05-04-2015 09:23 PM
05-04-2015 09:23 PM
05-04-2015 09:59 PM
05-04-2015 09:59 PM
Dear @soso
A warm welcome to the forums! I will write a quick reply because the forum' s about to close. Well don't for joining in the conversation with such an honest and open post - it takes a lot of courage.
Please don't beat yourself up for having mental health struggles. You have not wished this on yourself - no one would. Negative thinking patterns are learned, very early from what I have seen with my youngest child and her dad (who's incredibly negative and I've finally realised how much damage he was doing). It's wonderful that you had someone so caring in your life, but losing someone to suicide is utterly devastating. This in itself would likely be contributing to your own depression.
It is great that you've been able to be honest with your family. It is not cowardice that is keeping you alive. I suggest you imagine the pain you felt when your step-father suicided, then imagine passin it on to all the people you love most and who love you. Suicide can be contagious, in that those who have lost someone dear this way are more at risk of attempting themselves. Suicide can also be protective, if we can use the pain of our loss to remind us never to risk giving that to anyone else. I lost my brother when he was 21, when I have really struggled with feeling suicidal myself I have reminded myself of the cost to others if I go there. And I don't.
I have posted this poem elsewhere on the forum but can't find it ATM, so here it is again. I hope it might help somewhat to know you aren't alone.
Please be kind to yourself.
Siren Song
Death begins its siren song
As I try to hold
This hidden haemorrhaging
More pain than I can possibly contain
At these times suicide
Seems to hold such allure.
I cannot go there –
I force my mind away
By sheer will.
I know its promise of release
Is just a mirage,
I’ve been on the receiving side.
It would but hand this agony
To those I love most
And those who love me
A cursed gift I cannot leave.
So I sit with this cavernous black hole
I speak of what it devours and spews out
I sort through it like handling ra2or wire
When I can I even nurse it gently
Like a distressed babe
Until, at last, it subsides
… And I live
Kristin © May 2012
Keep posting, and keep in touch.
Kind regards,
Kristin
05-04-2015 10:37 PM
05-04-2015 10:37 PM
Welcome @soso
As Kristin writes, don't beat yourself up for having mental health difficulties. By the sounds of things, you've experienced more than enough to struggle with. Losing a loved one to suicide is like losing a limb. It's never just the initial shock of loss, it's the ongoing trauma and having to learn to adjust to their ongoing absence, and the pain. Lots and lots of pain.
I'm so glad you've found your way here. There is lots of compassion and warmth here. As well as a wealth of experience. It is a great place to spend some time. I look forward to seeing you around.
06-04-2015 12:53 PM - edited 06-04-2015 12:58 PM
06-04-2015 12:53 PM - edited 06-04-2015 12:58 PM
06-04-2015 12:57 PM
06-04-2015 12:57 PM
01-05-2016 09:40 AM
01-05-2016 09:40 AM
Feel for you SoSo as you have been through much suffering and hope you're feeling better since
this post was written. Depression that I have been plagued with is hard to shift but a I look to the
beauty of nature (a lovely sunset e,g,) and this gives me new hope. Thanks you for your story. Bimby2
01-05-2016 11:23 AM
01-05-2016 11:23 AM
HI there soso,
yes I do have experience of what you are describing. One question: given that your identity is protected on this site, and that no one knows or will ever know who you are, would it be difficult for you to describe in better terms what it is that you mean when you write that you can be a monster and that not even you know what you are capable of? I am asking this because, having direct experience with depression, I can tell you that self control is very possible, though difficult and though it takes lots of time to develop.
I can discuss my past openly, how the depression affected me and how I have learned to control it a bit. It is like learning to watch yourself from a distance as in mindfulness. IF you are able to give a better description of what happens to you it may well be that it is similar to what happened to me in the past and by sharing this information we could benefit greately.
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