I’m a little “late” to my write this post because I have been so enormously frustrated and exhausted.
Let he who is without sin throw the first stone.
John 8:7
Within the past month, there have been some who surmise that they have discovered the answer for “why” my mother ended her life, and with that “answer,” they cast stones at my family.
Lovely.
In the name of love for my Mother, they seek to harm those she loved most.
Those who believe they discovered the answer claim that they saw the signs, and, to that, I ask, “why did you not share them?” If you think you found the root cause, if you think you saw it while she still lived, why were you silent?
Let he who is without sin throw the first stone.
There is no room in this sacred space of mourning and bereavement for blame, self-righteousness, shame, and condemnation. It is shame that kills us most. Do not speak of things you do not know or understand. Do not assume to know the mind of the departed. Do not impart discord, hatred, and cruelty on her survivors.
Victims and perpetrators, that’s what everyone is in the wake of a suicide, including the one who physically died. Those left behind simply become more dead than alive, people walking without their hearts. Sullen, sunken, and tired eyes barely greeting those around them.
There is much we do not know, and there is much we do know. Do not be foolish enough to think that you have it figured out, and do not be cruel enough to speak abhorrent conjectures into existence.
This is the mess that fuels the stigma suicide survivors live through. This is the loss that begets loss, the suffering that begets suffering.
Yes, it’s harsh. Yes, it’s cruel. And yes, unfortunately, it’s the reality.
* * * * *
For those seeking to help and ease the suffering, the best thing you could do for your friends in mourning is simply to show up and listen with empathy and understanding. Advice doesn’t help. Platitudes don’t help. Conjecture doesn’t help. Empathy and compassion help.
Calm kindness helps. Showing up helps, checking in helps.
Reader, may your lives never experience this horror [again], and may love and compassion greet you. may kindness and humility envelop you. May reconciliation find you. May peace carry your broken heart.


