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Suicidal thoughts: How serious is our condition?
by David L. Conroy, Ph.D. Original location
Many of us have been told, 'Your problems aren’t that bad.
They don’t add up to suicide,' or, 'If you only took 15 pills,
you weren’t really serious.'
We have a condition that causes others to feel uncomfortable.
They reduce their discomfort by using denial, belittlement and
minimization on the seriousness of our situation. While most
of this denial is due to their fear concerning the possibility
our death, a part of it has another source. They may also have
had or be afraid of having bad periods in their own lives, and
their denial on our vulnerability to suicide helps them deny
their own vulnerability.
Since we have also been taught the myths of suicide, and we
are not immune to social pressure, and, like anyone else, we
fear death, we often acquiesce in this process. We can think
that unless we have shot ourselves squarely in the head, we
must not have a very serious condition. In the face of all
this pressure, it is hard for us acknowledge that our lives
are in danger.
An effective way to confront this kind of denial is to attend
suicide bereavement support groups. Listen to relatives and
friends describe the lives of the people they lost to suicide.
Some completed suicides had no prior attempts, some had
gestures, some had one or more attempts. While some suicides
endured decades of multiple and severe problems, in other
cases their survivors say in bewilderment, 'We don’t
understand how it could have happened. Those problems just
weren’t enough for suicide.'
No one outside of us, nor we ourselves, can accurately
determine our risk for dying by suicide. It cannot be
determined on the basis of attempts we have or have not made,
and it cannot be determined by totaling up the number of our
warning sign conditions.
Consider two people who smoke the same number of cigarettes
for the same number of years. At age 40 one of them gets
cancer and dies. We are like the survivor. For each of us
there is someone who had problems similar to ours who is now
dead from suicide. Like the survivor, we have a
life-endangering condition. The longer it lasts and the worse
it gets, the greater the likelihood that we will die.
People who survive unhurt from horrible car accidents, get
mild heart attacks, or are threatened by violence from others,
are people who have been in serious life-threatening
situations. Our fear of death is just as real and legitimate
as theirs. Fortunately, overcoming denial makes us stronger.
It gives us a realistic view of our situation. It motivates us
to do whatever it takes to get better and stay better.
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