Another of my friends committed suicide today.. seriously? thats three in two months. I cant take much more of this.. with these deaths my aunts death and my parents divorce and fighting and me being bullied i cant take this any longer. i feel like collapsing on the floor.
13 comments
Stacey I am sorry to hear that you have lost another friend. Have you reached out to anyone at all other than the poeple here?
no. I wish someone would listen. Everytime i try i get sent away or people just dont care.
have you tried talking to the pastor/minister at your church? and if you don’ have a church – just go to the nearest one and talk to the pastor.
reverent dawg
about what? i have never stepped foot in a church in my life.
Losing a friend is never going to be easy. Keeping your own sense of calm and maintaining your friend’s memory are important elements of the grieving process. Accept that this is going to be a very hard time in your life but be reassured by the reality that you will get through this and that the best way to honour your friend is to retain his or her memory always alive in your heart.
Think of the good times. Recall fond memories of things you’ve shared together and remember those. Do not play over the tragedy that took his or her life.
Write poetry, listen to music you like, spend some time alone to reflect. Doing things that remind you of your friend will help you attach positive feelings to thoughts of your friend, even if you cry the entire time you’re doing it at first.
Accept help that others might give you. Lean on family and friends.
Write a eulogy for your friend and read it at the funeral. Visit the grave. Lean on faith. If you believe in God, then pray for your friend, and for yourself and his or her other friends and family.
Allow yourself to feel sad. Don’t let anyone tell you how long you should feel sad, or how sad you should feel. The loss of a friend affects different people in different ways, but it is painful no matter what. Do remember that it is pain that must simply be endured, like a broken arm – there are things you can do to alleviate it for a little while, but it will eventually hurt again until it fully heals. Believe it or not, as painful as this loss is, it will fully heal in time.
Talk to your friend. This might sound weird, but it’ll help. Tell your friend how you feel, that you miss him or her; talk over things that are happening in your life, and how different things are since your friend can’t be with you. Tell your friend that you take him or her with you wherever you go, that he or she is always in your heart. Go for grief counseling or pick up some books on grief and how to handle the pain you feel.
Get enough sleep – or at least rest. Often, soon after the death of a loved one, we are plagued by bad dreams, or sad ones, and sleep seems scary and impossible. Lie down in a darkened room, and if you find it hard to sleep, at least put on some soothing music, or let the TV play softly in the background. The music or words from the television can help direct your dream state a little, keeping you from re-cycling your grief through your dreams. Do know, though, that our subconcious mind processes situations and helps us deal with things, so don’t avoid your dreams, though some may make you wake up sad.
Resume your place in the world. Once you feel better, go out with your friends and do things you like to take your mind off the pain. Distracting your thoughts for a while will not make you forget your friend forever. Dwelling on your own pain doesn’t honor your friend’s memory – having a big, bold life, and remembering your friend with love and affection as you do is what your friend would want you to do.
Make a scrapbook of your friend’s life. Include photos of him or her from when he or she was young through to older age. Include fond memories in this scrapbook – write captions or remembered stories next to the pictures. Look at it when you are feeling down, and share it with other friends.
Do something cool in your friend’s honor. If your friend liked to ride his or her bike, find out when the next MS ride is, and ride in your friend’s honor. Or if he or she battled cancer, check with the Cancer Society and do a Walk For the Cure or something similar. Donate any funds you raise in your friend’s name. This gives great honor to your friend’s memory, and does something positive in the world at the same time.
Don’t give yourself a hard time about not being able to assimilate into society right away. Give yourself time to deal with the blow of grief. You will find that it comes and goes in waves, you may be fine one day, and devastated the next.
If you could have helped them in one way or another don’t blame yourself. forgive yourself. easier said then done. but would your friend want you to live in misery for the rest of your life?
Loss is an incredible blow to the body and mind, it takes a long time to even wrap your head around the absence of the person you once knew, whether it was someone young or old. It is okay to have feelings of deep sadness, numbness, detachment and anger.
While you are in pain, people who have not experienced the death of a loved one may say insensitive things that are well meant, but not helpful. Gently excuse yourself from these people, now is not the time for you to have to worry about them.
You may find that you feel cut off from your other friends, or that some of them avoid you. Unfortunately, some of our closest friends just aren’t capable of dealing with death, and you may be surprised at who is able to step up to help you through this time.
You may be isolating yourself from close friends because you are afraid – to love is also to open up to potential strife and pain and perhaps even another death. Spending some time in solitude is okay but allow yourself to reach out to others who love you – even a phone call can sometimes do wonders.
The world will feel especially rough and indifferent to your grief. For you, it seems like the end of the world, and it just seems wrong that the world can go on without your friend so easily. Your loved one has died, yet people are still going out and getting their mail everyday, cars are going by, business as usual. Seek out places and things that serve as a refuge to you, even if it’s just staring at the wall for an hour. Do what you need to do to carry on, one day at a time.
This may sound impossible, but try to eat and drink and get enough sleep. Even if it’s hard, even if you are having nightmares, even if you can’t eat anything but broth. Do what you can, ask friends to be nearby, ask them to feed you, to remind you to eat, to open doors and windows and let the sunlight in. Sunlight, food, rest and hydration can all help ease turbulent emotions and make mood swings a little bit easier to handle.
There are crisis lines etc. Do you have insurance? even talking to a counselor would be better than being alone with this.
i cant talk to anyone. theyll think i wanna commit suicide too and even though i do i dont want to be sent away
It’s ok to collapse on the floor girl. You can pick yourself back up later
apologies for not responding sooner – had to run an errand and then couldn’t get onto his web site for over an hour
If there is anyone on his planet who has experience in dealing with death, it’s a church pastor/minister – Lutheran or non-denominational seem to be pretty easy going and compassionate – talking to a pastor – even if you don’t believe in God just might be helpful to you to accept the passing of friends and family – I don’t know – I’m just offering a suggestion of someone who you can talk to and make sense out of things from a spiritual perspective.
I personally do not “believe” even though I was raised to believe – that said even though I didn’t believe, i still found comfort and wisdom in their words – especially when my mom passed (10+ yrs ago) – because i was hearing about what SHE believed.
Kane’s post is also loaded with great ideas to consider.
all the best.
dawg
this is a good idea. i thought about going to a church a couple years ago when i was suicidal but never went. I might go but what if its a baptist church or something. what if its not open?
Churches all teach and counsel through the word and faith in God – my personal experience, i found baptist denomination very “strict’ fire and brimstone type – catholic I found very ridged more “protocol”-centric (not to mention their well know issues with molestation – but that could happen anywhere)
All churches run like a non-profit org so they will have an office and phone that you can call – it will be in phone book or on sign out front – call them and try and set an appointment – you don’t have to actually go to the service bu you could i you like – it doesn’t hurt to “see what happens” – most churches are very welcoming of newcomers .
i am technically a Lutheran – which is a looser more forgiving and understanding version of catholic – i have not gone to services regularly since I was about 15 or so (i’m 40+ now) and I’ve had two pastors – the one who I knew from birth to about 1999 … and the guy at the church that my mom used to go to – I’ve met him about 5 times – and he know i’m not a believer but he still “knows” me.
I’m not going to pretend that this is “the answer” or that I “know” it will be a good experience – but if you are respectful and ask for help and you are open to what they have to say you might find some peace … you could also talk to the pastor/minister at the funeral services – they might be even more helpful because they may have personally known the deceased.
peace be with you
pastor dawg
I may not understand fully, but I have lost friends to suicide. It’s horrible, and terrifying, but just because they died does not mean you need to. I bet they wouldn’t want you to, actually, although I don’t know them, if they cared for you, they wouldn’t want you dead. Try to stand up for yourself. You can get help, you can get through it.
Well, why don’t you go somewhere anonymous?