First, the blah blah. Â My mother wanted nothing to do with children, I was the only one she had that survived. Â The rest were aborted, but by the time she was pregnant with me in the late 1960s, with her being 34, she disappeared for days looking for someone to terminate the pregnancy. Â Finding no-one who would, and being a doctor herself, she tried various abortifacients (substances and treatments to induce abortion) on her own. Â Today, you can even easily find such things, though not labeled as such, at health food stores. Â That didn’t work, though I was sufficiently damaged at birth that I was given an emergency baptism because I wasn’t expected to survive, and spent 10 days in the NICU. Â After coming home from the hospital I survived many “accidents”. Â She gave me a coin to swallow but I didn’t choke on it. Â I “fell” off the counter. Â She tried coaxing me into sticking something metal into an electrical socket. Â I “tripped” down the stairs. Â She tried killing me, in ways that would look accidental, for a long, long time. Â When information on Lyme disease was first published in the late 1970s, she sent me places where I could become infected with it. Â I could go on and on about her various machinations, all the while to everyone else trying to look like a responsible, caring mother.
Fast forward 40 years and my health is an utter fricking mess and every doctor I’ve been to has been utterly clueless. Â In the last 12 years I’ve easily seen 20 doctors about my various health problems and received treatments that were either ineffective or made my health worse. Â You see, my mother was a leader in her field, a specialist in infectious disease. Â She taught classes in medical school, she did original research and published in respected journals, she saw patients, she consulted in malpractice suits. Â She knew things 40 years ago about infections that mainstream medicine today is just barely catching up to.
It wasn’t until after she died that I began to put together what had happened to me. Â She was, after all, my mother, and most of the things she did to me were covert and in secret, while outwardly appearing to be a caring parent. Â For the last few years I’ve been trying to undo and reverse the damage done by decades of her manipulation and I’ve tried nearly every therapy and treatment to get some semblance of a life back, to no avail.
Recently, though, a good friend of mine helped me out. Â He’s my last friend after everyone else steered clear of my problems like rats deserting a sinking ship, he’s watched me struggle, he gave me a place to sleep when I lost my house because of not being able to work. Â He gave me a lifeline when I needed it most. Â And, best of all, after many discussions where he could see that I was suffering and needed a way out, a final exit, he got me something that I could use to do that, too.
But apparently I wasn’t ready to use it just yet. Â For much of the last three days I sat in an abandoned house (a house which, upon reflection and consideration, probably has Sick Building Syndrome) with this wonderful gift, holding it in my hand, but couldn’t pull it off. Â I was so close, so very close to finally shuffling off this painful mortal coil.
I still have it, and plan to use it somewhere else, but for now am just frustrated that I’m still here. Â Because I tried, I really tried to have a life despite that pain and misery that got shoveled onto me, I tried for decades and now I’ve had enough. Â But apparently not quite enough to pull the trigger and call it quits.
But having it means I am at least one step closer.
9 comments
Hey man, death is awesome. Embrace your need for death. Living can be awesome, but death is always awesome. You know why? Because it’s all a big mystery, and we all meet on the other side. Keep your head low and your chin high
Dude you sound like a freakin’ boss
Some crazy ***** tried to kill you from before you were even born and kept trying after and you’re still living today
I don’t think you’d forgive yourself if you killed yourself after going through hell already
There is a reason you’re still on this earth, it might not seem like it, it might seem that everything in the world is against you..but there has to be a reason…think about it, you made it for a reason, if your mom knew all kinds of ways to kill you, but you made it.. That tells you that you’re strong enough to handle it.
Boss? Well I’ve learned that there are two types of things that try to kill you. The first type is that what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger, I have first-hand experience with this. That crazy ***** did make me stronger. The second type is that which causes misery, wears you down, and makes you weaker. The first 30-or-so years of crap made me stronger, wiser, and enlightened me about the world. The last 10+ years has just worn me down, hasn’t made me stronger, and has left me longing for the end.
There are many reasons people consider a final exit, like insurmountable health problems (got those), failed relationships (got those), money problems (haven’t been able to work in 12 years), social isolation (with an IQ of 165 I have trouble relating to people and vice-versa), and physical and emotional trauma. Oddly, though, I am not psychologically depressed. But I am constantly physically fatigued and worn-down. I don’t experience guilt or shame, nor do I feel I need to forgive or punish myself for the difficult path my life has taken, even though the difficulty has taken its toll.
Humans are animals. Animals of many species demonstrate behavior that ranges from wonderous and noble to beastly and depraved. And humans are not the only animals who commit suicide, like lemmings or beached whales. Even individual damaged cells in the human body will self-destruct rather than become malignant, cancerous, or otherwise damage the organism as a whole. That a “right to life” becomes in some beastly human minds an “obligation to life despite whatever suffering may be encountered” is just the opposite end of the spectrum to the more noble idea that a “right to life” also equates to a “right to die”.
I used to think that death was just oblivion, like sleeping forever. But after considering various states of matter and energy, and reading about many Near Death Experiences, I think there is something that is neither life nor oblivion that happens when someone dies. Maybe it’s just a hallucination, maybe it’s DMT released by the brain, but there is something that happens there, and I’ll be interested to find out what it is.
I had an inexplicable push-and-pull experience when I was about to pull the trigger, something drawing me toward it and that it was the right decision for me to end, and something making me resist doing it.
I understand why you wouldn’t want to go on. And I really related to your explanation on “what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger” but when something keeps trying to kill you all the time, it begins to wear you thin, and make you feel not so strong. Well, you’ve had a rough road and fought valiantly, so it sounds, thus far, so whatever you choose to do, you have my full support. I hope something gives you relief so you can live on because an indomitable spirit such as yours, well the world needs more of that. But with all the issues that have piled on, I can understand your exhaustion. Best of wishes in whatever you choose.
Thanks for your kind words, kitty. However I don’t quite know how to say what I’m about to say. It seems to me that many people who would want to try to do good in the world get their ideas perverted and misused by others. Jesus was a man, no more and no less, yet what he tried to teach led to the Crusades and other “holy” wars, the Inquisition, and a modern Church that supports false prophets and protects pedophiles. Einstein’s and Oppenheimer’s work let to nuclear weapons and the threat of Mutually Assured Destruction. And there are many others like me who fought valiantly only to be made to suffer by nurses and doctors who don’t give a rat’s ass about suffering.
How do you know she did all of those things?
But more importantly, she’s gone now. You are an adult, and she is dead. That means your life is yours now.
What she may or may not have done to you is over.
Trust me, I know that chronic illness with no answers is frustrating, and it makes you feel defeated, but you need to take responsibility for yourself now.
Many people are chronically ill without being suicidal. Many people have suffered abusive childhoods without bring suicidal. You say you aren’t depressed, but you clearly are, or these things wouldn’t make you want to give up.
Your options are… Just do it and get it over with, or get some help, and take your life back now.
Good luck.
Hi, Are you taking medicine? Have been tested for Lyme?
I can’t believe what your mother did to you. She was a crazy, an evil person and how is that this kind of person was a doctor?, treating patients? It’s so contradictory.
I really hate doctors, I have been with many -visiting-, and they are so cold, insensible people, so I can understand you.
I’m every day with pain, and getting worse and the horrible doctors don’t care about it.
I’ve been fighting with this the last 5-6 years of my life, I’m so tired of them, I really hate them.
My ex boyrfriend was a doctor! go figure! He never believed me that I was feeling very bad, I’m here 6 years later and he doesn’t believe me yet, and he’s a doctor! I dont’ want to see him. They really don’t belive the others, their patients. They’re few that maybe care about … maybe.
I hope your pain is not so bad, I hope you fight, you ‘ve going though really bad experiences with your mom. I still want to live but i feel totally stuck, I can’t bare this anymore, seeing how I get worst.
Receive a hug, and sorry for my english.
Natalie.