Mayo Clinic: healing suicidal grief

downloadWhen a loved one dies by suicide, overwhelming emotions can leave you reeling. Your grief might be heart wrenching. At the same time, you might be consumed by guilt — wondering if you could have done something to prevent your loved one’s death.

As you face life after a loved one’s suicide, remember that you don’t have to go through it alone.

Brace for powerful emotions

A loved one’s suicide can trigger intense emotions.

  • Shock. Disbelief and emotional numbness might set in. You might think that your loved one’s suicide couldn’t possibly be real.
  • Anger. You might be angry with your loved one for abandoning you or leaving you with a legacy of grief — or angry with yourself or others for missing clues about suicidal intentions.
  • Guilt. You might replay “what if” and “if only” scenarios in your mind, blaming yourself for your loved one’s death.
  • Despair. You might be gripped by sadness, loneliness or helplessness. You might have a physical collapse or even consider suicide yourself.
  • Confusion. Many people try to make some sense out of the death, or try to understand why their loved one took his or her life. But, you’ll likely always have some unanswered questions.
  • Feelings of rejection. You might wonder why your relationship wasn’t enough to keep your loved one from dying by suicide.

You might continue to experience intense reactions during the weeks and months after your loved one’s suicide — including nightmares, flashbacks, difficulty concentrating, social withdrawal and loss of interest in usual activities — especially if you witnessed or discovered the suicide.

Dealing with stigma

Many people have trouble discussing suicide, and might not reach out to you. This could leave you feeling isolated or abandoned if the support you expected to receive just isn’t there.

Additionally, some religions limit the rituals available to people who’ve died by suicide, which could also leave you feeling alone. You might also feel deprived of some of the usual tools you depended on in the past to help you cope.

Adopt healthy coping strategies

The aftermath of a loved one’s suicide can be physically and emotionally exhausting. As you work through your grief, be careful to protect your own well-being.

  • Keep in touch. Reach out to loved ones, friends and spiritual leaders for comfort, understanding and healing. Surround yourself with people who are willing to listen when you need to talk, as well as those who’ll simply offer a shoulder to lean on when you’d rather be silent.
  • Grieve in your own way. Do what’s right for you, not necessarily someone else. There is no single “right” way to grieve. If you find it too painful to visit your loved one’s gravesite or share the details of your loved one’s death, wait until you’re ready.
  • Be prepared for painful reminders. Anniversaries, holidays and other special occasions can be painful reminders of your loved one’s suicide. Don’t chide yourself for being sad or mournful. Instead, consider changing or suspending family traditions that are too painful to continue.
  • Don’t rush yourself. Losing someone to suicide is a tremendous blow, and healing must occur at its own pace. Don’t be hurried by anyone else’s expectations that it’s been “long enough.”
  • Expect setbacks. Some days will be better than others, even years after the suicide — and that’s OK. Healing doesn’t often happen in a straight line.
  • Consider a support group for families affected by suicide.Sharing your story with others who are experiencing the same type of grief might help you find a sense of purpose or strength. However, if you find going to these groups keeps you ruminating on your loved one’s death, seek out other methods of support.

Know when to seek professional help

If you experience intense or unrelenting anguish or physical problems, ask your doctor or mental health provider for help. Seeking professional help is especially important if you think you might be depressed or you have recurring thoughts of suicide. Unresolved grief can turn into complicated grief, where painful emotions are so long lasting and severe that you have trouble resuming your own life.

Depending on the circumstances, you might benefit from individual or family therapy — either to get you through the worst of the crisis or to help you adjust to life after suicide. Short-term medication can be helpful in some cases, too.

Face the future with a sense of peace

In the aftermath of a loved one’s suicide, you might feel like you can’t go on or that you’ll never enjoy life again.

In truth, you might always wonder why it happened — and reminders might trigger painful feelings even years later. Eventually, however, the raw intensity of your grief will fade. The tragedy of the suicide won’t dominate your days and nights.

Understanding the complicated legacy of suicide and how to cope with palpable grief can help you find peace and healing, while still honoring the memory of your loved one.

This article was written by the Mayo Clinic Staff.

www.mayoclinic.org/healthy…/end…/suicide/art-20044900

One year later: What have we learned from Robin Williams’s suicide?

images (1)Every experience brings us wisdom. This is what Native Americans call “medicine,” also known as our personal power.

The shocking loss of Robin Williams on August 11, 2014 has had a profound impact on opening the door and bringing suicide out of the closet. Not only did Robin expand us with comic genius and acting during his lifetime, he opened our our hearts  and stretched our minds with his death as well.

The Huffington Post (Canada) featured my article which identifies the lessons we have learned following his suicide. I invite you to click the link to read the article in full.

http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/adele-mcdowell/robin-williams-suicide_b_7850898.html

Opening our awareness to suicide

bluepurpledandelionHeretofore, suicide has been a taboo topic. Now, it is so headline-making and societally embarrassing that clinicians and researchers are madly looking for answers and trying to quantify criteria. Why has suicide become so rampant?

There are those that end their life by suicide from hearing voices. Or they become imprisoned by despair, shame, and worthlessness. They are feeling depressed and hopeless; and their actions can be reckless, impulsive, and, frequently, under the influence of a mind-altering substance. They feel disenfranchised and disconnected from others.

Suicide is complex and complicated. There is not one etiology. It is not simply a matter of mental health.

It is a matter of violence; be it the trauma of war, domestic violence, childhood sexual abuse, political torture, bullying at school, cultural shame, personal loathing, and unrelenting self-hate.

It is also a matter of personal choice and debate. Think of peer pressure and identification with your social group. There is also devastating illness; acute, chronic pain; existential fatigue, karmic rut, points of honor, release from paralyzing fear; end of emotional pain; as well as end of life issues. Suicide is never one thing, but the result of an accumulation of stressors and circumstances.

Suicide is also a matter of economics. Just ask Italy, Greece, Ireland, and India. Countries are establishing suicide hot-lines in response to growing numbers of economically comprised citizens. If you cannot feed your family; if you cannot find a roof for your family, if there is no work; if you are consistently cold, hungry, and dressed in rags; if you are exhausted from trying, trying, trying to keep it all together and you cannot, suicide has become a response. In Spain, if you cannot pay the mortgage on your home; the bank brings a locksmith to open your door and claim your house. Far too many have taken their lives as a result of losing the safety, comfort, and refuge of their home.

Loved ones who are survivors of those who died by suicide are often shunned and, equally, as result of their loss, now at a higher incidence of suicide themselves. Trauma begets trauma.

We live in a competitive world where competition, bullying, shaming, and judging are prevalent in corporations and office; schools and universities; capitol hills and houses of worship. There is individual and societal violence and abuse.

Societally, there is a prevalent inability to walk in another’s shoes, to witness the pain or injustice. We turn a blind eye because it is uncomfortable. He’s crazy or she did it to herself.

If we are to end these vicious and pernicious cycles, there is a call for compassion and meeting the other. Suicide is a profound lesson in compassion. Are we ready to learn? Are we willing to demand that we treat each other with peaceful understanding and open hearts?