Life Has Meaning? Suicide, Cutting…

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008 | Posted in Negativity by Vanessa

Plant in Forest Park

New Life in Forest Park

For a while in college, I worked part-time as a content editor and web producer for a company called HealthyPlace.com. A large part of my job responsibility was to keep the communities up-to-date. I spent 20 hours or so per week scouring different resources and adding stories and news to the front pages of each community, moderating the journal pages, selected journalers to feature, and at one point I even created a new website to help flesh out (no pun intended) our self-injury community. Looking back, I suppose it wasn’t overly conscientious to call the site “Blood Red” because it could have been a “trigger.” I never really understood that concept. To be honest, I never understood mental illness or why people would flock to websites and communities that centered around them and seemed to sort of promote them. I could open a whole can of worms and write tomes of random narrative here, but I will save that for another time.

I don’t like to approach writing in a structured way at all, but somehow, when an issue is too deep, too personal, or too negative, I find myself staring off blankly, avoiding the computer screen like I’d avoid an uncomfortable relationship oriented conversation. My mind essentially shuts down and I become tired. I don’t know what kind of coping mechanism this is, if it’s one at all. I’d probably achieve better results if I gave myself an outline when I find this happening to me - a tool to get my thoughts back on track.

Last night a friend of mine was rushed to the emergency room because they were talking about suicide, locked themselves in the bathroom with a butcher knife, and proceeded to slash up their arm. This person was treated, held overnight, and released this afternoon. I was understandably upset, saddened, and concerned when I heard this news but I was far from shocked by it. The person in question has been known to ‘cut’ in the past, but this definitely felt like a whole different level. Even if suicide was not actually an intent, anything to this extreme is beyond a cry for help - it is, dear friends (and sister who oh-so-loves Whitman), a Yawp. A big whopping Yawp for help.

It seems to me that suicide, or ‘attempted’ suicide, is the last resort of a person that feels not only depressed but also bored and unequivicolly stuck in their lives. Depression alone is not enough. I think the perception that you’ve gotten yourself completely stuck, immovable, wriggling on a pin (line 55) without a means to escape is the worst spot to be in and the most hopeless. After all, we as a human race have only hope, according to the Greek myth of Pandora and her legendary box, at any rate. It’s the only thing that keeps us going. Hope. Without that, there would be no art, no progress, no society, no you, no I. Nothing. If we had no hope we’d have nothing to keep us here, nothing to strive for. We’d probably all choose to opt out of life.

That’s what I think suicide is. It’s someone that’s come to the end of their tether, regardless of whether things could change for the better in an hour or a day or a week, they’ve come, at that moment, to the end of their tether where absolutely no hope remains. They find themselves stuck and wriggling, depressed, bored, and they say, “This is the end. It’s my end.” And if everything goes according to plan, it is.

Life in Your Hand

Life in Your Hand

Personally, I always tell myself that if things are at their absolute worst and I find myself completely depressed and feeling stuck, I’d give life one last try in a place very far away from the society that I know that’s put me in such a predicament. I would fling myself headfirst into a different world, whether it was the countryside of France or the hills of New Zealand or the busy streets of China. Even if that meant dying in a faraway and altogether unfriendly place, at least I would have tried one last time. Essentially, I would run away. Maybe that’s too optimistic or too immature, but it gives me strength in the darkest and most lonely moments.

It’s truly Sad, the world some of us create for ourselves. I wish I could make it better. What else is out there?

Your insights are appreciated and any words of hope, encouragement, or positive ideas I can pass along are encouraged.

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4 Comments on Life Has Meaning? Suicide, Cutting… - Add yours!

Justin
August 20, 2008

Great post Ness - Well written and great accompanying photos as always. I know we disagree on this topic because I don’t see suicide the same way you do. But you are right about how people create a world for themselves. I don’t know if I am right they way I feel about the subject - but I always find reasons to live - making me very lucky. I don’t recall being in a situation where not existing was my only option - so it’s hard for my opinion to weight in on this topic.

Praying for a speedy recovery with a lifetime of awesomeness and positive thinking. ;)

[...] a side note, I am a little disappointed no one else commented on the last entry about cutting and self-injury.  Some of you messaged me, some of you said nothing, but Justin was the only person to actually [...]

Sheila
August 26, 2008

Now that I have a chance to comment…my reflection of your article is true but I always feel that there are other options no matter what life hands you. (”you” is directed to those that actually choose these options).
You and you alone have the choice to create opportunities and different directions. Y
ou have the choice to move to a different city, to find different friends, create a bigger family (or don’t socialize with the ones that you already have), find someone that shares feelings like yours, change jobs, make or lose money… You should never choose the easy way out. That is exactly what suicide is. Make your life more..period. Give yourself something to look forward to. Give yourself a goal.
As far as cutting is concerned, the basis is to make yourself FEEL isn’t it? To make an outcry for attention although you do it secretly or to make you more aware of how you feel in a society that really doesn’t care about the individuality of You. You only hurt those around you on either option. Inflicting pain and suffering on the people that actually care about you is only selfish. But you don’t see it. You are blind.

Vanessa
August 31, 2008

I wanted to add this quote by Sue Hubbard that I found while reading about artist Rachel Howard. I am preserving it because it’s an impeccable quote that mirrors themes I mentioned in the post above and because, quite possibly, I’ll want to refer to it later.
“the ultimate human crisis… unlike Beckett’s dictum that we all fail but tomorrow we will attempt to fail again better, here all hope has finally been extinguished.” - Hubbard

Vanessa

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