September
is National Suicide Prevention Awareness Month and today is World Suicide
Prevention Day. A day designed to reach out to those affected by suicide and
raise awareness. More information is available at http://www.nami.org/suicideawarenessmonth/hp
.
I will start off by saying that I
am not a medical or clinical professional, I am just one woman armed with
facts, opinions and personal experience. Nothing that say here today should be
taken as the diagnosis or treatment of an illness. If you suspect that you have
a mental illness please seek out a medical or clinical professional. If you are
contemplating suicide please reach out to a friend, lover, religious person, The
National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255) or call 911
immediately.
Comedians Robin Williams and
Richard Jeni have something in common, and it is not that fact that they were
both funny men, it is the fact that they both committed suicide. Robin Williams
August 2014 death brought a host of opinions from people, some people called it
tragic, where others called him selfish or a coward. These reactions are not surprising
considering the stigma that is placed on mental illness. Now I am not going to
go on a big rant about stigma, I have done that here before. I just want to
talk about suicide, its myths, some facts and my own personal experiences.
Myth one: Suicide is Uncommon
That
sad, but true fact is that it is more common than we think it is. In 2014 alone
9 million adults had serious thoughts of suicide, 2.7 million made suicide
plans, 1.3 million attempted suicide, and 40,000 died by suicide. That breaks
down to one suicide every 13 minutes, one veteran commits suicide every hour.
More people died by suicide in 2014 than by automobile accidents. So as you can
see it more common than one would think. I have known five people in my life
that have committed suicide and all them did it before I turned 25, which may
not seem like many but when you consider that they all took place between the
ages of 13-25, five people in 12 years is nothing to shake a stick at.
Myth Two: Shake it Off
I have
to admit that I am guilty of telling a quasi-suicidal friend that they just
needed to “buck up and get over it.” Take in mind I was a much different person
back then. There is however a largely held belief that a person who is
contemplating suicide just needs to “think happy thoughts” or “Pull it together”
and that is simply just not true. A vast majority of those who attempt or
commit suicide are suffering from a mental illness, such as schizophrenia,
bipolar disorder, or major depression. Those are not diseases that can be cured
with “happy thoughts.” Mental Illness is a contributing factor in 90% of
suicides and the risk of suicide increases more than 50% in individuals
experiencing depression. You must
remember that mental illness affects the brain and its pathways, meaning that
suicidal thoughts or actions are due to chemical misfires in the brain in most
cases. Now I’m not saying that every person to commit suicide has a mental
illness, but even those who don’t have a mental illness still need professional
help, a suicidal thought, or suicide plan is not something one can simply “walk
off.”
Myth Three: Only Cowards or Selfish People commit Suicide
For many
who commit suicide they are so deeply depressed that they feel that their
removal from the world will ease the burden on their loved ones. They feel that
they are being helpful or for some people they feel that no one will miss them so
their death will be no great loss. Despite what many people think suicide is
not a well thought out action, in fact 25% of those who attempt suicide do so
within five minutes of their initial decision, and more than 70% do so within
the first hour. This is the time when a person is not thinking clearly, they
don’t see this as taking the easy way out, they see it as the only way out.
Suicide is not an action about crying out for attention, nor is it something
done to purposely hurt someone else. I can say this because I have been there.
My story
I didn’t do it for attention, I
really thought the world was going to be a better place without me. I was 18,
and was in a really bad relationship, not physically abusive, but mentally and
emotionally abusive. I was in a really bad place because we had just bought a
house, and I really wasn’t sure how to leave. I just knew that the decisions
that I had made had been terrible, and that my existence was making the world
terrible for everyone else. So one night at the height of my depression I was
home alone and I decided that the world would be a better place without a
fuck-up like me, and proceeded to swallow the better part of a bottle of Aleve.
I got very lucky, because I got very sick and I threw up every pill that I took,
passed out, and slept for the first time in three days. Within a week I was out
of a bad relationship, living somewhere new, still depressed, but I knew I
needed help and I was working on getting that. I was lucky that I threw up, I
was lucky that I woke up the next day, and I was very lucky that I didn’t end
up in the hospital. It was almost a year before I told anyone what really
happened that night, and now I’m happy to tell the story, because I want others
to understand what it’s like to reach that point. I was also lucky to have
someone around who helped me through my depression and was there for me to
reach out to. That night was not the first time I had suicidal thoughts, it was
just the first time I acted on them. So I can say from experience it is usually
a rush decision.
Final Thoughts
Suicide
is an irrational action, committed by people thinking irrationally. We as
survivors be it those who have lost someone or those who have survived an
attempt must make a stand for those in need. If someone you know expresses suicidal
thoughts or actions you need to you get them help immediately, don’t dismiss
them as seeking attention or tell them to shake it off. If you lose someone to
suicide don’t blame them and don’t blame yourself. Blame the illness that took
over their mind and disrupted their brain, and if it was a rare case where
mental illness was not involved blame the irrational thoughts that drove them
over the edge. Also remember that love can’t cure mental illness, but it helps
those of us suffering from it to know that we are loved and it can help our
perspective on life.
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