Suicide Prevention Week: My Story

Suicide Prevention Week: My Story

September 10 is World Suicide Prevention Day. Suicide Prevention Week is the Sunday – Saturday surrounding it. 

My Story

In April, I celebrated my 43rd birthday, which was also the third anniversary of my afternoon on suicide watch in the emergency room of a VA hospital.

I know what it’s like to not want to be.

There were times I wanted to figure out a way to drive over my own head with my big SUV because it seemed the only way to make the roiling thoughts stop spinning. I understand how people start using and abusing alcohol and other drugs to self-medicate. Please. just. make. it. stop.

My thoughts of crushing my brain, somehow, weren’t as serious as other thoughts. Although my suicidal ideation is atypically violent for a woman, even at my worst, I didn’t want to leave a mess for anyone to have to clean up. Why inflict PTSD-worthy images on an innocent somebody, particularly someone who knew me not mushed or in pieces or with parts blown away?

But I couldn’t stand myself. I felt no hope for the future. I honestly believed my family would be better off without me, because I would never get it right, so could only damage them.

Lamotrigine now keeps me from falling over the edge.

But then? Then, months before my suicide-watch birthday, I had a plan. And a date.

For the severely depressed, it is a relief to develop a plan. Did you know that? The days, weeks, years no longer line up in an overwhelming vista of black with no discernible edges. It’s easier to endure something when you know it will end.

My end was in sight.

The Reality

No matter how skewed my thinking was, it did not change the fact that my children would have been irreparably changed by my suicide. They may have deserved better than I was during those times, but I am better than I was during those times. Perfect parent? No such thing. The best I can be? Not yet. But I can keep getting better.

I am the mother God gave my children.

Last week I started reading Gillian Marchenko’s Still Life. Although she never took seriously the thoughts of killing herself that popped into her mind, her bouts of major depression were more debilitating than mine. Her book is helping me better understand, accept would be the better word, that I don’t have to go digging for deeper, hidden trauma to explain my hopelessness. I don’t need a “better” reason when I feel like my darkness is out of proportion to my experience of trauma.

My brain is what it is.

And I need to take better care of it.

Depression

If you’re struggling with the darkness, or have fallen into hopeless apathy, know that you really aren’t alone. You’re not the first person to fall into the pit, and you won’t be the last. It feels utterly alone. But it’s not.

Depression lies.

Here’s some truth:

You’re not worthless.

It’s not hopeless.

You’re not helpless.

The darkness will lift.

You are not beyond grace.

Crushed by Grace

Peace.

It would all be over.

My kids would be better off with one big trauma than enduring a childhood suffering an endless series of small traumas with a mother who would never get it together.

The darkest lie I believe during the worst times is that I am beyond grace. Suicide is not automatic condemnation to hell, but I stood condemned because I consistently turned my back on grace. I refused to be grateful. The faith thing was just too hard. I’d never be good enough, never be able to live the truth I had longed for others to understand and embrace. I had nothing but inexplicable misery in this life, so why not cut it short and stop inflicting it on others?  I had the power to stop being

But I didn’t.

Before I could get my plan together, God crushed my backward hope.

I had set my face and headed in a new direction toward deeper darkness that looked like light, steps more confident than they’d been in a long time.

The impact shook me to the core. Knocked me flat on my back, unable to catch my breath. Like walking full-force into a glass door. I couldn’t see it until I felt it. Hard. Immovable.

Truth is funny that way. Even when you can’t believe it, it’s still true.

Truth is truth even when you can't believe it. Click To Tweet

Noooooooo!!!!

I ran so hard into the wall I lost my grip on my confidence in my chosen path. God snatched it as it flew through the air, threw it to the ground beside me, and stomped on it. My deepest desire… He. crushed. it.

I felt a new despair.

No matter what I did, I could not stop being me.

Truth it truth; His grace is sufficient. Here's my ugly beautiful story for Suicide Prevention Week

Eternal Beings

For a rational Christian, the Truth of eternity is a beautiful blessing. Life on this earth is temporary. Eternity is… eternal. I thought I was rational, but thinking hell is preferable to life, that’s not the sanest belief. I’d made my peace with impending never-ending suffering. What I hadn’t considered was that in order to suffer forever, I’d have to be.

Ending my physical life would not end me.

In The Weight of Glory, C.S. Lewis, in a less fatalistic frame of mind than mine, put it this way…

There are no ordinary people. You have never talked to a mere mortal. Nations, cultures, arts, civilizations – these are mortal, and their life is to ours as the life of a gnat. But it is immortals whom we joke with, work with, marry, snub and exploit – immortal horrors or everlasting splendors.

There are no ordinary people. You have never talked to a mere mortal. #CSLewis #eternity #life Click To Tweet

It may sound overdramatic, but I am immortal. It’s not a delusion of grandeur. It’s a fact.

My delusion? That I was beyond grace.

I couldn’t rest in the sure hope that at the end of this life, I would be transformed into Christlikeness. I could only be left with all that was worst about me. I hadn’t even gotten to a C.S. Lewis immortal horror thought; just me was more than I could bear.

Why must I be cursed with existence...

Hope... I didn't really want it. It would ask me to make an effort. I was all out of effort. Suicide Prevention Week: My Story

The Weight of Hope

God took the only thing I wanted so I could reenter the painful process of getting back to wanting other things.

 Why must You take even THIS from me?!? I’m DONE. DONE. DONE. I can’t do this!

No, you can’t.

But in my weakness, He is strong…

I was alive. I wasn’t happy about it.

I couldn’t stop being. My existence came with responsibilities I did not feel up to. Life had to go on, and God was letting me know that other things than I’d been feeling lay ahead.

Have you ever regretted the lighting of a spark of hope in the darkness? I resented the action that hope required. I didn’t particularly want to make the long, hard, slog uphill. The downward slide was all I had the energy for.

I love Jason Gray’s Without Running Away on his A Way to See in the Dark album. This resonates…

But where I thought hope had ended
I always find a little bit more

It’s not like I’m trying
To be optimistic
If the truth be told
I’d rather dismiss it
And be free of the burden
Of the living that hoping requires

To bring my heart
To every day
And run the risk of fearlessly loving
Without running away

Hope is not always a shiny thing that lifts us. Sometimes it's a weight heavier than death. Click To Tweet

I could see no light. But slowly, the shape of Truths the darkness had hidden began to be visible. I didn't need to see the light to begin seeing BY it. Grace is awesome like that. Even at my worst, it is there. Suicide Prevention Week: My Story

My Thorn, My Responsibility

I can’t fix the glitch in my brain. It’s not something I can just read-the-Bible-enough, pray-enough, go-to-church-enough believe away. God can heal, but that’s not what He has chosen for me. At least not in this season. Complete healing now is not how He can be most glorified. It’s not what would help me grow to be more like Christ. It’s not how I can best share His love with others.

It’s not God’s job to arrange things to my liking. It’s up to me to align my will with His.

It's not God's job to arrange things to my liking. It's up to me to align my will with His. Click To Tweet

Being human stinks sometimes.

My grace is sufficient for you… 

2 Corinthians 12:9

Really?!? It’s not feeling very sufficient right now.

Regardless of how I feel, I am surrounded by grace.

When I lose the ability to believe, Truth is still Truth.

I can’t fix my brain, but I can give it its best chance to be healthy. My best chance.

You’ve heard it before; you’ll hear it from me again… Drink enough water… Eat healthy and regularly… Get enough sleep… Exercise… Don’t isolate… Take time to be creative… Be careful what you feed your mind… Think about what you’re thinking about; take control of your thoughts… Immerse yourself in Truth by Immerse yourself in Truth by reading your Bible and practicing spiritual disciplines

I have kids. How I deal with the good, bad, ugly, and beautiful matters. Even if you don’t have kids, your walk matters, too. We need each other in the body of Christ, and the lost world needs us living the Way, the Truth, the Life. Whether or not our lights look the way we thought they would or think they should, we’re called to shine them in a dark world.

Whether or not you can see light right now, you’re not forever lost in the dark. You don’t need to see the light to begin seeing by it.

Grace is awesome like that.

You don't need to see the light to begin seeing by it. Grace is awesome like that. Click To Tweet

Before We Go…

Struggling? Feel free to comment or message me if you’d like prayer…

Experiencing victory? Share some encouragement! Here’s some encouragement from my 44th birthday!

Feeling ill-equipped to deal with someone in crisis? Check out this Check out this crisis intervention model grounded in the Parable of the Good Samaritan.

 

If you are in crisis and need help NOW, call 1-800-273-TALK (8255). You can also click the link and use Click to Chat. Either way, you will be connected to a National Suicide Prevention Lifeline counselor, anytime 24/7.

CrisisChat is another online option.

If you are a US Veteran, or family member of a veteran, you can contact the Veterans Crisis Line by dialing 1-800-273-8225 and pressing 1, by texting 838255, or clicking the link and clicking Confidential Veterans Chat. They also provide service for the deaf and hard of hearing.

Not in the US? Click here.

If someone you love is in crisis and is at risk for attempting suicide, GET HELP. They may be angry at you in the moment, but they’ll be around to thank you later.

Truth: You're not worthless. It's not hopeless. You're not helpless. The darkness will lift. You're not the only one. You are not beyond grace. DEPRESSION LIES. Suicide Prevention Week

 

Still Life

Okay, another plug for Still Life. If you want visible words-in-black-and-white proof that you’re not the only one intimate with the depths, or if you love someone and you can’t understand where they disappear to during major depressive episodes, please read this book.

Interested in other useful reads? Check out my reviews of these Books Worth Reading.

 

13 Reasons Why? Check out 44 Reasons Why Not.

 


 

You can find this post and other great Christian content at the following link-up:

Sitting Among Friends link-up

14 thoughts on “Suicide Prevention Week: My Story”

  1. The Lord knew I needed to find your blog today. Thank you so much for writing and sharing your story. I also fight depression and I am a survivor of a suicide attempt. I still struggle daily. Today, in fact, is a struggle. Thank you for reminding me of His Grace. <3

    • I am glad you found your way here today, and I’m grateful you survived. I am sorry you are struggling. I know how hard and heavy it is. Know I’m not trite when I say I’m praying for you. Yes, His Grace is there even when we can’t feel or believe it.

  2. It is interesting that I read this post only moments after writing a short story of how God intervened for me. I’ve been trying to remember and record God Stories on my blog. These are stories in which the Lord showed me his presence in my life in very real and sometimes startling ways. The one I wrote tonight is about how I was suicidal in college.

  3. You are so right with your two word sentence . . . depression lies! I also am a survivor of depression and a suicide attempt. Praise God, we are still alive! Just talked with a friend of ours who served in Iraq as a missionary and felt like the Holy Spirit was prompting him to ask during a large gathering if anyone was struggling with suicidal thoughts. To his surprise about forty people raised their hands and most of them were women who had lost their children and didn’t want to live anymore. May the lies be silenced and hope grow!

    • Yes, praise God, we are still alive! And, Amen, may the lies be silenced and hope grow! Thank you so much for taking the time to comment!

  4. This is beautifully written and I feel you and know what you are going through. A few years ago I wanted to die. I was tired of feeling sick all the time and every path I went down was the wrong one. So I told whatever force there was I did not believe in God at the time…Just make this stop, I cant take this anymore. I do want to live if this is all there is. What is weird is that even though I was not saved, God brought something into my life that looked like a curse-Grand Jury. I was told to go on it immediately for a year. I dragged myself there in the beginning, then realized I liked it a lot and it oddly enough picked me up and helped me get through each month. Now I am saved and walking closer with God and still feel like you do sometimes-I am done, I have had enough, I loved how you said you have the energy to go down, but not up. That is me sometimes. But now I know I have God, and I have to look to Him.

    • It can be interesting the spots of light God uses to get us through, isn’t it? Sometimes things we’d least expect! Thank you so much for your comment.

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