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Depression and suicide... you may never see it coming.

Category depression
Wales manager Gary Speed found dead - Former Wales international Robbie Savage wrote on Twitter: "He was upbeat on phone yesterday we were laughing together, talking football and dancing he was a great teammate and a great friend #RIP."

This news hit the sports pages today, another victim of suicide likely brought on by depression.  I had never heard of this guy before today, so it doesn't hit me at the level of someone close to me deciding to take his or her life.  But the part of the article I included above struck me, as it often seems to be part of far too many suicide stories.

When friends and acquaintances of a suicide victim are interviewed or questioned, often there's a statement along the lines of how happy they seemed just a few days (or even hours) before.  Sometimes it's known that the person is suffering through a tough situation.  It might be money issues, employment problems, or marital troubles.  They might have been on depression medications that had either become ineffective or were not creating the right chemical balance in the brain.  Perhaps they were on meds, but they considered themselves "cured" and stopped taking them, whether due to pride or unwanted side effects.  All of those effects and reasons could be in play, but from someone on the outside looking in, everything seemed fine... until it wasn't.

We're far too good at putting on masks... especially guys.  People ask "how are you", and you answer with the expected response... I'm fine.  But you're not.  The veneer and facade is thin, and it's barely concealing the sense of hopelessness, uselessness, and trapped desperation that you're feeling.  The problems have gotten so large, the obstacles so high, the only path to peace seems to be to end the game.

And meanwhile, we never see it coming.

Before you decide to take that final step of no return, call someone.  Talk to someone.  Call the Suicide Prevention Hotline (1-800-273-TALK) and see if there are options you haven't considered.  Talk to your doctor and have a frank discussion about what you're feeling.  Open up to a close friend and let them help.  Tell us you need help, but not in a way that makes it too late to do anything.

And for those looking in from the outside... Our "social" world makes it appear that we know someone better than we ever thought.  Instead of having three friends, you have 300.  You chat, email, and tweet them every day.  But do you take the time to get beyond the social pleasantries, to talk about something other than work, technology, football, or a dozen other topics that are "safe"?  When you type "how r u?" and they say "fine", do you take the time to challenge that if you sense something's not quite right?  Are you afraid to say "r u sure?", "really?", or "no you're not"?  Try it some time... you may literally save someone's life.

Don't hide behind "It's none of my business" or "I wouldn't know what to say".  Just be there.  That may be all they need.  Don't let a moment of embarrassment or awkwardness stop you from reaching out.  It's far better to deal with that than it is to deal with "if I had only..." the rest of your life.

Comments

Gravatar Image1 - You're absolutely right. I was fortunate enough to have people in my "social" world reach out for me when I needed and they made a huge difference.

Gravatar Image2 - Yes, that was a perfect example...

Gravatar Image3 - Apparently sometimes the happiness immediately before the suicide can come from making the decision to act.

Very sad for his wife and children particularly I can't imagine how they must be feeling.

Gravatar Image4 - Jason... had a friend in high school where that exact thing happened. He had a horrid home life and nothing was going right in his life. He then seemed to get very happy, only to be found in his car with carbon monoxide two days later...

Gravatar Image5 - I've lost two brothers this way. It's very difficult to be left behind, but there are ways to cope and perhaps help others cope. { Link }

Gravatar Image6 - Especially relevant, given that there are often "holiday suicide trends" - so sad.

Gravatar Image7 - How this is starting to be tackled in Australia; 2011 day has occured

{ Link }

Gravatar Image8 - Interestingly Ruby Wax was on the Radio this morning talking about her own experiences. She says isolation is a killer. She has been working with SANE and others to create Black Dog Tribe (blackdogtribe.com) { Link } which aims to allows suffers of depression to find each other and sources of help. It also helps carers to find help and each other. It's in beta and should be fully operational in January.

Gravatar Image9 - Good post. I'd like to add that depression doesn't have to relate to the classic problems of money, loss of love, drugs, or other hardships. Once can simple be depressed for no tangible reason. It's a disease.

In the Netherlands a good example was actor Antonie Kamerling. He had it all and he suffered no significant hardship in his life. Money, a beautiful wife, a happy family, and loved wherever he went. Still took his life for reasons unknown.

Gravatar Image10 - I've just bought this Kindle book:

{ Link }

Ronald Reng's biography of Robert Enke. It has just won the William Hiil Sport book of the year prize and has wonderful reviews. It talks about Enke's life, struggle with depression and eventual suicide in the prime of his life.

Gravatar Image11 - I'll need to check that one out, Jason...

And I agree completely, Ferdy. Unfortunately, few people understand that, and the extent of help is "you have everything, and you have no reason to be depressed. Just get over it."

And we know where that sometimes leads... :(

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