To All Men Plagued By Darkness

Years ago, while barbecuing on the back porch, my wife and I heard a scream.

For a moment, I couldn’t tell if it was the happy shout of a child at play or the wild, broken screams of a woman.

Minutes later, I found myself in our neighbor’s laundry room, holding the body of my neighbor up as high as I could to make some slack in the dog chain he had hung himself with.

The man’s wife, who I had heard scream, begged me to keep holding him up, to take the pressure off his throat, to get him down… convinced he was still alive, that her husband’s life could still be salvaged.

But I knew.

I knew from the heft of the body, the temperature, the plasticine feel: he was gone.

I continued to hold the body up while another neighbor climbed a step-ladder and unhooked the chain from the ceiling.

I set the body down on a heap of laundry on the floor and stared at the soap-white face and the torn, purple neck as the growing sound of sirens filled my ears.

For weeks afterwards, I felt a sense of dread anytime I entered a dark room: braced myself whenever I opened a door, half-expecting to find a dead man hanging when I turned the lights on.

But what stayed with me most was the way I had felt as I carried the body that day: the way my heart had burst with longing to be able to travel back in time so I could tell my neighbor what I had learned first-hand that day, belly to back with his corpse: that suicide was no solution: that suicide as the end of pain was an illusion: that suicide takes what would have been a passing pain and locks you and all you love to that pain forever.

Three weeks ago a friend of mine killed himself.

And as I sat at the funeral, blinking through tears at the sight of his wife and children, their heads bowed in devastation, I was reminded of my neighbor’s suicide all those years ago, and of all the men who, seeing no other option, take their own lives in staggering numbers.

It does no good to say “think of your family,” or “how could you be so selfish.”

For pain that blinding knows no logic.

We can only say “I see you. I know you. I feel you. And I AM you.”

For this darkness inside us is deadly not because it’s rare, but because its ubiquity is hidden.

Modern life has cut our tribal bonds: estranged us from the truth of each other’s condition: convinced us in our isolation that we are uniquely broken.

And so we suffer a devastating reciprocal blindness: we are blind to the inner darkness of those at risk, even as those at risk are blind to the truth that their darkness is universal: that ALL men suffer that same darkness, differing only in timing and degree.

How many men would still be here if they had not had to bear the double weight of pain AND shame, silenced by the belief that they carried some freakish, unintelligible darkness?

If you are drowning…

If you feel there is no way left to be in the world…

If you feel the fight in you dying…

CALL SOMEONE.

Though it be your most excruciating act, reach out to your brother, your father, your neighbor, your friend.

Gather together whatever last embers you can find, and pick up the phone.

No matter how many thousands of times you’ve tried to change and failed…

No matter how many times you’ve fucked it up all over again…

Hold on.

You are no abomination.

You are no defective man.

No matter your pain, no matter your secret thrashings…

Hold on.

Even now, all the old hope and meaning and joy you long for is still there for the having… closer than you know… so long as you find a way to outlast the darkness.

If you’re contemplating suicide, or if you think someone you love is contemplating suicide, please call 1-800-273-8255 or go to https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org.

Your life is precious. Still, and always.

Comments

  1. Thank You!

  2. Aaron Everitt says

    Thanks Bryan for sharing – I hope we see each other again under different circumstances

  3. This is great writing. Not sure how I stumbled across this, but I’m glad I did

  4. Iain Hamilton says

    Important words, obviously spoken from the heart.

  5. Thank you !

  6. Randy Clarke says

    Great perspective. I lost my younger sister to suicide 16 yrs ago. I know what this pain is and how long and hard a road it is to travel through it. I never judged her for that choice. I know that It is a choice I could have made myself, but I know now that no matter how brutally crushed my soul, I can never make that choice. It is one of the biggest lessons of my life at a cost that was just too high.

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