Why we need to choose our words more carefully when we talk about suicide
credit: TreatmentbeforeTragedy.org |
On August 12, 2014, as the tragic news of Robin Williams’s
death spread like a contagion through my Twitter feed, I realized something:
you could tell how old people were by the movie lines they quoted in response.
For me, it was Dead Poet’s Society, that iconic struggle of life (and death),
and the Walt Whitman line, “That the powerful play goes on, and you may
contribute a verse.” Or a whole stanza, when you’re an epic figure like Robin
Williams.
My next thought, though, was of David Foster Wallace. I took
his 2008 suicide pretty hard. Foster Wallace was one of those authors with whom
I had an intellectual affair of sorts—when I read Infinite Jest, I felt like he
was speaking to me in a code that only he and I could understand. So of course,
upon learning that Robin Williams’s heroic struggle with lifelong depression had
ended, I thought of Foster Wallace’s description of why people who suffer from a
choice-stealing brain disease sometimes end their own lives:
“The so-called ‘psychotically depressed’ person who tries to kill herself doesn’t do so out of quote ‘hopelessness’ or any abstract conviction that life’s assets and debits do not square. And surely not because death seems suddenly appealing. The person in whom Its invisible agony reaches a certain unendurable level will kill herself the same way a trapped person will eventually jump from the window of a burning high-rise.”
I felt the exact same sadness upon learning of Robin Williams’s
untimely exit from this world that I would have felt if I had learned that his struggle
with cancer or any other disease had ended. But not everyone saw it that way.
If you didn’t read Matt Walsh’s tone-deaf diatribe describing suicide as a
choice, don’t. But if you did, see how his words read when the word “depression”
is replaced with “cancer,” and you’ll have some idea of how hard it still is to
talk about mental illness.
Also, incidents like this give us an opportunity to talk about cancer, and we certainly should. Only we shouldn’t turn the subject into a purely cold, clinical matter. “Chemical imbalances,” people say. “A man is cancerous because of his brain chemicals, and for no other reason.”
No, we are more than our brains and bigger than our bodies. Cancer is a mental affliction, yes, but also spiritual. That isn’t to say that a cancerous person is evil or weak, just that his cancer is deeper and more profound than a simple matter of disproportioned brain chemicals. And before I’m accused of being someone who “doesn’t understand,” let me assure you that I have struggled with this my entire life.
Like Matt Walsh, like many people, I have had my own
struggles with depression. David Foster Wallace’s description of suicide
resonates with me so strongly because late one night, in the throes of despair at
the end of my marriage, overwhelmed by a loss of faith, I thought I was at the
top of a burning building, and I thought I would have to jump. In that moment
of agony, I truly believed there was no other way, that the world would be a
better place without me.
And in that moment, by chance or by grace, one of my children
woke up and came to me, like an angel, and said, “I love you,” and cuddled in
my arms, his head snuggled just below my chin, like he did as a baby. I’m
probably remembering this quote wrong, but I think the Greek dramatist
Sophocles said something like “Children are the anchors that hold a mother to
life.” In that moment, anchored to life by my sweet child, I knew I could—and would—escape the
burning building and live.
But unlike Matt Walsh, I do not begin to presume that my
ability to survive serious thoughts of suicide was in any way due to something
special about me. I’m not strong or brave or unselfish; I was lucky.
And I had an incredibly happy childhood, which makes up for a whole host of
ignominies later in life. Very few people in this world are as fortunate as I
am, and I give thanks for what I have every single day.
Words have power. And words are our only way to move beyond
the solipsistic existence of our own minds and into shared community with
others. Yet the existential conundrum of life is that we are all, ultimately,
alone. As Andrew Solomon noted in his poignant tribute to Williams, “The Crime of Loneliness,”
“A great hope gets crushed every time someone reminds us that happiness can be neither assumed nor earned; that we are all prisoners of our own flawed brains; that the ultimate aloneness in each of us is, finally, inviolable.”
Which brings me to language, that mechanism of hope that sometimes allows us to escape the prison of our own minds. Here’s
the thing: the word “commit” and the word “suicide” don’t belong together. They just don't.
In
certain contexts—career, relationships, goals—the word “commit” has positive
connotations. My friend Heidi Reeder’s book Commit to Win, for example,
outlines strategies to succeed in work and life by harnessing the power of
positive commitment. I think we would all agree that this kind of commitment—a choice
to focus on the people and things that matter most to us—is good.
But in mental illness, the word “commit,” in both its active
(e.g., “to commit suicide”) and passive (e.g., “to be committed to an
institution”) forms, has damaging connotations that falsely convey a sense of
choice where too often no meaningful choice exists. People don’t “commit”
suicide. They die by suicide, or they complete suicide (too often after more
than one attempt).
Dr. Thomas Joiner has made it his life’s work to understand
why mental illness sometimes leads to death by suicide; he notes that the rarity of
suicide notes suggests how profoundly alone and unable to communicate people
who take their own lives feel at the end of their existence:
“To say that persons who die by suicide are lonely at the time of their deaths is a massive understatement. Loneliness, combined with alienation, isolation, rejection, and ostracism, is a better approximation. Still, it does not fully capture the suicidal person’s state of mind. In fact, I believe it is impossible to articulate the phenomenon, because it is so beyond ordinary experience. Notes are rare because most decedents feel alienated to the point that communication through a note seems pointless or does not occur to them at all."
Much has been written about mental illness and stigma. I
myself have said that “it’s time to talk about mental illness.” But as Dr. Joiner
observes in his 2010 book, Myths about Suicide, “Talk about suicide is not
cheap.” With suicide, the stakes are very real.
There are therapeutic treatments for mental illness, just
like there are therapeutic treatments for cancer. But with both diseases, not everyone survives.
Robin Williams’s death was a tragedy, but it also gave us an opportunity to
speak up, to share our stories, and to demand better treatments, earlier
interventions, and evidence-based care for brain disease. We need Treatment before Tragedy.
The words we use to
describe suicide—and mental illness—matter. They shape our very understanding
of the disease, and how we treat the people who have it, including ourselves
and our loved ones.
As William Stafford, himself a venerable member of the Dead
Poet’s Society, wrote (far better than I could, and with words I think Robin Williams would appreciate):
"And
so I appeal to a voice, to something shadowy,
a remote important region in all who talk:
though we could fool each other, we should consider--
lest the parade of our mutual life get lost in the dark.
For it is important that awake people be awake,
or a breaking line may discourage them back to sleep;
the signals we give—yes or no, or maybe—
should be clear: the darkness around us is deep."
a remote important region in all who talk:
though we could fool each other, we should consider--
lest the parade of our mutual life get lost in the dark.
For it is important that awake people be awake,
or a breaking line may discourage them back to sleep;
the signals we give—yes or no, or maybe—
should be clear: the darkness around us is deep."
This comment isn't related to Robin Williams, but I hope you will read this. I just got done watching the Mind of a Rampage Killer episode of Nova you were on. I had read your post, "I Am Adam Lanza's Mother" before, but I never realized what we might have in common until I heard your son's interview. That accent. If you're like my family, you've spent years on speech therapists trying to help him with it. It sounds exactly like my brothers did at that age. My brother is now almost 50 and it is much more pronounced. He, too, flies into rages, though they have decreased as he has aged. The cause of his accents is that he has hydrocephalus - water on the brain - and we never knew it until he was in his 20s. The bubble of water in the middle of his brain pushed on his speech center and causes the accent. It also has caused increased cognitive disabilities. It can also cause the behavioral problems he has. As he got older he developed "Cushing's Syndrome." It has the same symptoms as Cushing's Disease except that it is caused by pressure on his pituitary gland from the bubble of water in his brain rather than what causes it in people with the disease. I hope you read this and I hope it helps.
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