardice. Think of it, instead, as a natural consequence of their condition. We who have survived prefer to think of it as an individual who died from suicide, not as someone who committed suicide. Just as someone who has Stage 4 cancer eventually dies because one or more of their physiological systems shuts down, someone who has a severe mental health condition may eventually die from suicide as a natural progression of their condition.

I know this letter probably provides you with very little reassurance and does little to ease the grief and pain you’re currently experiencing. It probably doesn’t help change your feelings toward the loved one you’ve lost. But I hope what it does is help provide you with understanding and maybe even a little context. And that may be key someday to helping you heal, to move on, and maybe even to reach out and help another before it becomes too late for them.

Know, too, that you are not alone in this. There are hundreds upon thousands of others who have been affected by suicide. There are support groups and organizations whose sole purpose it is to raise awareness about suicide, to reduce and eliminate the stigma surrounding mental health so that sufferers might have the courage to get the help they need. Find those groups, surround yourself with others who know what it’s like to go through what you’re currently experiencing, and support each other. The American Foundation for Suicide Prevention and Project Semicolon are two great places to start. Both organizations are on a mission to end suicide so no one else has to feel what you’re feeling right now. We’d love it if, when you’re ready, you joined us on the front lines of this battle.

Again, you have my deepest condolences, and I wish you much love, peace, and healing in the days to come.

Respectfully and sincerely,

A survivor

(Originally posted at jimstitzel.com/2018/11/to-t...

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11 Replies
CrochetCrazy profile image
CrochetCrazy

You hit the nail on the head with this. I feel the need to share it with some of my loves ones because this is how I feel every day, but still don't want to burden them with my crap.....

jimstitzel profile image
jimstitzel in reply to CrochetCrazy

Please do share! I hope it helps provides insight for them and encouragement for you.

kenster1 profile image
kenster1

hey im glad you posted that but more happier that you had second thoughts and chose another life path instead.that was your worst case scenario and now your here living proof that things can change.life may still be hard but its better than having no life at all.im a survivor as well of more than one attempt so glad I came through them.

jimstitzel profile image
jimstitzel in reply to kenster1

I was fortunate that a concerned friend intervened in my life in time before I could attempt. If she hadn't, I would have been dead within a week. That ended up being a major turning point for me, not to say that the last couple of years have been easy, because they've been anything but. I have to say, though, that the fight has been worth it, and I'm happy with my life now and happy with the person I've become.

butterfly2121 profile image
butterfly2121

Thank you for sharing that. I have also struggled to convey that message to many in my family. Last year I thought seriously about committing suicide but by the grace of God did not go through with it. So I consider myself a survivor because I have never had thoughts so strongly of going through like I did that time. I checked myself into outpatient center for group therapy to get myself out of that mindset and learned a lot about myself and coping techniques. I have suffered with depression and anxiety a long time. Shortly after I got through that my brother in law killed himself. I cried but had a much different reaction than most of his family. I understood. I understood the pain he felt and wanting to be out of it. Feeling like a burden. Feeling like things would never get better. My husband cried on the phone when he learned of it but the first words out his mouth were what a coward. My mother in law did not even shed a tear through the whole thing. I understand everyone shows their grief differently but one of her other sons asked her directly about her response because he could not understand it and she explained that she had to write him off a long time ago because she had basically given up on him. He wasn't taking care of himself physically...ie going to the doctor, dentist, never had enough money things like that. She said she just figured she would get the call one day that he had a heart attack. These responses hurt my heart something terrible and I still can't wrap my head around these reactions to suicide. I don't understand how a mother can ever give up on her child. I just don't. With my husband I tried so hard to make him understand one feels when they are that down. I am not sure if I have gotten through to him or not. But what you wrote exactly spot on. Even shortly after that other famous suicides like Kate Spade and the reporter who I cannot think of his name. When I saw the news of Kate Spade I literally bawled my eyes out. I don't know her. Never owned one of her purses. But to see that if affects everyone of every income level and that she even probably had all the resources to get help...well it just made me so very sad. I wish the stigma of mental health would get better and that people would understand it is just as if you are battling with any type of illness/disease. Again thank you for your post.

jimstitzel profile image
jimstitzel in reply to butterfly2121

Thank you for reading. And I'm very sorry to hear about your family's reactions. Unfortunately, they're very common. I've had to go it mostly alone with regard to my family because they don't get it, either. For my dad, it's simply a sign that I have sin in my life and basically just need more Jesus. I am a Christian, but I also know my own spiritual condition and know for a fact that my faith is strong. It's sad to me when family isn't supportive. I hope you'll share my letter with your husband. Maybe it will help him understand. Maybe it will help with your mother-in-law, too.

butterfly2121 profile image
butterfly2121 in reply to jimstitzel

I will share it with my husband. I hope it will help him. Because he also did not understand my own bought with it when it happened to me. He doesn't understand depression and anxiety. I do believe my marriage is significantly contributing to my depression and at some point I may have to get out of it until I can figure out what to do. I just do not know what that answer is yet. <3

More people should read this, any one who survived a suicide attempt will back up your words.

jimstitzel profile image
jimstitzel in reply to TheGirlWithGlasses

Thank you.

Mumma_h profile image
Mumma_h

Wow , as someone who has suffered with depression about 5 years ,and has just had it come back, I applaud you for your very truthful piece of writing. That's exactly how it is , I havnt attempted suicide but have desperately wanted the pain to go away and now that it's back its something I've been thinking about ( but getting help for )as I'm terrified of going through that day by day minute by minute agony that depression can be . You described it perfectly and as it's my first time on this website it helps to know there are people out there who get how awful it is . Thankyou for sharing

jimstitzel profile image
jimstitzel in reply to Mumma_h

I'm glad that this piece touched you and provided you with at least a little bit of a sense of community. I know one of the worst parts of depression is feeling alone and isolated, and it's hard to remember that there are others who go through the same thing every day. I'm also glad you're getting help. That's a very hard thing to do when you're caught in the throes of depression, but I'm proud of you for doing what you need to take care of yourself. I wish you much luck and healing, and you're always welcome to message me if you want or need someone to talk to.

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