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| Suicide - A PAPER WRITTEN FOR DEPRESSED AND SUICIDAL PEOPLE | |||||
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It wasn't until I lost my son
to suicide that I began to learn lots and lots about suicide and
depression. There are a few things that, by now, you probably know but I
want to tell you (again?). Maybe this will help to put things in
perspective. First, we have to learn to
accept our past and know that we can't change it. We have to come
to terms with it and get past any guilt or shame. It can be done.
Just because something bad has happened, or because we have done something
wrong, does not make us bad. Frequently, we have disproportionately built
those things up in our own minds. When we can put the past behind us, we
can go on with our lives. That's "accepting the things that we cannot
change". To live our lives in the present,
we must stop doing things that cause us guilt or shame. Guilt and shame
are like vampires. When they are exposed to the sunlight of truth and
openness, they burn away to nothing. This means we must be honest with
ourselves and in our dealings with others; but we still must use caution
when dealing with some people. A life that is satisfactory
also includes all of the good character traits that we can think of. The
Boy Scout oath comes to mind, but this really depends on our own personal
definitions and which traits you can take pride in. You and I can do, or
be, anything that we (not someone else) can comfortably live with.
We have that choice, that ability, and that much power over our lives. Secondly, we have to take
charge, and face our lives with boldness and be responsible and active (as
opposed to passive) in our lives. We must stand up for what we think and
believe, make our position clear, and not let people walk on us
figuratively or literally. That empowers us to be leaders (someone has to
be in charge), to make our own way in the world, and gives us self-pride
where there would otherwise be shame, self-blame, and surrender. Mahatma Ghandi said "A
no uttered from deepest conviction is greater than a yes
mearly uttered to please, or what is worse, to avoid trouble". I must
caution you though, to start with small decisions and progress
slowly, because that will give you a successful history to draw
on. This is "changing the things we can change". Thirdly, I was a member of
a social/civic organization that opened each and every meeting with a
creed, part of which was: "We believe that faith in God gives meaning and purpose
to human life ..." I believe it does, and that
faith can carry us when things are tough. Now this statement is not to
make people go right out and join up, but we humans need faith in
something, if only because it is our nature to do so. If you had
faith in God, and depression has caused you to feel so bad as to lose it,
remember that God has not moved, He is just where you left Him. The Alcoholics Anonymous (A.A.)
organization uses a prayer for it's members. I think they only use the
first verse, but here is the whole prayer: *** GOD, grant me the Living ONE DAY AT A TIME; Taking, as He did, this Trusting that He will make That I may be reasonably happy Amen By Reinhold Neibuhr *** Fourth, there are better
ways of handling all of our feelings than turning them inward. If we turn
the feelings inward (bottle them up), they will consume us from within. We
must feel them and deal with them to get rid of them. We can learn to express
those feelings in a variety of ways. For instance, anger can be expressed
by telling someone about it, by taking a tennis racket and beating
(violently) on the seat of a stuffed chair, and by writing and expressing
the anger. Also, we could express our feelings in painting, music, acting,
dance, or other arts. And, of course, if we're going to point that anger
at someone, we should point it towards the people that caused and deserve
it. We should never direct it at innocent people. Fifth, exercise is vital to
healthy living. I can't tell you how important this is to our well-being.
If you think that you can do nothing (and I know how depression can
paralyze people) and be happy, you are wrong. Exercise is the most
effective way to feel better right now. If you will do some exercise
daily, you will feel better and sleep better. If you make it a regimen,
you can do it from habit even if you have a "bad" day or several
bad days. This is a very
concentrated version of things that have made me able to live a better
life in the last few years than I have ever had before. I have suffered
depression all of my life, and I know the desolate feelings that were in
Edgar Allen Poe's poems, in Van Gogh's paintings, and the feelings that
make us think the world will be better off without us, that we are burdens
to other people; and the self-hate that makes us want to die. Those are
false and distorted thoughts that uselessly cost thousands of people their
lives every year from suicide. The loss of those lives to the world is
incalculable. I hope this helps to put
things in better order for you, and I pray that you will never be one of
those people. This is a total package and should be interpreted as an
overall view of what is going on with your depression. It is as good of a
summary as I could muster. It has taken me years to
understand these things, and be able to put them in a form that I could
communicate to other people. With these tools, you can start to see the
way things really are, and start to rebuild your life if it is out of
control. Being out of our control make us feel worthless. This should also
change your approach to fighting depression and suicidal thinking to
fighting the source of the disease (To change, so that we are in
charge of our lives, and we decide and we control how we live)
instead of unsuccessfully trying to fight the symptoms.
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