Recently, I spoke to a Mom that told me a very sad statistic about her son’s high school.
She said that 3 teenage boys had taken their own lives in 3 years!
I felt deep sorrow about this situation not only because of the loss of 3 precious lives, but also because I, too, have struggled with depression.
And, I, too have been tempted strongly to attempt suicide.
In this excerpt from the introduction of my book:Â The “Mentally ill” Mentor: Practical Principles for Achieving and Maintaining Balance in Your Life, I explain my heart-wrenching experience in greater detail.
Here it is, word for word from my book (If you’d like a copy you can find it on Amazon.com). Â
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Introduction
SO, WHAT EXACTLY IS A MENTOR?
The dictionary defines a Mentor as: A wise and trusted counselor or teacher.
If wisdom comes from experience, I guess you could say I have a lot of it.Â
But the kind of experience I have is much different than nearly all of the people that currently advise you on what to do about your
struggle with a Mental Illness.
You see, unlike nearly all of them, I have actually been there.Â
I have actually felt the shame and lived through the sorrow.Â
I have actually shed the tears and felt the desperation.Â
I have actually kept on going when everything
inside me said it was time to just give up.
As much as your doctor, your therapist, your social worker, your spouse, your brother or sister, your mother or father, your best friend or whomever it is, may love and care about you – they just don’t know how you feel.
I do.
MY TRUE STORY
Fresh out of a “real-for-real†Mental Institution after a bizarre trip to Nevada in search of “The” Jessica Simpson, I was sure my life was over.
Not only had I been officially diagnosed with a “debilitating†Mental Illness, but I had no job, no money, no self-esteem and no desire to go on living.
As the painful days following my hospitalizations turned into weeks and then months, I struggled just to get out of bed each day.Â
I hated myself for that, and for the fact I was neglecting my responsibilities as a husband,a father, and a provider.Â
I also hated the fact that my future seemed
even more hopeless and dark than the present.
Back then, during every waking moment, hard, cruel questions would swirl around in my confused mind – questions like: How am I ever going to provide for my wife and our three young children?Â
How long can IÂ endure barely being able to pay the rent and put food on the table?Â
What if I let my Mental Illness get out of control again?Â
How long will my wife, Aimee, be able to put up with me before she resorts to divorce?
NOW OR NEVER
Unable to answer these questions, I finally came up with the perfect solution.
Although I had tried to put the almost constant thought out of my mind for months, I finally decided that taking my own life would be the most appropriate way to deal with the overwhelming shame and hopelessness I felt.
After all, how could someone officially diagnosed with a Mental Illness and who had spent time in mental institutions in two different countries on three separate occasions, ever make it in the world?
I still remember clearly the day when I realized it was now or never.
My wife, our two young children and our new baby were at a birthday party.Â
I knew I could leave an “explanation letter†on the front door,which only she would be able to read.Â
The children would never see my dead body, and in the long run they wouldn’t even remember me.Â
Not only would my wife be relieved of me – the biggest burden of her entire life – she would finally be provided for financially by a life insurance policy I knew included suicide.
But as I pictured it in my mind’s eye –actually walking downstairs,loading my gun, putting it to my head and pulling the trigger – something or someone stopped me.Â
From deep within my soul I felt a faint ray of
hope, a feeling that I was worth something and that my life was worth living.
A CRY FOR HELP
Instead of being worried that I would be bothering my wife, or that her friends at the birthday party would think I was some kind of crazy, unemployed nut, I called her up and begged her to come home.Â
When she finally arrived, I cried like a baby as I poured out the feelings of my heart to her.
It was in that moment I realized for the first time that major, immediate, sweeping life change was no longer a matter of preference for me.Â
It had become a matter of life and death.
As much as I wanted to continue to blame my childhood, my marriage,my failed businesses and all the people around me for the bottomless emotional pit that held me captive, doing so would only be continuing the lie I had unknowingly been telling myself for years.
It would be feeding the very thing that had brought me to this point in my life.Â
It would perpetuate the deadly cycle that I was just beginning to realize I was in.
The fact was, I had finally hit absolute rock bottom.Â
And although I was in excruciating emotional pain, I was still around to talk about it.
Somehow, through a literal miracle, I had resisted my terrible temptation.
And from that point on, I realized that I had nowhere to go but up.
While I was full of fear and anxiety, I also knew that somehow, someday – against all odds – I would finally reach the top, crawl out, and declare victory.
As I re-read my own writing now, I am in tears.
Reading this brought me back to a very dark time in my life – one that I will never repeat.
If you read and identified with what I have written, I plead with you to get the help you need.
You, too, a person of great worth and value.
And you, too, are far above writing yourself off.
You have family, friends, school and work associates and people you may not even be aware of that love and care about you and would be absolutely heartbroken if you were to take your own life.
And, as someone who can identify with how you feel, know that I care about you as a fellow human being – a brother – and I know, from personal experience, that you can get through this!
If you are in crisis right now, I urge you to talk to someone you love or call a Suicide Hotline in your area.
I promise you, from personal experience, that as dark as your world feels right now, things WILL get better.
You CAN do it.
Hang on and don’t give up, and one day you will be very, very grateful you did.
Until Tomorrow,
Dave
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8 comments
That’s all very cool.
If only I could believe these positives about myself. Today my counselor told me my thoughts and feelings matter. Do they? I find it hard to believe – just as I find it hard to believe that the obstacles that put me here in the first place are fixable. There really isn’t anyone I can tell the unadulterated truth. Most places won’t allow it, but no people will hear it either. Because they can’t truly understand it, what’s ill with me, what they can do to help.
Perpetual isolation does things to you.
I really liked reading you and I’m glad you are better now!
I stand with poisontongue with the positive things that I don’t really believe to really apply to everyone. I think; if everything has always been terrible, why would it change and be different? I never had any luck why would it change?
i’m always amused when people who have a live-in companion, somehow “miraculously” realize that they can still turn their lives back around.
lol…
My doctor actually sees a psychiatrist and a psychologist, too. And he’s a psychiatrist himself. I know – that’s just weird. Gosh, doctors aren’t human beings, after all. They’re robots. They don’t get sad or anything like that, but they do pick their noses sometimes. I think they’re programmed to do that. He must be programmed to blend into the general public or something.
while we’re at it:
1) don’t promise what you can’t deliver
2) it won’t get better
3) i can’t do it
Yeah, people might be upset if i end myself. Or they’ll be upset if i keep existing miserably and then die involuntarily someday. Or they’ll be upset if i don’t do whatever they think i should do, die or not.
But WHAT ABOUT ME? Huh? What about me?
How upset and heartbroken and tormented and debilitated and despondently depressed will *i* be, every day, if i *don’t* end myself? How many days of that will i have to endure, despise the fact that, not only will it not gain me anything, it will actually prevent me from gaining anything worth enduring all that agony.
Can those people maybe just suck it up and accept the fact that i’d rather not exist, because it’s far too continuously painful, while producing nothing i want, in return?
Can they maybe just this once, NOT think of themselves, and NOT prioritize how THEY feel, and realize that i do not want to continue existing in a life where no effective solutions can be implemented, many of which either don’t exist, can’t exist, or do exist but are prevented by things beyond my control?
If they can’t, they can’t, and they’ll just have to be sad for a while, boohoo, before they go back to distracting themselves from all the problems i needed solved, in order to justify any further exertion.
They may complain about being “sad,” but i’ll be too dead to complain about not being alive, and never having been able to truly live, due to all the things chosen by others, through poor judgment, which i was unable to change… some of which i could have changed, with their cooperation and compromise, which they were unwilling to allow.
Most people have to feel like shit sometimes. But people like me have to feel like shit 100% of the time. I think i’m allowed to opt-out, if i cannot avail myself a better option.
Truly, what about us? The thought of long-term existing is misery, especially when mandated by other people.
That’s the way it’s been my entire life, too. As it is, there’s only approximately one person in my way. I couldn’t even call a suicide line and make them care, ha.
the argument/position i just outlined, is essentially also a proof, of sorts, which showcases that “those people” do not actually care about us, but rather, care about how they will feel about the notion of our permanent absence being the result of choosing to exit, due to a realistic and accurate expectation of an unbearable life that does not allow us to gain/experience any of what is important to us, to offset the very well accepted fact that sometimes things will suck.
It’s not that we think things are never supposed to be difficult… it’s that dealing with all the bullshit all the time, had better be worth it, or i’m going to quit dealing with bullshit that isn’t worth dealing with, regardless of how anyone else feels about that.
Ugh I have when they try to make us feel guilty ( cause we don’t feel bad things enough already -_- ) and try to change our mind and not suicide. Like you said, it’s for them to not have to go trought that the hmm 6months?, 3months? that they will need to be fully recovered. I think we have suffer for much longer already than they will feel when we will die