|
|

By
Ace-Jensen (A.J.) Mahari
More Links at the bottom of this page
Feeling Suicidal Right Now? Read This First
Parasuicide
The Attempt
There is "a realm of experience that is ruinous, where
ceaseless pain suffocates the spirit and consumes the will to
live. These are the moments of the suicide attempt: the 'whole
catastrophe,' as Zorba declares. Here are all the feelings,
thoughts, and actions at the threshold of suicide -- the extreme
limit of one's ability and willingness to endure the pain and
still remain alive. Suicide cannot be understood by isolating
any one moment in the process. In order to explore the mystery of
suicide, we must listen to all its voices; both its naked,
unremitting pain and its cool and methodical planning. Important
questions emerge: What frightful clash of internal and external
forces would point one toward self-annihilation? What abandonment
of hope could so challenge our basic innate instincts toward
self-preservation?
As we listen to those who have decided to end their lives, we
find some answers to these questions. Each story is different, and
yet they all have significant commonalities. The story of suicide
begins with loss or trauma, an unbridgeable sense of alienation,
and a deep need to hide one's pain. Withdrawl begins and then
deepens -- gradually, almost imperceptibly. Eventually, the
person who was once here is no longer present ... she only goes
through the motions of living. Hiding behind a facade, the person
is isolated, and vulnerable to the urgings of the suicidal trance.
Unchecked, the trance draws him or her to one fatal choice.
The Tunnel
And then I went to bed and thought that would be
it. I remember lying there. The window looked out
over the river and it was a beautiful scene. The
moon was full and I was feeling this real peaceful-
ness. I said to myself, 'It's a beautiful night to
die.' I got into this whole other state, of knowing
I was gonna die and accepting it and really wanting
it. It's like when you go to weddings, you take
pictures to remember everything that happened. Well,
I was taking mental pictures to remember this.Chris
At the brink of the attempt, the suicidal trance intensifies
to a frightening pitch. People feel extended beyond their capacity for
survival. Some describe a deafening cacophony of voices, while others
relate an otherworldly stillness and certitude. The suicidal act itself
may be fraught with emotions of anger or grief, or it may be purposeful,
even peaceful, and virtually without feeling. The ability to consider
options has been so truncated [cut short] that the person sees his
future as though through a narrow tunnel, at the end of which is only
one possible outcome. Time exists only as the succession of moments
between the present and this one final act.
Chris' experience of this tunnel was so intense that everything she
thought and felt seemed to further confirm her desire to end her life.
She was not to be thwarted, either by a change of heart of by
outside intervention.
Chris' story vividly illustrates her paradoxical determination to
wrest control of her life, by means of her death. It also reflects
once again how traumatic loss, unacknowledged, may form the seeds of
suicide... Chris and her husband moved back to the mainland, bought an
old farmhouse, and tried to make a new start, but nothing changed. He
continued to distance himself and assign blame, and she grew morose
and pained. The grief of his rejection was omnipresent and consuming.
For months on end, they would barely speak, occasionally being sexual
--for him a release, and for her a momentary respite from loneliness.
Curiously, Chris seemed incapable of expressing anger, as though those
feelings were being consistently short-circuited, undermined by
sadness. She had no experience at being assertive. Demanding basic
civility seemed inconceivable, and her self-confidence eroded.
I would get this sinking feeling, like the bottom
would drop out of my heart, and these thoughts and
feelings that 'I don't deserve to live,' if I got
angry at anybody. They could get angry at me, and
I didn't like it much , but I cerainly couldn't
reciprocate.
For almost all those I interviewed, there was a precipitating event
that occurred just beofre the suicide attempt. A cursory look would
lead one to belive that htis particular event caused the act, but the
decision to end one's life rarely erupts so dramatically from one
source of stress. A precipitating even appears in almost every
recounting of an attempt, but shouldn't be regarded as teh real basis
for it. Instead, the event serves to propel one further into the
suicidal trance -- into the 'tunnel'.
The Attempt Itself
As people describe the details of their suicide attempts, we find
that within the actual attempt to take one's life there exist smaller,
highly powerful, and sometimes conflicting experiences. Just as a
hurricane contains a number of discrete weather systems -- the ever-
intensifying winds portending the storm's approach, the full malevolent
force of the tempest unleashed, and the eye at its center (often so
tranquil that one forgets the storm will soon resume its deadly course),
a suicide attempt is composed of many different mind states. Each of
them contains its own set of thoughts and emotions, and at any given
point great sadness can exist side-by-side with a feeling of
determination, and volcanic rage along with calm acceptance. Experiences
within the suicide attempt include:
* Fury and rage
* The methodical trance, and
* Intimations of death
The Fury
The central moments in some suicide attempts are silent and
methodical, but others are filled with an almost unearthly rage
and desperation. All of the frustration, disappointment, and despair
converge during a few explosive moments in which one's energy becomes
directed toward self-destruction.
The Methodical Trance
Suicide attempts expressing strong emotion are dramatic and highly
disturbing ... for many there seems to be no other outlet or target
toward which to direct their emotion other than themselves. Suicide
was the only channel they could find for their overwhelming rage.
hearing their stories leaves us uneasey -- perhaps even frightened --
to ralize that internal and external pressures can escalate so
precipitously.
It is surprising, however, that most people who attempt suicide
experience relatively little emotion during the event. In fact, only
a handful of those interviewed in this research said that there was
a wild emotional tone to their suicide attempts. Instead, most spoke
of a more methodical and purposeful demeanor, muted in emotion.
What allows one to become so nonchalant? Psychologists refer to
this process as dissociation, in which people separate or distance
themselves from painful or frightening emotions and memories, sometimes
splitting them out of awareness together. This unconscious mechanism
is quite effective as a temporary way of dealing with overwhelming
stress or trauma. Over time, however, it leaves one's emotional life
truncated [cut short] and shallow. The suicidal trance is an extreme
example of this. It is as if there are two people present: one is in
unbearable torment and the other is calculating the best way to
eliminate the former and thus eliminate the agony. At worst, one may
feel already dead, simply waiting for a final release.
Intimations of Death
"I'd know everything. I'd be delivered from
confusion and learn the meaning of my life,
the reason for my being here. All the
questions would finally be answered."(Ian)
"I'd finally be with my family -- with the
people who loved me."Robert
Images powerfully organize our lives. We entertain images of our
possible future, and memories of our past, and both influence our
experience of the present. We envision spiritually in the form of gods,
saints, and angels. If we're honest, most of us will admit that we have
imagined teh moments of our death.
As children, we wrestle with the incomprehensibility of death. "Will
I still breathe?" "It must be cold under the ground." "Will Mommy and
Daddy be there too?" "Do puppies go to heaven?" As we age, we may ask
different questions and our concepts of death may be more complex, but
we still wonder what this enormous event will bring. Both the questions
and the answers come to us in pictures.
People who experience being close to death call upon the visions
they've accumluatedd during their lifetimes, for they offer guidance.
These images may encourage certain choices and may discourage others,
but they are always central players in the drama of our own mortality.
This is especially true in the midst of a suicide attempt. Each
person interviewed had a characteristic vision of an existence after
suicide and a particular understanding of how it would provide the
perfect response to suffering. For people in suicidal pain, as for
many others, images of death offer respite and future reward. In the
suicidal trancethe images of death as release and as an entry
into a better world are so powerful and convincing that they can
determine whether someone will continue to endure the suffering or
will attempt suicide. Robert saw his death as liberation and
deliverance: he would finally be free of those who didn't seem to
love him and reunited with deceased members of his family who did.
Mark, the painter and college professor, in his journal entry,
envisioned death as the end of a life sentence of suffering.
Thus the need to affix the proper period
to a life sentence that had become run-on.
Back to the bathroom, blade in hand, turning
the shower on quite hot. He felt a pulse in
his ears, cauterizing the flow of forevers.
The Eye of the Hurricane
Suicide attempts promise a kind of certitude that those who suffer
actually yearn for -- offering to end a life sentence of unceasing pain
and to eliminate the daunting complexity of human existence with a
single act. Suicide attempts create a sense of freedom in those who
long for escape. People commonly report that at the center of their
suicide attempts there were sudden moments of stillness: feelings of
acceptance, serenity, and peacefulness, and relief from pain. How can
calm be found in such an improbable context?
In these moments, when, like Abraham and Isaac combined, one is
poised at teh altar as both executor and sacrifice, one expereinces a
heightened state of awareness. One's attention is powerfully directed
away from the trance and the chronic fixation on pain and is focused
instead on the moment-by-moment experience of the present.
At this point people report being able to disidentify from the
world of suffering and enter a new world that is smaller, less complex,
and manageable.
Suicide promises to eliminate the possibility of continued hurt. In
a series of perhaps inalterable moments, a person can sever his or her
relationship with the world, declare an end, and feel relief that the
war is over. He or she suddenly senses the serenity of nature or
expereinces a clarity of perspective. One man I interviewed said,
'Everything came together. I finally felt clear. I knew this [suicide]
was the answer.' On Robert's final walk to the hanging rope in the
garage, although nervous, he felt filled with 'tranquility and peace'.
Vic actually felt happy leaving his therapy group that night; and his
ebulience carried him through most of the attempt. While Chris was being
chased, she was twice able to experience the serenity of the full moon
that would accompany her to her death. Throughout her attempts, she
could feel the beauty of the night and the peacefulnes of the moment.
It was almost like a mystical experience,
really. There was a very strange quality
about it. I have made all these decisions
to die, and it seemed there was this bigger
energy around me. It was a kind of peacefulness.
I could feel the coldness as well, but it was
like this serenity descended into my brain.
It made me think that I was making the right
decision, you know, because right inside
attempting suicide, I am experiencing this
kind of very beautiful state.
These experiences are powerful. Paradoxically, they can even offer
moments of appreciation for the sacred and precious beauty of life,
despiet the fact that they are part of a suicide attempt. But they are
ephemeral and short-lived. However potent, these experiences are still
secondary to the intention to die, and they dissolve as the attempt
continues.
At The Heart of the Attempt
What drives someone, in these final moments, to carry out his or her
plan rather than interrupt it? What is the nature of the momentum that
continues one forward, often despite considerable obstacles? The
answer to these questions lies in at leaset one of the following
desires:
* To escape a dilemma that feels inescapable
* To gain control of uncontrollable confusion
* To send a message when all other means of communication
have failed, and
* To kill the pain, even if it means killing oneself
Escaping the Inescapable
I felt a relief. It was the only time I
felt a little bit good during those twelve
days. I really decided that that was it --
the only way I was going to relieve what
I was going through. (Ed)
Human beings want to avoid pain. It is a natural and normal thing
to do. We may decide to leave a job or to sever a relationship when it
is chronically unsatisfying, or when it leaves us continually upset or
feeling disconnected with ourselves. In some ways, the attempt to calm
such turbulent waters is the same during a suicide. When the intensity
is too great to bear and one sees no indication that change is possible,
suicide seems like a reasonable attempt to escape what seems inescapable.
Many who tell their stories describe a state of mind and body filled
with turmoil adn chaos. Roiling waves of anger, fear, and self-hatred
batter the mind until virtually nothing else can be sensed. The chaos
that can assault from within and leave abject hopelessness.
People in difficult circumstances will often try to escape those
circumstances by any route available. the amalgam of pain combined
with the other elements of the descent brings them to a crossroads.
One road represents the continuation of chronic suffering and the
other represents liberation. However, their perception of available
options is so narrowed at this point tha their only means of escaping
the pain or quieting the chaos seems to be suicide.
Escaping the inescapable also reflects one's relationship with
time. As we've heard, those who are suicidal conceive of their future
as an immutable repetition of the present. Pain will compound pain
throughout time, without respite.
Power and Control
People who contemplate suicide believe that their lives will never
change for the better. They reason that it is futile to initiate any
activity desinged to break through the crushing sense of defeat. They
feel powerless. Backed against a wall or thwarted by an
impenetrable shield surrounding them, they experience life spinning
out of control, and their ability to stabilize it becomes progressively
limited. It is paradoxical and tragic that, for many, the only act that
can wrest a sense of power and control from such suffering is the
attempt itself. The world must be simplified -- reduced to one moment,
one certain destiny. Anything more is too complex to contend with. IN
such a context, the phrase 'taking one's life in one's hands' means
exercising one's last right of self-determination: the right to kill
onself.
The Attempt to Communicate
After one has failed to communicate the depths of one's pain or the
severity of one's fear and hopelessness, suicide attempts represent
the delivery of a final message. We are familiar with the suicide
note -- a good-bye left on the scene to be found after the act is
completed -- but the attempt itself is also a message. Just as there
are moments of fury within the attempt, and moments of desire to rescue
a snse of power and control, there are also moments in which a person
attempting suicide is consciously intending to send a message via
the act.
Killing The Vehicle
At the heart of suicide lies the intention to kill the pain,
regardless of the consequences. Whether it is unrelenting physical
discomfort, or whether people have exhausted their capacity to bear
overwhelming mental and emotional pain, they endeavor to extinguish
the agony, utilizing whatever means necessary.
The attempt to kill oneself requires a substep that almost all
those interviewed describe. In order to initiate the act and execute
the plan dispassionately, one must first separate from the parts of
oneself that are suffering. Again, dissociation plays a role. Since the
body and mind are the vehicle through which one experiences unbearable
pain, the body and mind become the targets of self-destruction. It
seems logical to eliminate the pain by eliminating the vehicle.
This form of dissociation is most often a gradual process. However
sudden it seems, however surprised others find themselves in the face
of a loved one's attempt, the seeds have been sown before.
The Bubble Bursts
How are suicide attempts thwarted? What series of events intervenes
unannounced to preserve one's life, and what happens then to one's
suicidal trance? These questions take us into critical moments of
the suicide attempt and those that immediately follow it. There are
people for whom the attempt fails and yet the trance adn the desire
to end their lives remain. Others experience the beginnings of a change,
either during or just after the harrowing episode they orchestrated.
Devotion to the suicidal quest wanes, but it leaves a vacuum. How that
vaccum is filled strongly influences the trajectory of one's recovery.
There are people who, alarmed by unexpected physical distress --
increased or irregular heart rates, uncontrollable muscle spasms,
shortness of breath, extreme loginess -- have abandoned the attempt
and called for help. Others ... experience disturbing metaphysical
encounters -- premonitions of death or afterlife, for example --
and stopped. Some gave up when the method faltered, as for example,
when their bodies rejected the pills they had taken.
Sometimes the suicidal trance shatters during the attempt. The
desire to die dissolves, at least temporarily, leaving the person
shaken and unsure how to proceed. When the suicidal bubble bursts,
people may feel overwhelmed with emotions they have long suppressed.
The attempt seems to have organized all their thoughts and feelings
into a vision of death and liberation, so that when the trance
collapses, no psychological structure remains to handle the emotion.
Sometimes the failure of an attempt bursts the bubble of the
suicidal trance. Most often, it delivers one into another state of
confusion, a netherworld where people are neither strong or focused
enough to make another attempt nor clear enough to envision the future.
Sometimes just after an attempt, however, a glimmer of insight does
emerge.
The source for this page was Chapter 3, "The Attempt" of the book "Waking Up Alive". Click
below to purchase your very own copy of this book.
Waking Up Alive: The Descent,
The Suicide Attempt and the Return To Life by Richard A. Heckler, PH.D.
Brother To Brother
Personal Experiences of Those Who've Attempted Suicide Coming Soon
Glenna and David Romph don't understand why their son took his life
Glenna and David Romph's Letter To Local Newspaper
Despair hits hard during holidays
What families can do to help
WLU brings suicide into open
Links Related to Suicide Prevention
since December 23, 1999

This page was moved to this domain on February 9, 2003 - and is © Soul's Self Help
Central 1996-2005. © Borderlinepersonality.ca 2003-2007
Last up-dated January 19, 2007
|