A Conversation.

_web_scared girl

The phone rang, the name displayed and I answered. It was her. In those days, it was usually her, and I never missed a call.

She was crying.

She wasn’t known for crying. She was known as a force of nature to be reckoned with when people did stupid things at work, the person who you could rely on to bring a shovel if you had to get rid of a body, a person to rely on in your darkest moments. She was a lot like me, and because of that and other things we shared an intimacy that I did not completely understand until that moment.

The voice I knew so well cracked with strain and need. It hurt me to hear her, but I was tethered to the need for wifi for work. All I could do was listen, talk, and tell her I was there for her even when I wasn’t there. We’d discussed the problems she had with endometriosis before though she didn’t like talking about it. The surgeons were going in again, having already taken out one ovary months prior to help her with the pain I watched her fight through for over a year. They wanted to, in her words, “hollow her out”, taking everything else. Alone in a world strange to her, she sobbed on the phone, “What should I do? What should I do?”

There are times in life when you care enough about someone in a bad situation that you just want to reach in and take all their pain, even if it means carrying it yourself. This was one of those times. I knew she wanted children. I knew the pain she was in was real, so very real, and that her strength allowed people to minimize her pain. I knew all of this, and connected only by the equivalent of two cups connected by string, unable to do anything else, I said… “I’m here.” That was it. That was all I could do. I had no right to make the decision for her between possibly helping her pain versus her not having children. It was bad enough that she had to go through it.

Hours passed, we talked about this and that, but underneath it all was that. She had already known what she was going to do when she called, she wanted to know someone else thought it was ok and whatever she chose was ok. There was no guarantee of anything as with most things in life, except that the surgery would mean no children and the pain could well remain. Damned if you do. Damned if you don’t.

For her, it was scary, and for me, it was about her. Her life. Her quality of life. I told her that and said she had to choose between children or the possibility that the pain might stop; I could not tell her what to do, I could not help her with the decision about her body, about her pain, none of that was mine and I couldn’t even pretend to make an informed decision. She knew me. She probably even knew I would say that.

I heard her pull in her breath as she often did before making a hard decision, and she said, “I’ll have them do it.” A finality. A decision made. A life changed.

That conversation still haunts me. As intimate as it was, it was painful. Intimacy includes pain and sharing things that hurt. While it was not the most intimate conversation we had, I remember it well because all I could do was be there for her even when I couldn’t. I could help her by not helping her, by… allowing her to work her way through to her decision.

In the end, the pain didn’t go away for her. I was there for that too, quietly present on the bad days. Then the bad days seemed to stop, but I would find she had made another decision, one I was not party to.

She killed herself.

She wasn’t the first person I knew who had killed herself, but she had been the closest. Sometimes people think it bothers me, and I tell them that I was fortunate to have had someone like her in my life. It’s true. There was no anger about it. I did not consider it selfish.

I considered it something I wish she had talked to me about while I understood why she had not – because then that conversation would be the one that haunts me, where I would tell her I didn’t want her to go, where there would be an empty spot in my life where she once was. It would have been completely self-centered, about what I wanted. And if she had suffered, I would have felt the responsibility of that suffering, that pain that she bore for so long. That would have been terrible, too.

But that conversation… well, that conversation ended up being something I remember because of all of that, and I knew for that conversation, she had chosen to allow me to be a part of it.

Being present is sometimes the best thing we can do, and we live with that because living without it would be worse.

Don’t Make It Suck More.

Case Toothpick

He sat there quietly on the steps, playing with the pocket knife he had been sharpening in whatever time he had, massaging it against an oiled whetstone when there was a break from work in the printery. There was no anger or rage, no fear or discomfort – a complete apathy had settled over him, as comfortable as a warm blanket on a cold winter’s night where he was born 15 years ago.

He’d just been kicked out of Physics class, one of the few classes he enjoyed, for highlighting a mistake made by the teacher – he was told never to return to the class.

He studied the honed blade and tested it against the young hair on his forearm, deriving no pleasure from how well he had sharpened the knife, how the knife shaved as well as a straight razor, scraping dead skin with it.

Things had not been going that well.

There was no one to talk to, really – to speak of things bothering him was a sign of weakness, and there’s little room for weakness between young men crushed together under the weight of a school where everyone in authority told him that he could do better when he didn’t meet their expectations. He had not yet learned that when he did well they did not speak, all that he heard was that he was not working hard enough.

The same happened at home. Nothing was ever good enough. There were no smiles involving him, the laughter was either directed at him or about something he wasn’t supposed to be party to. No matter what he did, it seemed, it wasn’t good enough. No matter how hard he worked in his drunk father’s business, it didn’t matter. His stepmother was a lost cause, off typing away and dragging her feet on hard wood floors, her inability to cook not open for discussion despite him having to walk home for lunch every day.

It was a control, keeping him from speaking with others at school except in class or breaks.

The printery did little more than make ends meet, with glorious plans espoused by his father that were not attainable.

“If you pulled your weight…”, “If you tried harder…”… well, that was what he was fed with every day in every aspect of his life. He did try hard. He wasn’t perfect. He responded to painful stimuli just like everyone else, to a point, to a point where he was squaring off with everyone when beaten into a corner like an animal. He started coming out of that corner swinging, and that, too, didn’t help.

He remembered a drunk uncle who had been a doctor in an emergency room complaining about how people didn’t know how to kill themselves properly – they slit their wrists the wrong way, and he had gone about explaining the right way. It’s odd the things that stick in a young mind.

He didn’t fit in at school. He was mocked for his cheap black shoes, even slapped on the back of the head by schoolmates driving by as he walked back to his prison. He seethed.

Maybe it would be easier for everyone if he just wasn’t around. The thought had no feeling to it – there was an apathetic pragmatism to someone who, already confused by puberty, the culture shock of being of another place and of a mixed ‘race’, and no way to let any of it out without more of the same burden that had been piling up for years.

He traced the knife point – he had honed that part the most, for opening boxes of paper – along the path that the drunk doctor had demonstrated, quietly. There was no thought of death. There was a thought of leaving life and escaping a world that was heavy-handedly trying to sculpt him into something he could not be.

Those he loved could not be pleased, those he liked could not be pleased, and the response that broiled in him just made things worse over and over again.

Life, to him, was pain. As he fiddled with the knife, he thought about what might be said about him should he leave, and realized it simply wouldn’t matter anymore.

A deep breath. The index finger steadied itself behind the blade of the knife, feeling the curve of it. “It might take a while”, he thought, but he had nowhere he wanted to be and nothing better to do based on the validations of others.

There was no pain when the point pricked the skin, revealing a drop of life’s juice. Another deep breath, preparation for the stroke….

“Don’t do that.”, said a familiar voice, quiet and deep, friendly. He looked up from his wrist, down the stairs and saw quiet and large Jojo, who looked up with the penetrating and humorous expression he always seemed to have . Jojo beckoned with his hand, and the moment was over.

He went and hung out with Jojo.

In that pivotal moment, the straw did not break the camel’s back, and, as it happens, it never did.

People like to talk about suicide after people have committed suicide, or when they have suicidal ideations. You’ll hear all the buzzwords – depression, ‘mental health issues’, and then you’ll hear the judgements about being selfish. You’ll hear people say that they had no idea, that they had just spoken to them not long ago, and how well they knew them.

The only suicide experts are dead. Everyone else just has theories. Everyone is different.

Corpsman UpI’ve lost friends, acquaintances and loved ones to suicide. I’ve also talked a lot of people out of it – more than I’ve lost – by not talking, instead listening. And I’ve lost a few I did listen to. 

Everyone who commits suicide has a reason that people who don’t commit suicide don’t understand. Few people who have stared into that particular abyss are even allowed to talk about it in society, or in a conversation with a counselor, without some judgement that somehow seems to make it all worse. I imagine that there are more people who have thought about suicide than any scientific study would reveal.

In some religions, it’s a sin – for the religious, the ultimate backstop. Another reason not to say anything about it. It’s taboo, more so than the the Internet History of many religious people’s web browsers.

It’s real.

As the above showed, it didn’t take much even in the moment to stop it, but it did not stop what lead up to it. While some- many? – people are oblivious to how difficult other people’s lives are, simply not being a jerk is enough.

On Suicidal Trees

Suicidal Hog Plum Tree.Like most suicides, it gave no warning. The machinations of digging the pond included the tree being over the pond.

The pond was dug right at the very end of dry season. The tree seemed to be fine, this large hog plum tree. No roots were broken, no damage to the tree.

Leaning against it, I learned of the biting ants and learned… not to lean against it. It became a landmark of one of the many things to avoid casually touching on the land, like the weaponized chlorophyll of the Trinidad Roseau.

Maybe it was that lack of touch that was the signal. Maybe, somewhere in the latent consciousness of trees it decided it was not just alone but lonely. Maybe I had chopped down some of it’s children and it couldn’t stand to live without them. Maybe it had seen it’s reflection in the beginnings of the collected water of the pond and it didn’t like what it saw.

Whatever the reason, I found it in the pond one day, broken at the roots. At the roots, I saw the stone.

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I do not know why it committed suicide. It seemed happy enough. And here I was left, having to remove it’s burdensome body from the pond, something that between the pickup, tractor and excavator was done… dismembering it accidentally here and there. Corpses are so fragile.

I write all of this to show how easy we are to anthropomorphize non-human things, and how we treat humans like non-human things. About how people commit suicide every day – U.S. military veterans alone at a rate of 22 per day, once every 65 minutes – dismissed as numbers that march into the sunset.

Civilians, too, who pass quietly into the night, not the celebrity.

And here I wrote about a suicidal tree.
And you read it.

Share this to support Suicide Awareness. The life you save may never know. 

Inferno

LampsThere are some that burn neatly

In ordered rows, in

Symmetry, order…

Controlled by fuel,

They linger for a time and

Fade away.

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And then there are those that burn

Pushing beyond boundaries,

Burning bright…

Their fuel within

They rage

Until they are no more.

 

I knew an inferno that tried to be a candle.