Coming To Terms With Suicide
Death is a funny thing. It’s natural. It’s heart
breaking. And it’s most definitely inevitable. Yet, when it happens it still
knocks you for six like a rogue wave in a stormy sea. People die every day, it’s
an on-going cycle that will keep turning for as long as we live on this planet.
The concept of life itself is simple, we’re born, we live, and we die. But it’s
what we do during the time we are given to live that determines just how
precious our lives are. The places we visit, the people we meet, the things we
do; are all contributing factors to what makes us as individuals… special. And
it’s exactly that, that makes death so hard to accept. You know it’s going to
happen, you just don’t know when and knowing that you’ll eventually end up
losing someone you hold so close to your heart is one hell of a bitter pill to
swallow.
This is where the complexity of grief comes in. With
every death, follows grief and it’s something you see all the time. You witness
people grieving but you do not feel their grief and with that lack of
understanding, you stand as an on-looker, watching them embark on an
everlasting journey of heartache and sorrow. But as weeks pass by, they seem a
little better. You see them crack a smile or maybe even a slight laugh and you
immediately tell yourself that they’re doing ok. However pain is an emotion we
cannot see and can therefore be concealed incredibly well and if you cannot see
their pain, well you cannot feel it. Until it happens to you.
I experienced that very pain seven weeks ago when my
best friend committed suicide. That best friend, was my dad. The man that
brought me up loving heavy metal music, football and gaming. He was the one
person who could brighten my darkest days just by giving me one of his hugs.
You see, you think you know grief because you’ve seen it happen a hundred times
to the people around you. But you don’t truly know grief until death creeps up
on the person you love most and snatches them from your grasp far too soon.
Let me assure you that death is terrible under all circumstances, however, suicide is
particularly traumatic. Had my dad been diagnosed with a terminal illness, maybe
I would have been able to prepare myself for the day he would be taken
from us. But nothing could have prepared me for that day. Don’t get me wrong, my dad
was ill but he had an illness of the mind, something you cannot see and
therefore is so very often overlooked. Nobody would think I suffer from
depression and anxiety, yet I do. It’s such an easy illness to overlook,
especially when you don’t know what you’re looking for. Was I aware that he
suffered from depression? Yes. Did I think that it would one day take his life?
Of course not. He was my dad, I’d always imagined him still around at 90 years
of age, sat in a chair, whiskey in hand, and ranting about the state of the
economy and how screwed up the country is. Losing him at 19? That wasn’t how it
was supposed to happen. But it did and there’s nothing I can do about it.
Now that’s the hardest part to accept. In the days
leading up to my dad’s death, I knew something wasn’t right and I still kick
myself now because I didn’t ask him if he was ok. Even if I did, maybe the
outcome would have still been the same but at least I could sit here now and
tell you all that I tried. He wasn’t even 50, he still had so much happiness to
come. But now he won’t be here to see me off to university, he won’t see my
sister nor I graduate. He won’t be there on mine nor my sister’s wedding days.
He will never meet his grandchildren nor have a happy retirement with my
beautiful mother. And as upsetting as all of that is, it only emphasises how
much he was hurting. He is and always will be the bravest man I know for
leaving behind everything he knew the future held. You may be reading this now
and thinking that suicide is a selfish act but I would have to disagree. Yes,
my dad’s death has caused a lot of collateral damage, grief and heartache but I
will say this once and I would say it one hundred times over if I needed to; I
would much rather my dad be gone and at peace with himself now, than have to
live a life of unhappiness just to please his family and friends.
And I’m not going to lie, losing him has been the
hardest thing I have ever experienced and I’m never going to be the person I
was before he passed away. Whoever said that time heals all wounds was a liar,
because no amount of time can heal me when a part of me died with him that day.
And after the funeral, the flowers stop coming and only the
odd few people still come to visit you. It’s hard because you’re left to sit at
home, wishing that you’re just stuck in one big nightmare, ready to wake up to
everything back to normal.
But that’s not how life works. Grief has no time
frame, seven weeks on and it’s only just beginning. You never truly learn to
live again, you just learn to exist. Slowly counting down the days until you
can be reunited again.
Beautiful words from a beautiful soul. Your dad was always so very proud of you and continues to be while watching over you. Much love and hugs from me and family! X
ReplyDeleteWhat wonderful words Oh sweety I wish time would heal your pain and make it all better but you are right it wont and who ever said it would was a liar, but what time will do and i know from experience is ease the hurt.You will never stop missing him you will never stop wanting one of those special daddy hugs, and you know what nor should you xxxxx
ReplyDelete