Heart pounding. Body trembling. Eyes crying. Terror, sheer terror, in the middle of the night. Can’t sleep, can’t stop thinking, can’t breathe.
It’s not like this every night, but it was like this last night.
We spent the past six years since my brother’s suicide saying: “Please, no one else do this. We’re going to make it. We can do this”
We said it regularly. We said it on anniversaries and at random. We said it again and again and again.
We didn’t make it. She didn’t make it. She smiled and shook her head affirmatively as she said it, and she didn’t make it.
When someone in one’s family dies by suicide, all family members instantly fear another suicide. It’s horrific. It’s horrifying — it’s so horrifying it will make you cry til you can’t breathe and scream until you can’t speak.
That was our reality, that was what my family lived through. That’s the pain we lived with for years, and the fear we lived with for six years. And then it happened, again.
Again and again and again we pleaded that none of us would do this. We encouraged honesty, we checked in on one another, we regularly had this discussion.
It had been six years. I thought we made it. I thought we were all safe. I thought my mom was safe. She said she was safe.
One third — one third of my family has died by suicide. That’s one out of three so far. Do you know how absolutely horrific that is? No, I get it, you “can’t even imagine that,” and I’m honestly grateful that you can’t. It’s a terrifying reality.
Now here we are again, and I am mortified. One in three… one in three… what does that mean? What does that mean for my nieces and nephews? What does that mean for we survivors?
The horror… the sheer horror.
My mother lived a beautiful life. Though she endured significant trauma, she overcame so much. She was excited about life. She had multitudes of plans and dreams. She loved her life, and she didn’t? How on earth am I supposed to reconcile that?
How horrible. With all the beautiful, wonderful, incredible things Mom had going for her… how horrific that she still desired to die more than to live. How absolutely terrifying that, in that vital moment, she could not see the beauty of life. She could not remember her beautiful plans. She could not feel how wonderful her life was. In that moment, she wanted to die more than she wanted all the amazing things she had to live for. I know she loved so much and she was looking forward to so much. I know that. But for some reason, none of that mattered in that moment.
That is absolutely horrifying, and, now, I can’t trust the rest of my family. I can’t trust the other survivors who say they’re not going to do it, because she said that too, and I believed her.
I believed her. I believed her. I believed her, and she’s gone.
I am in anguish. I believed her.

This is my prayer for you today , Jesus be near . Im so sorry.
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Thank you 💙
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I am praying for you.
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Thank you 💙
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I know this fear all too well. I didn’t sleep at night for months after my dad died. I thought someone else would die while I was asleep. I made it my responsibility to keep the rest of my family alive. As suicide survivors, we know that’s not how it works. But it’s wild what the brain will do to try and gain some semblance of control in the chaos. I grieve with you, I fear alongside you, I SEE you. Most of all, I pray for peace for you.
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😦 gosh, I believe it. Exactly — keep everyone else alive. I am with you. Thank you 💙
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Thank you 💙
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