Translate

Showing posts with label suicide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label suicide. Show all posts

Sunday, March 12, 2023

Depression made me fat. It also nearly killed me. One day to termination...

 In 2014, I was photographing a place for one of my (then) realtors. I happened to catch a look on their face... I was angry and embarassed all at the same time. I could tell they were disgusted by my size. I had been doing a fair amount of work for this client, but after that day, I never heard from them again. I was so appalled, hurt, and hating myself. 

I had just gone though a period - being a good two years - of a deep depression and had gained a lot of weight - maybe not a lot by some standards, but 50lbs on a 5'4" frame is a lot. My ideal weight is between 120 and 125. 

Around the same time, my sister came to my house. She hadn't been over and we hadn't seen each other for several years. If you read this blog, you'll  know the backstory. She had barely sat down at my table before she looked at me and said, "You need to lose about 50 pounds, hey?" Between her and my client, I was again pitched into a pit of self-loathing. 

In February 2015, I hired a trainer and hit the gym for a bunch of reasons: I was super pissed of by that client's unspoken but very loud comments, and my youngest was getting married. So I went at it. Hard. For 18 months, I was on a specific, non-changing diet and in the gym five to six days a week. I lost a ton of weight, gained a pile of muscle, was wearing a size 4, and was feeling great. My trainer encouraged me to compete, and I did that too. I came in last there but that was ok. 

During that time, I donated a lot of my clothing because I couldn't imagine not being in the gym at least four days a week. I thought my habits were well-established and that yes, I'd gain a bit of weight - because one cannot survive on a competition diet forever - but I was pretty confident I'd be able to maintain a reasonable weight for a person my age. My trainer said not to get rid of my clothes - she's a very winning competitor and she told me she usually gains 20 lbs between competitions, but I was deluded and thought size four was a forever thing. 

Shit happens when you're not paying attention.

In 2017, early in the year, I took up pottery. I was still in the gym, but I really enjoy pottery and it began taking up more of my time. The weight began to come on. I should note here I have very few mirrors in my house and none are full-length. That's a whole other story in a book called dismorphia. 

By 2019, I wasn't in the gym more than three days a week. I didn't have my trainer anymore, and I had let other pursuits take some of that time. 

I knew I wasn't doing well, so in the spring of  2018, I got an appointment with my friend's doctor, who my friend likes very much, for an assessment for anxiety. Unsurprisingly, it came back with high anxiety and depression. That doc sent me to a counsellor, who was great but who is part of a group of professionals. I could not see this one person on a regular basis and couldn't choose to see them specifically - one gets who one gets in that clinic. I didn't want to be relating the whole story every time I saw a different counsellor, so I didn't pursue. I should say though, the initial assessment was that I'm not a terrible person, that I have some life-long family-related challenges, but I have a very supportive spouse and three great adult children, who are in the loop about the family stuff, so I figured I'd just carry on. I wasn't feeling awesome but I wasn't suffering too much. 

In early Feb 2019, I was asked to participate in a public talk with five other people in my profession. It was a HUGE nod: one of the presenters is top of the field in this country, and I was blown away to share the stage with her. I remember seeing the video of my part of the event, and liking my presentation but also being aware I had gained a bunch of weight. I was disturbed and that realisation bored into my brain like a worm... 

Then the pandemic hit. My gym closed, we were locked down for six weeks, I was lonely, bored out of my mind, angry, frustrated. Stupidly, and not realising I was sliding deeper, I was on twitter a lot. Twitter is poison generally, but for depressed people, it is as dangerous as a loaded gun. 

I stopped going to the gym after it reopened. It was so on again, off again for another year, I couldn't re-establish a healthy, regular habit. Add to that, I developed a real dislike, bordering on phobia about seeing people masked. Masked and huffing at the gym was not on my dance card... 

I wore a mask when necessary but I avoided going anywhere it was necessary, which is to say I quit going out of the house any more often than necessary - work, and pottery. Our studio owner at the time was a 77 year-old man with a pacemaker and diabetes, so for him, I masked. 

My spouse loves grocery shopping so that was covered. There was a period I'd go to the shops with them but I would not go in, becasue I didn't want to see them in a mask. I still have PTSD about masks, especially those damned blue medical masks. 

What I didn't know was that I was already depressed and sliding into another debilitating depression. I knew I wasn't doing well, but I didn't have a clue how far in that deep dark well of despair I already was. By January 2021, after the 2020 winter holiday season that didn't happen, I was in bad shape. Bad enough that I was ideating not rarely. In late January that year, I was in full thinking about it all the time mode - and I'm talking about suicide here. 

One evening - a Sunday night, I was in the pottery studio by myself, and I could not stop crying. I was alone, sobbing, and wondering if there was any tubing about. I was lucid enough to know I was in crisis, so I called our city's crisis line and was with an intake person for two hours. She was concerned enough about my state she wanted to send the city police to transport me to hospital, but I told her I was going to go home, that my spouse was there, and I'd be ok. I was, until about 2 a.m., when I woke up in a panic of despair, and again was picturing where there was hose in my garage. Again, I called the crisis line and spent another two hours with them. 

The next day, I told my spouse what was going on so they were aware. They're very supportive. Very. 

Meanwhile, there was encouraging news about a vaccine, and spring was coming. I had some hope. But I was out of the gym completely, my diet was shit; there was a lot of wine by this point - not to the point of alcoholism, but a couple glasses every night. Again, I had no idea I was as depressed as I now know I I was. Everyone was struggling, we were 14 months into the damned pandemic, and I just figured everyone was feeling as I was. 

In July 2021, our government lifted the mask mandate. It was absolutely amazing. It lifted my spirits a LOT to not see everyone masked up. Yes, people carried on masking but very many fewer. At the same time, our city's huge annual rodeo happened, and we got the go-ahead to photograph an event we'd been shooting for four years. So the summer was fine. I knew I wasn't at my best, but I felt the pandemic was behind us, and I could begin healing. But no. 

In early September, our goverment put the mask mandate back into place, and I felt absolutely crushed. I had three vaccinations on board by then, so having that mandate come back... On September 4th, I walked into our members only pottery studio thinking we wouldn't be subject to the mandate, and found everyone masked. I lost it. I went on a big, scary, loud, angry rant. I absolutely freaked out everyone in there - 20 people at least - who had never seen me in any kind of state, let alone ranting. I had to apologise specifically to two people who I seriously scared - and I will say I scared myself as well.

As I sat at my wheel, tears pouring down my face, despair choking me, one of the members came by me. As background, I thought we were good friends. I had introduced this person to their spouse, photographed their wedding, done headshots for them both, hung out with them, trained with one of them for a while. As he passed in front of me, he asked what was wrong. Through my tears, I said I was so frustrated at people who wouldn't vaccinate because we were back to mid-pandemic dystopian facelessness everywhere. He literally laughed in my face. I didn't know he was an anti-vaxx idiot. I felt like I'd been struck. 

Two days later, on his facebook, his mother, who was faced with vaccinating or being out of a job for a while, posted that she had "gone on the special train, and it was really smoky in there." There is little that enrages me as much as racisim, so this horrifing equating vaccinating - literally a life-saving, socially-conscious, right minded thing to do - with trains transporting Jewish people to their deaths in German ovens absoltely blew me apart. 

And I was descending ever further into a black, black depression. You know the "frog in water on the stove" analogy - the one where a frog in water won't notice the heat creeping up until it's too late and it dies by being boiled? Yeah... that's what was happening to me. 

An aspect of depression for me is intense anxiety centred on my weight; an anxiety so profound and debilitating, I had become absltuely obsessed about my weight. I would wake up sometimes 20 times a night in an absolute panic. Concurrently, I was so depressed, I couldn't imagine going out of the house, let alone to the gym. I did not want anyone to see me: I'd gone from 130, all muscle to 160, flabby, palid, anxious, angry. 

December 2021 rolled around. We had a very good winter holiday - lots of friends and family over for dinner. I wasn't ok, and I knew it, but at least we could have our traditional holiday family dinner. 

This is where it took an absolutely devastating turn. I lost my persective. My anxiety became extremely pronounced to the point I was misinterpreting everything, and I was engaging in rants - two hours at a time - a few times a week. My spouse could not understand, and could not help. In this context of massive depression, debilitating anxiety and paranoia, I started to believe my kids (all busy, productive, amazing adults) had begun to dislike me to such a point they were no longer calling, or even responding to texts. 

There was LOTS going on I didn't know about: I didn't know my eldest and her partner were really struggling. Add to that, she had to let go of her lovely dog - an 11 year old boxer/bull terrier with terrible joint issues. His joints literally liquified. It was terrible. My other daughter in town was also struggling with massive anxiety which at one point caused a physical reaction - paralyisis in one of her legs. So their not calling was due to all sorts of stuff not related to me. But I knew none of it except for the dog, so I was taking it all very, deeply, horrifyingly personally. 

I finally decided I should say something, but in my state, I had no good grip on what to say, or how to say any of it. They took it as an indictment. It sparked five months of silence from one of them, and utter chaos via texts - I was writing pages and pages of insane angry, abusive, horrifying, accusitory rants to my children - all three of them, and imagine for my youngest, who lives in the US in a no-travel permitted bloody pandemic. Meanwhile, I had ramped up my rants to almost every day, for hours on end. This culminated in June with me essentially telling my spouse to leave, that we were done, me jumping in my car and heading west into the mountains in a white-out spring storm. The one thing that saved me from not driving off a cliff - literally, because I wanted to so, so badly - was my dog; she was in the car with me and I adore that dog. There is no way I was going to hurt her. 

My intention was to drive 3 hours west and hole up in a hotel in a small town where I feel safe. But I was so incredibly depressed, I couldn't do it. My anxiety was so intense, I could not drive that road I've driven so many times in my life. I managed to get 45 kms west of my city, and could not do it. Depressed, massively anxious and loathing my inability to do ANYTHING. I dragged myself back home, still white hot angry, buzzing with anxiety. Finding my spouse here, I badgered them. "Why are you still here?!" My spouse is a strong person. In 26 years, I've seen them shed tears twice: once when our first dog had a terrible accident, and we had to let him go, and this moment, where I was bullying them to leave. 

I was still not fully aware of how actually serious my depression was. I had been crying for hours every day for, by then, four months, but in that state, I believed my children were victimizing me, my spouse was colluding with them, and that everyone was against me.  

Then, my middle daughter sent me a long text. Within, were the words, "you are my abuser." That was the bottom. I was done. I had done to my children what my mother had done to me. I had not only abused them for by then six months, I believed they hated me, and that left me zero to live for. 

But that message, those words, were like a kick in the head. Something broke through. I called my doctor and said I wanted to take my life, that I had ruined my relationships with my children and my spouse, and that I could not live anymore. Writing this, I'm sad for myself. I've struggled with depression all my life, and I have had three periods where suicide seemed the only way to stop all the pain, but I had never called anyone to say, "I'm doing this. I am a liability to everyone around me." 

I've known my doctor since she was 4 and I was 5. Her former spouse hung himself where his children would find him. She knew the sounds, and she HEARD me. She immediately sent me mental health assessments, booked an apointment with a psychiatrist, got me connected to a psychologist and got me on an anti-anxiolytic. 

Often attendant with anxiety and depression is gut issues. It should have been a clue that I have had such severe reflux for 10 years that between that an waking up due to obsessing about my weight, I was not sleeping. I think I was getting maybe four hours on a good night for the last 15 years. Didn't help we had a mattress with memory foam, which is bloody torture for hot sleepers. My doc got me on some meds for reflux too. 

I've been on this drug now since June. My suicidial ideation began subsiding about four weeks after starting this drug, and between then and now, it very, very rarely peeks around the corner for a sec and then goes away. I have also finally stopped obsessing over my family issues, which invaded my thoughts very, very often for more than 40 years. Not to put too fine a point on it, but this particular drug I'm on literally saved my life, and let me put up a huge, thick, mostly soundproof wall between myself and my family and their bullshit and their narcissism. I'll come back to this in another post. 

So back to the issue of weight. I am the heaviest I have ever been in my life. I don't know how much I weigh, but I know it is probably 20 lbs more than before I began training in 2016. 

Depression can kill a person by many means; suicide, alchoholism, poor diet. In my case, I don't eat regularly - I hear there's a term for this, "atypical anorexia, where sufferers are heavy but don't consume enough calories, leading to the body acting as if it is starving by slowing metabolism to a molasses in january pace. This leads to rapid weight gain if one begins eating regular meals. Without exercise, the body stays in starvation mode. 

So this is where I am. Last year, I didn't think I could still ride a bike and being as depressed as I was, I was very terrified to try. I finally did, and it was fine, but between a very very wet spring and an intensely hot summer, we didn't get out very often. But at least I knew I could do it. 

Last week, we were in DC to be part of a panel discussion about our exhibition there. We walked 60 kms in the four days we were there. That was very encouraging. Today, one of the organisers sent photos from the event, and I was left absolutely SHOCKED at how I look. I know I've gained weight but I had no idea what I look like - again, no mirrors lower then collar bone around in my house. I don't recognize the person in those photos. I turned sixty in the middle of the pandemic. It took my youth, my health - mental and physical - and has left me an old, fat, very out of shape, high blood pressure, self-hating person who in no possible way resembles who I once was. 

But. I called my gym to make sure I still have an active membership (yes, unused for two years, so that's $400 for nothing). I am absolutely terrified to go back. I am terrified that someone who knew me "when" will see me and say something. But I'm going to try. I feel like if I don't, even with good drugs on board, I'm going to slide back into black. 

The moral of this story? If you encounter someone you used to know, and see they have changed a lot in the last three years, PLEASE don't say "wow, you've gained weight," or "you've changed a lot." PLEASE ask them "ARE YOU OK? Can I help? Tell them you care for them. Tell them they're important to you. And PLEASE stick it in your brain they are STRUGGLING, sometimes to get from day to day, and sometimes not to die. 

Be kind. Be aware, be compassionate. 

(I haven't copy-edited this yet, so if you're reading and you find errors - and you will - forgive. I will fix). 

Monday, September 16, 2019

I feel all the time but I don't know what I'm feeling...

One of the most difficult things about being the child of a narcissist (or someone with borderline personality disorder - BPD) is untangling emotions, understanding what one is feeling, why, if the emotion is attached to something, someone, some event, or if one is generalizing.

As I sit here this morning, I have an intense feeling of upset, slight anger, foreboding, fear, frustration. About what? I haven't untied all that yet.


In the list:


I've had a client contact me about a project I've tried three times to complete for them. They must contact their client to make sure the site is prepared, and they haven't. Frustrating but I can't fix it for them - they drop the ball but I take the hit.


I have a friend needing help moving stuff, which I'm happy to do, but I'm a third party to the machinations, so sitting about waiting on that stuff to be coordinated.


I'm travelling with a group next month, but not positive of accommodations, and unhappy about a potential addition of $500 US to my costs resulting from my having done a good deed...



I'm pissed off we've had dead air from an organization we've been trying to contact since May this year. This angers me so much because their behaviour is ridiculously unprofessional, and we're left wondering what we've done.


I'm bored; work is too quiet thanks to a continuing sluggish economy.


I'm annoyed with myself for procrastinating over several need-to-be-completed items that will take only a few hours to finish.


I'm so very angry at my sibling over their handling of a change to our parent's living situation and that sibling's demands for money but a refusal to say WHY.


I'm also furious at this sibling's deep unwillingness to be clear about what is going on, particularly, as I understand it, they were on the verge of losing their home, and the home our parent was living in. This sibling chose to be angry and confrontational despite our many offers of help.


And I'm furious at another sibling for having taken nearly half a million from our parent and lost it all. Every damned penny of it, and $45K from an investor, and $80K from another person's parent too... this is a whole other story, none of which I was part of, except where I suggested, strongly, to my narcissitic parent they should make sure their investment is secured - which they didn't, so yeah, near poverty. 


I'm struggling to figure out which feelings go where and if they're even worth entertaining. And I'm sick to my stomach and I don't know why, and I know I'm pretty close to burying my head in the sand that is Reddit, or in my addictive craft habit. I have lately come to understand how I use these as "treatment" of a sort.


Growing up as the child of a narcissist is a distinctly unbalancing experience. There's no variance in how the narcissist approaches whatever it is they're angry about - and they're always angry about something.


It is never their fault and they always react on maximum volume, no matter how infinitesimal whatever the issue might be. There is no emotion one can feel and/or express the narcissist won't somehow attack, minimize, misrepresent.


They can spend hours or days haranguing, but when the harangued person finally crumbles into tears, or resorts to rage, the narcissist doubles down. There's no emotion one can feel or express that the narcissist will accept as valid; emotion is always an attack on the narcissist no matter what has precipitated that emotion.


When one is subjected to this from an early age, to be blunt, it fucks you up.


The net effect, particularly when all this starts when one is a tiny kid (2 years old in my case) is, as an adult, the victim often - almost always - misinterprets what people are saying, or what they mean by what they're saying. I am, as a rule, confused and uncomfortable about where my emotions are coming from and I have a difficult time understanding other people's emotions. I am aware I read in other people's feelings, but am terrified to ask if they're actually feeling the way I think.


I usually default to believing they're angry, or they detest me - this being a result of my parent's regular assertion when I was young that they had "people" watching me all day, every day, whether I was at school or with friends (I had so few friends; my trust was shattered at such a young age, and I never knew who these "people" were).


I always feel as if I've done something terrible - a persistent, ungrounded foreboding. Someone saying, "Hey can I talk to you for a second," releases and INTENSE fear response in me. Always. You will understand in employment situations, where people must collaborate many times a day, the "Can I talk to you?" thing made my work environments unbearable and terrifying. For the record, I work for myself now and have mostly done so for about 25 years.


I struggle to let things roll off me and to understand when something needs a response, or when there is no point in even thinking about it, let alone responding to it. I am never confident in whether I have appropriately dealt with a problem, or responded correctly to a question, or an issue. I feel most of the time I've made things far worse, by addressing them at all.


This weirdness has not been helped by the couple occasions when I've been blamed for something completely out of my control; once a pipe burst in a room I was in, and the woman of the house - my former spouse's mother - came steaming down the stairs yelling "what did you do?" at me. I was sitting there, stunned that water was suddenly pouring out of a wall behind all the shit she had stacked up there, having had no clue there were pipes there.


I have three adult children and I am fascinated (and envious in a sense) by how expertly they deal with the day-to-day issues they have, and how well they solve work-related stuff, and by their excellent friendships - with each other and with actual friends.  I'm also amazed I managed to raise three kids who can do that. I'm very glad my distinct issues seem not to have transferred to them. They're great collaborators and skilled at conflict management and resolution.


I feel unbalanced most of the time where it concerns my emotions: I'm either flat, meaning I feel nothing, or experience far less emotion than someone else might in the same situation, or I'm often full-on torn apart by a comment or event someone else might barely register.


I feel I am always letting people down, never doing the best I can do, cutting corners, being shitty. This is my narcissistic parent speaking, and I know it, but this horror began when I was very young.
Although I know it isn't logical, it is deeply internalized. I've heard it said children raised in such environments are permanently-affected, as the trauma causes changes to their DNA. I haven't read too much on the subject, but colloquially, I'd claim it true.

Where it concerns my siblings, my emotions are particularly hard to manage; I shift between concern for them - they were victimized as much as I was, in different ways - and anger towards them for not taking off the blinders they find so comfortable.


I am very concerned for my one sibling, as they are enmeshed in a not-at-all-positive way with our joint torturer/parent. I have deep concerns as to how this sib will react to this parent's death (this parent being 90 years old presently), and how they will adjust to the absence of this still-narcissistic, parent who has, I understand, added stalking-type behaviours to their contact with this sibling.


At the same time, I am beyond furious at this sibling - for how they have scapegoated me, in concert with our parent, for more than 45 years, how they fail utterly to see how, more and more, they are exhibiting the same characteristics of this parent (and of this parent's own also-narcissistic/BPD parent), for how they protect our abusive parent, how they prey on me for help, but reject any help offered - except when they are in dire straights - and ignore me entirely when whatever crisis they may be having has been solved. Since early this year, my overriding emotion is a desire to literally tie this sibling to a chair and punch them until they feel the deep pain I've felt my entire life.


The other sibling ... I also feel so much fury and anger towards them. I cannot comprehend how they can sleep at all, let alone live day-to-day knowing they are the one-and-only reason none of us will have an inheritance, and why the other sibling has been footing the bills - all of them - for this horrifying parent we share. This sibling has exhibited a bizarre vacillation between having near-murderous feelings toward this parent and attempting to have a relationship with them. For the record, their joint relationship has been spectacularly and catastrophically unstable for most of this sibling's 47 years.


Well-meaning people will often say, "Just let it go," but they truly do not comprehend how children of narcissists experience emotion, and how confused and often fearful those children (who may be adults in their late 50s) are. If we're struggling to wade through a lifetime of it, imagine how little a probably-caring but uneducated person might understand.


The net effect of my inability to appropriately parse and navigate my emotions has been the development - among several issues - of profound body dysmorphia to the point of obsession as a stand-in for dealing with the moving parts.


This dysmorphia coalesced on a specific day when I was 13 years old thanks to an off-hand comment made by a good friend, who I know meant absolutely nothing by it. I was going down the stairs in our school, heading to class - she being on the stair directly behind me - when she made a comment about the structure of my hips and butt. I can remember that moment and I were I in that school, I could walk to the exact place - the exact stair I was on - when she made the comment.


Literally from that moment on, this dysmorphia has been a daily, draining, torturous fixture in my waking life. It is the first thing on my mind when I wake - and I wake three or four times a night - and the last thing on my mind before I fall asleep. It doesn't help my sibling is a fitness professional (driven to some extent as a means for them to cope with their own demons I suppose), who has no shame about shaming me and how I look, whether that be the body scan or an insulting comment.


This dysmorphia is coupled with an ever-growing fear of being in public looking like I do. This is compounded by my having competed in a fitness competition four years ago, and then returning to a normal weight and average strength for a person of my age. Hating how I look also keeps me out of the gym: I'm embarrassed to be "normal" after having become so fit and strong.


In my case, that bucket-list item, the competition, was approached as a means of, "SEE! I'm not gross!" rather than something I pursued purely on my own terms, for my own reasons. I'm now fighting with entrenched dysmorphia made worse by having become very fit and quite thin for that competition, but not having the tools to deal with being a normally-sized person of my age. On the rare occasion I see my sibling, their habit of body-scanning me, and their unshielded look of disgust after that ... it doesn't help, and it makes me want to injure them all the more. Vicious circle for sure.


If you're reading this and wondering why I don't get help, I assure you I have tried. I have used - with some success - one of the on-line counselling services when the issues with my sibling were such I was feeling suicidal. It was very helpful to have a faceless, but experienced psychologist willing to read my long accounts, and make observations and suggestions. To not have to be face-to-face where he could see me, how I look, and to have counselling sessions not diluted by my terror over how I look - it was a good solution.


I have recently sought out mental healthcare services; however, despite physical health care being easy to access and covered under the country's health care plan, mental health services are not covered and are very costly, or if provided on a sliding scale, not dependable.


I need care several times a week for at least a year, but at a cost of about $2000/month, it's impossible to afford. It is not for a lack of desire and willingness to get help; it's a literal inability to afford the care I need. The doctor I saw recently diagnosed me with severe anxiety - filed under "No shit, Sherlock," - and prescribed a specific medication to help. The drug she prescribed has a significant side effect - predictable weight gain. Definitely no bueno. Like 1000 percent no bueno.


I am not in contact with my siblings or my parent - and yes, this is extreme, highly guilt-inducing, and difficult to swallow. I know, however, contact with this parent is poisonous, and contact - currently anyway - with the siblings is likely going to affect me negatively.


I know what it's like to have to talk myself out of walking into traffic or driving into a semi - it is utterly, utterly terrifying to be at that point and to know what might trigger that again, and how bloody close - twice in the last eight years - I came to saying "aw, fuck it," and driving across the line on purpose, despite knowing doing so would end my intense pain but would ruin my own children's and partner's lives.


I cannot stress this enough; when someone is in THAT much despair and so desperate to end their own pain, and they know doing so will have a massive, permanent effect on their loved ones, you MUST understand how unbearable it has become for them.


Neither of these siblings is willing to acknowledge their parts in any of it. They are, at times, like starving dogs with respect to goading me. One of them - maybe both - seems to enjoy pushing me to the point of pure, blinding despair. I don't know what they get out of it but it seems to satisfy something for them. Then again, they learned at the feet of the master, given our parent was ravenous for the high of torturing (in an emotional way) me, teaching them how to scapegoat, and expert at alienating us siblings one from the other. The effects of this parent's efforts are cell-deep and permanent.


A bit of advice for people who like to give advice, particularly to people like me: Just don't.


I guarantee you, if you had a happy or reasonably stable childhood, you cannot possibly understand the chamber of horrors that is a childhood overseen by an angry, unfulfilled narcissistic parent whose sole purpose in life is to create as much pain, despair, fear, sadness as possible as some means of obtaining power, and edifying themselves.


Friday, July 25, 2008

Sacrifice

Some years ago - about 15 or so - a good friend began displaying really bizarre behaviour. Her life had been really disrupted and difficult for a few years and so she decided to make a major change in her circumstances.

That in itself wasn't such a worry but there were other details that were too out of character and too odd to lump in to the "just making significant changes" category. I was terrified for her, to the point that I was worried for her life. Enough that I called one of her family members to let them know I was really concerned about her and why.

Of course this family member called her and I'm glad they did but she was furious with me.

It would be a lie to say I wasn't shocked that she was angry with me. Really angry. The 'don't ever speak to me again' type angry.

Looking back, however, considering how unlike her usual self she was then, I can understand her reaction. Despite that, were that situation to recur -with her or with someone else, I would do it again.

What kind of friend was I, really, had I not been willing to put the friendship on the line? I was terrified that she was not moving out of the city but that she intendied to shuffle off the proverbial coil. The truest test of a freindship is whether one will sacrifice that friendship to preserve the life of that friend.

I did hestitate to make that call but I made it anyway because, if I were wrong about her, so what? If I were right? That was a different story. I couldn't turn away and hope for the best.

At the time, she hadn't the perspective to understand; everything else was wrong and my actions were just one more wrong thing. We are friends again, for the record and I know she understands now why I did what I did.

In more recent years, a young man I did not know well but who was one of my children's circle also took his life. After, there were many, many regrets and many comments of "I wish I'd said something or done something. I kinda knew something was up."

Sadly, those who felt there was something terribly wrong didn't do or say anything for fear of pissing of the young man or for fear of being, themselves, uncomfortable or perhaps making a mistake or being wrong.

But what if?

What if one person had conquored their own fear of being wrong, of pissing of said young man? What if he had become really angry? What if he had lashed out? What if he had understood that one person gave a damn, and what if that had kept him from shooting himself in his family's garage?


What if that one person had lost that friend but that friend were not now dead?

What if?

What are we willing to risk to preserve the friend even though doing so - keeping that person alive - might kill the friendship?


Photo Credit: David Rabinowitz