By Georgina K. Smith, Ph.D.
“You wake up in Chicago, pull back the curtain and you KNOW
where you are. You could be nowhere else. You are in a big, brash, muscular,
broad shouldered motherfuckin’ city. A metropolis, completely non-neurotic,
ever-moving, big hearted but cold blooded machine with millions of moving
parts-a beast that will, if disrespected or not taken seriously, roll over you
without remorse” -Anthony Bourdain
Mr. Bourdain’s words reach far beyond Chicago. He could have
been speaking in part about addiction, depression, the cold blooded machine of
suicidality.
Over the past eight days the world lost Kate Spade and Anthony
Bourdain. The world also lost many other people to suicide whose names did not
make the news. My heart feels heavy and I feel compelled, like many others, to
say something, and still what I have to say feels somehow incomplete.
I’ve heard people talk about the selfishness of the act of
suicide and their anger about it. There is a devastating, traumatic legacy that
suicide leaves behind with a penetrating transmission of pain. The person who
dies by suicide, however, is often in such extreme mental suffering, pain and
anguish, that suicide may present the only seeming reprieve they are able to
give themselves and others, feeling that their existence is too painful to them
and all those surrounding them. It can feel like the escape out of a burning
building when the building burning is them. This kind of pain often creates a suffering that inhibits the
brain’s ability to think rationally, to find hope, to connect to coping and
managing. It can create a pain so great mentally and at times physically that
living feels like too great a burden to bear. It can create a fight or flight
response that meets so imperfectly with an impulse that the result is
suicide. So often these individuals want to live. They just want to experience a different life than the skin they are in.
But let’s be clear. It is not only the mentally ill who are vulnerable to suicide. Yes, depression, mood disorders and other forms of mental illness are significant factors and can feel unbearable to live with. But many who die by suicide are not mentally ill. They are grieving or they are traumatized or addicted or they are in such deep loneliness and shame over events in their life or enduring such desperate life circumstances that suicide seems like the only way out. Trauma, grief, shame, disconnection, mental illness can make the acts of daily living, of daily transactions with others, with the world, feel like the person is a live wire navigating torrential rain storms, volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, and violent weather changes. With depression, light stings, gravity crushes, and depression pulls the chains that they are pushing against. The energy to navigate their inner world and its response to the outer world can feel exhausting, like a never ending game of chicken. And the response of the outer world when they can’t understand the person’s struggles and reactions can often reinforce the shame, self-hatred, and hopelessness. And it’s no one’s fault.
But let’s be clear. It is not only the mentally ill who are vulnerable to suicide. Yes, depression, mood disorders and other forms of mental illness are significant factors and can feel unbearable to live with. But many who die by suicide are not mentally ill. They are grieving or they are traumatized or addicted or they are in such deep loneliness and shame over events in their life or enduring such desperate life circumstances that suicide seems like the only way out. Trauma, grief, shame, disconnection, mental illness can make the acts of daily living, of daily transactions with others, with the world, feel like the person is a live wire navigating torrential rain storms, volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, and violent weather changes. With depression, light stings, gravity crushes, and depression pulls the chains that they are pushing against. The energy to navigate their inner world and its response to the outer world can feel exhausting, like a never ending game of chicken. And the response of the outer world when they can’t understand the person’s struggles and reactions can often reinforce the shame, self-hatred, and hopelessness. And it’s no one’s fault.
Success, like that of Kate Spade and Anthony Bourdain, does not
create an immunity to struggle, to depression, to suicide. Rather it can create
a suffocating cocoon of isolation and paradox, where there is a violent
fracture and conflict between the experience and presentation of inner and
outer worlds that cannot be reconciled. A very fragile heart beats inside the
superimposed persona of a superhuman. What a lonely place. Success and fame beg
for a form of public servitude, are synonymous with luck, fortune and
happiness, and the prerequisite for gratitude and a ban of the right to
complain or suffer. But from the homeless person on skid row to the individual
in their Bel Air mansion to the school teacher to the actress or the janitor or
the stay at home dad or the veteran or the blue collar construction worker or
the executive working mom or middle school student, mental illness, loneliness, and suffering
do not discriminate. Access to resources and to help, however, sadly does. And we have a long way to go.
The World Health Organization estimates that 1 person dies by
suicide every 40 seconds. According to the United States Department of Veterans
Affairs, an estimated 22 veterans per day die by suicide. So why are we not
talking about them? Why do we seem to come to a stunned halt when we hear the
news of Kate Spade and Anthony Bourdain? I imagine it is because we may
understand a little more about the anguish and trauma that veterans are
enduring. But perhaps we cannot as easily grasp how people who appear to have
it all, who appear happy, successful, can suffer the same fate. I believe it
triggers an existential dread in us; a fear that if they can’t make it, how
will we? And in these days and times, I believe the news hits us on an already
pulsing raw nerve. The political divide. The gun violence. The rocked sense of
safety in our communities. Never at any time in my past decade of private
practice have I seen so many patients consistently coming in speaking about the
impact they are experiencing from our country’s current state of affairs and
politics and their escalated fears and tensions. So perhaps we hold on to the
happy stories when we hear them, perky Kate Spade and her colorful creations –
a light. Anthony Bourdain – the best kind of bad boy with an honest voice, who
breathed the essence of realness and human connection and purpose. If their
lights go out, how do ours stay on?
We have to talk about it and find a way to create connection. We
have to talk about our struggles. About our ‘not okay-ness’ behind our social
media smiles. About our grief, our depression, our traumas, our desperation,
our suicidality. And no, you don’t have to lay your story out for public
consumption. You decide. You choose who you tell. You have the right to your
boundaries and your privacy. But tell someone. And for those that speak out in
any way, anywhere, thank you for your courage. For your presence. For your
heart beat. For your bravery. For still
holding on. I know it’s not easy. I’m a fellow traveler.
The weights of all these precursors to suicide can create a
tipping point where everything becomes out of balance. Trauma can create defense and coping systems that are completely necessary and rational at the time of the trauma, but over time long-term can tip a person into illness in part because of the stress hormones surging through brain and body. The weight of these precursors may also show up
as the crushing burden of depression. And depression will curl up with its host
at night, never leaving their side, infusing itself into dreams and nightmares
and humming a pulsing undertone of anxiety as a constant reminder of its
presence and power. And during the day it may dress up with its host, don a
smile, and play right along with what the day needs, what the surround needs,
with what the act of living needs, whispering its persistent dread and doubts
and questions, telling its old stories, and playing out its old fears, pulling
shade over the light. It will make eyes heavy, hands shake, and the normalcy of
daily exchanges feel alien and harsh. And it will speak its language of shame,
toxicity, brokenness and blame till it becomes the host’s language and
identity. It beats and burns and erases its victim till there is no shelter
they believe they can escape to anymore. They just want out. Yet still trips
are planned, work is attended, relationships exist, hellos and I’m fines are
exchanged. And we may never know what lies under the surface because for many, arriving at this end can finally appear like the most possible, rational thing
to do and they may seem temporarily more okay in their acceptance of this.
To the people who are suffering and who are still here trying to
find a way to hold on and find a way out in waking life: know that it’s okay to
not be okay, keep talking to your loved ones, keep going to therapy, keep
asking for help, keep taking your medications if that’s something you need or
talking to your doctor about changing the medication. Find your community, your
people. Focus on any moments of okay-ness and find ways to understand them and
expand them, find the things and the people that can be your lifelines and
reality tests when the darkness pulls for you. Practice being a voice of
compassion and kindness. You are not the violent weather pulsing through you.
You matter. You’re loveable. You’re loved. Find that voice inside that will
speak back to the voice of shame, blame, anger and hatred, that can find
different responses to the weather inside of you. Find purpose and gratitude,
even if that is in the fact that you got out of bed today, that you showered,
that you smiled at someone, or someone smiled at you, that you felt the sun on
your skin or the bite of the cold wind. Keep putting one foot in front of the
other because that’s the only way you will ever know what lies around each new
corner. Your broken past is not the evidence for your future even though it
will try to convince you it is. Find whatever works for you – medication,
religion, the gym, music, spirituality, 12 step programs, therapy, comedy, meditation,
nature, your dog, your cat. Check in on your most basic needs – are you eating?
Hydrated? Sleeping? And when nothing is working, do nothing. Minimize the
damage. Go to bed one more night before making the last decision, the final
act. Wait. Then wait again. The absence of action is sometimes all you need to
do when you are at the lowest point. Not everything will work all the time, but
there can still be relief, healing, progress, change. The maintenance of any
form of recovery requires a practice and a management and some form of ‘balanced’
lifestyle (whatever that may look like to you…try not to attach to an idea of
perfect balance. It does not exist. Navigating our flux within a more manageable
range is what I mean by ‘balance’). Recovery needs you to keep showing up.
This isn’t a matter of will. Of fortitude. Of moral choosing.
This is life or death. And if death becomes the only choice, then what profound
suffering must have preceded. And what profound suffering will continue for all
those impacted. Some make it out. Some do not. We have to talk about mental
illness. We have to talk about emotional suffering and struggle. But we also
have to recognize that certain systems - macro and micro - do not promote openness, communication,
acceptance. We have to reduce stigma and fear and educate. We have to stop with
minimization and invalidation. If people who are suffering could “just get out
of bed and do it” they would. The brain is an organ capable of illness and
dysregulation just like any other organ. But we do not bring chicken soup to
those with mental illness. We bring judgment and expectation. Until we have
walked in their shoes, we simply cannot know the extent of pain in their world.
I have come to believe that those suffering with depression and
other forms of mental illness and trauma who are still here are not better or
immune to what the future could bring. There may be a darkness that is never too
far away, and a sometimes unexplainable impulse towards suicide that may be dormant but ever present. Rather those who are still here are continuing to make difficult choices every day, every
moment. It’s not about being better or stronger or less sick. Some find a way
to live by going straight towards their trauma and pain. If trauma and pain are
your kin, coursing through your veins, many who know them so intimately choose
to find their life purpose in them, not by running away from them. And for
every fear and every doubt that tells you to take a step away and a step down,
take a step towards. And sometimes it will be messy, you’ll overcompensate, or
feel too much or not enough, or make mistakes, but you’ll be alive to make
another choice. And when shame and failure want to take you out, walk into the
swampy mess of it all and own your vulnerability the best you can, trusting
that the hellish feelings will pass and that they are not facts. The storm will
pass, even if there’s another one right behind it, but then it will pass too.
Trusting that somehow things can work out. But they can’t work out if you’re not
here.
We are not just the presentation of our social media profiles.
We are complex, broken and beautiful and we need connection. We need resources
from all spheres – physical, social, emotional, financial, spiritual. We need
meaning, purpose, curiosity, hope. We need accountability. We need to feel seen
and heard. Many of us are fighting demons that others will never see. Embrace
your humanness and imperfection, ask questions, ask even your strongest friend
if they’re ok. Make eye contact and don’t look away. Go deeper. Ask for help.
Offer help. Get educated about mental illness, get real, be patient, be tolerant,
be kind. Please be kind. Don’t brave this world alone.
Resources
National
Suicide Prevention Hotline: 1-800-273-8255
Substance
Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration Treatment Referral Helpline:
1-800-662-4357
Didi
Hirsch (Low Cost) Mental Health Services: 888-807-7250
Psychologytoday.com (therapist, psychiatrist, treatment center locator)
Psychologytoday.com (therapist, psychiatrist, treatment center locator)
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