A Rest Stop from
Depression and Suicidal Thoughts
Depression: Understanding Thoughts of
Suicide
by Stephen L. Bernhardt
For many years I had suffered from depression and suicidal urges.
I tried to determine why it was happening to me and what I could
do to end my pain. The books I found were
mostly statistical listings of who took their own life, their income brackets, and
vocations. Personal accounts were specific to their situation and recounted little
insight into why this was happening to me, or what I could do to end the intense
pain.
I am, what some would say, mildly manic depressive and have a family
history that would support such a conclusion. But, this is not my story. This is an
attempt to help those who are depressed with suicidal thoughts, better understand
what they are going through and help them find possible solutions.
Most people who are suicidal are also depressed. The two prime reasons that a
person becomes depressed, are a loss of control, over their life situation and of their emotions,
and secondly a loss of a positive sense of their future (loss of hope). Any therapy
which is to be effective in reversing our depressed state, and the resultant
suicidal urges, will have to help us regain control, and help us regain hope.
Being depressed causes us to narrow our view of the world around us to such an
extent that reality becomes distorted. The negative in our lives is constantly
reinforced and the positive around us is discounted as being irrelevant, or even non
existent. Options to help solve our problems are rejected as having no merit, until it
seems as if there is no possible solution.
An unrelenting and oppressive sadness
comes over us which causes a very real pain, as if the pain of the sudden loss of a
parent stays with us for weeks, months, and even years. It is as if we are trapped in
a dark cave or possibly a tunnel that runs only from our constant pain to somewhere
near hell, with no exit to heaven and no exit to joy. We begin to think that there is
no relief and that this pain will never end. Tomorrow will be the same, or worse.
Death may be the only solution!
Suicide is not a solution, it is an end before a solution can be found. It
cannot be considered an option, for an option denotes we have a choice and death
robs us of both, option and choice. Death is an irreversible act that does not end the
pain, for it remains in those who are left behind. Even people who are totally alone,
and take their own lives, transfer their pain to those of us in society who do care,
and we do - care!
Many people have suicidal thoughts at some time during their lives. For most
the thought is fleeting, happening after a major life loss, or at some point in life
where they perceive the future as becoming hopeless. For others, life is not quite so
kind, they may have a strong genetic propensity to become depressed, a chemical
imbalance, or a series of unfortunate life experiences may eventually end in
depression. Still others have much to do with causing their own pain by
using an unrealistic cognitive thought process and having expectations in life that
are not possible to achieve. Whatever the cause, we are all at risk of
having strong suicidal urges when it seems as though the future has become
hopeless.
There is no class or type of person that is exempt from having suicidal thoughts.
Doctors, therapists, and teenagers from all walks of life, are all high on the
percentage lists of completed suicide, although it seems that those people with
strong religious convictions are least likely to attempt.
Suicidal "Triggers"
Given a person is depressed and having suicidal thoughts, there are certain
releasers or triggers which intensify the suicidal urge. Recognizing those triggers of
renewed suicidal urges which are present in your life will help you to understand
what is happening to you and begin to allow you more control of your emotions.
1. Beginning Therapy and After Therapy.
Suicidal urges are particularly high just after a depressed
patient first enters therapy. When beginning therapy the very symptoms give
rise to thoughts such as "this will never work", or "why should I put
myself through this, when there is no possible hope of success". Combined with
these thoughts may be the possibility that the patient and therapist do not connect
or bond (as may happen between any two strangers when they first meet). The
expectation that therapy will fail, especially if this not the first attempt, is
devastating. We begin to believe that if therapy fails, then we will never be rid of
this pain, and what is the use of going on.
THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT! It is particularly tragic, when a patient has gone
through therapy and the depression has substantially lifted, that they then kill
themselves. It happens! Depression is episodic, in that it can come and go, sometimes
in an instant. If a person is feeling euphoric and at long last can envision
themselves as depression free in the future, any setback will cause a flight back to
the conditioned response of suicidal ideation.
The thought of the pain
returning is unbearable and the urge to die may become intense. The triggers
which cause this renewed depressive and suicidal episode are usually the same
things which contributed to the depression in the first place. After therapy a
continued exposure to an abusive partner, an oppressive boss, the inability to
overcome substance abuse, inadequate concept of self, financial problems, etc. can
trigger renewed suicidal urges.
There is good news! These suicidal urges do not have to plunge you back
into the depths of your depressive hell! This does not signify your therapy has
failed or that you must then start again from square one. Recognizing those triggers
or releasers of renewed suicidal urges that are present in your life will help you to
understand when it happens and, that it can be reversed. The panic which follows
renewed suicidal thoughts will be short lived if you do not allow this panic to take
control of your mind. See your therapist, a friend, or the local crisis center.
Let them help you talk it out, what you need now is - time. The feeling will pass,
usually in 2 days or less!
Off in an isolated room playing a game with a young child, or alone in the back yard
inspecting whatever, we hide trying to avoid any conversation which might remind
us of the pain. Aunt Annabell, or even a stranger might ask us if we have a job yet,
or if the divorce is final, and we are slammed back into depression and suicidal
thoughts. A loving relative might ask us "what's wrong" and try to bring us out of
our shell. An inappropriate angry outburst might follow, giving credence to the
saying that "you always hurt the ones you love". We are sorry, we depress.
3. The Antagonists.
The antagonists in our lives (the oppressive boss, the abusive spouse or partner,
or that jerk who never quits) can easily trigger renewed suicidal urges. Strangers,
at first meeting, soon recognize or sense that we are depressed. This may be an
unconscious recognition on their part where our general demeanor, body posture,
facial expressions, and attitude send signals that may cause them to react with
outbursts of anger, which are not warranted, given the circumstances.
This unfair
treatment of a depressed person is perplexing and gives rise to thoughts such as
"life is so unfair", or "life sucks!". Some others may feel a compassion for the
depressed person which they are seldom able to adequately express, and they may
embarrass or act inappropriately. Still others seek out depressed individuals and
take advantage of the situation, all in order to boost an ego that is badly in need
of repair. Take heart, as our depression lifts, and we begin to regain control of
our life and of our emotions, this treatment will pass - and it does!
4. Natural Events and Suicidal Thoughts
The effect that natural events have on depression is extremely important,
especially when one is beginning to overcome the depressive response. Fast moving weather front
lows, the full and new moons, changes of the seasons, and decreased sunlight in
winter, will cause an increased state of anxiety when a person is depressed. One
is especially at risk when there is a fast moving weather front approaching the two
days before the full moon. This must not be discounted as hearsay or superstition!
Hollywood has made a mockery of the effect that the full moon may have on
people.
When I mention the effect to people who have not experienced it, the
same facial sneer always appears and anything I say after that is discounted as the
babblings of an idiot. The fact is, that when depressed we are in a more primal
state. Our emotions are raw and we are subject to natural changes in our
environment and in our bodies. Increased risk can be anticipated during lows in the
cycle of our biological state (such as during a woman's menstrual cycle - men have
high and low monthly emotional and physical cycles also).
A statistical correlation has not been identified concerning suicidal attempts
and the
full moon because the full moon does not cause one to commit the act. The full moon and the
other listed natural events cause an increased state of anxiety which exacerbates
depression and increases the risk of the suicidal urge becoming strong. Actually
the risk of attempts of suicide is greatest during the week after the full moon, as
increased depression and the resultant suicidal urges begin to take their toll.
Strong suicidal urges, mania that approaches panic (and a resultant plunge back
to depression), or deepening depression that cannot be explained by renewed life
crisis, can many times be explained by looking at a calender which has the cycle
of the moon marked on it! Although knowledge of what is causing this reversal
does not keep it from happening, there is comfort in that one now understands what
is happening and comfort that it will end in two days or less, and it does!
5. Substance Abuse
Nicotine, caffeine, alcohol, illegal drugs, obsessive overeating, and some
prescription drugs, all have a detrimental effect on depressed persons. Many times
the thought is that if the abuse can be overcome then the pain will end. In
some cases this may be true, but what if attempts to overcome substance abuse
fail? The failure may cause further depression making it difficult to even attempt
subsequent withdrawal, let alone be successful. The truth is that it is possible
to separate the depression from the substance abuse. Once the depression is
overcome the substance abuse can be worked on from a position of strength rather
than from a depressed state.
6. The Death Fantasy
During times of increased stress and trauma some may try to escape the pain of
life by fantasizing that they are dead. The fantasy may begin with the thought that
one has died, and the family and friends are standing at the grave side, they grieve
and are very sorry we are dead. The vast number of people at the funeral attests to
how much we were loved and admired. It had taken our death but we were finally
able to communicate to them how unfair life had been for us and now they could
take us seriously and realize that our pain was real. The "mock" attempts of suicide
may be a similar form of fantasy, where the loved ones are visioned as standing
around the hospital bed and they are finally able to realize how unbearable the
pain of life was for us.
If one becomes preoccupied with the death fantasy or uses it to excess in
escaping from the pain of life, the fantasy will become a conditioned response in
reaction to added stress or crises. Death can become a friendly thought and one
may begin to fear the pain of life more than they fear death.
7. Bipolar Disorder: A Manic Crash and Burn.
The bi-polar, manic depressive person (one who alternates between periods of
manic euphoria and a depressed state) should be extra careful to identify those triggers
which may cause a reversal of mood. Some people seem to be able to control their
manic periods, others cannot. Even those who outwardly seem to be in control are
at risk if they have a reversal of fortune, and their sometimes unrealistic endeavors
turn sour. The mood swing can be swift, unexpected, and dangerous. In an instant
we can be slammed back into a depressed state with strong suicidal urges.
Our view of the future
The human conscious mind is the only entity on the face of this planet which is
able to conceptualize and abstract the future. The need for a positive sense of the
future is one of the prime motivators of human life. This need transcends even the
event of our ultimate demise and is the motivation to envision a continuation of life
after death. We do not want to think that death is the end. Heaven, and life after
death with God fulfills this need for the religious person, others have envisioned
reincarnation, or that we enter (body whole) into another dimension without the
need to believe in God. For others the legacy of their works or the continuation of
their genes through their offspring is enough to give them a positive sense that
death is not a complete end.
In the short term and for those who do not concern themselves with what
happens after we die, there is still the need for a positive sense of our future.
It is what makes us get up in the morning and face the coming day. Even in the
face of adversity or drudgery we are motivated to endure, because we envision an
end to these conditions and a better future at some later date. Anticipation of
future events is what makes our body ready itself for the sex act, it is what
motivates us to amass wealth and power, to buy a lotto ticket, to set goals and
have aspirations.
Even the diehard sofa potato looks to the future as told to him
by the upcoming programs in the television listings, and of course there is that
next thirst quenching beer and resultant belch, to look forward to. We all have
a need for something to look forward to, if we lose all hope that the future holds
anything positive or that our present pain will ever end, most of us will depress.
CONCLUSION
Knowing what is happening to us goes a long way in being able to regain control
over our life and our emotions. But real healing will not be possible until the
depression is lifted. I recommend that anyone who is depressed and having
suicidal thoughts, seek help. There are drugs which may help to maintain a
depression free life, and therapy is needed to help us better understand why we
became depressed and what we need to do in order to live our life in control of
our emotions.
This manuscript was conceived while I sat on a ledge overlooking the abyss
of hell. I would contemplate if I should follow the intense urge to jump and
end it all, or if I could muster the strength to take control of my emotions
and of my life. I tried so very hard to picture the future - with me in it.
I hope that relating the knowledge I have gained from my experience and my
pain, might somehow help ease your pain. Knowing what is happening to you and
some of the reasons why it is happening, might help you regain a positive view of
your future, a view that includes both, you and me.
by © Stephen L. Bernhardt - 1996-2007
steveb@frii.com
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Suicide is not a solution,
Suicide is an end...
Before a solution is found. |
I hope that you have identified with one or more of the
concepts I present in this article. I have received
numerous emails thanking me for helping people to
realize that they are not alone in their pain caused by
depression and suicidal thoughts. Yet, this article is only a small part of the
potential benefit possible on Have a Heart’s Home.
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Unfortunately many people read and appreciate the
article, only to rush off to yet another Web Site in search
of answers to their problems. I strongly encourage you to
now read the article on Emotional Thought Stopping.
Please take this step to finally start doing something
about your depressed state and suicidal thoughts, rather than continuously looking
for the ‘quick fix’. The answers lie in our day-to-day,
directed efforts to find help and to help ourselves. For
most of us the ‘quick fix’, in fact, does not exist. But
don’t despair. If you start now, in retrospect your
day-to-day directed efforts will have helped your
depression and suicidal thoughts in an amazingly short period of time. Just
do it!
I am delighted to see my guest book is being used by people to express
their opinions - check it out.
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