Your Own Ghost
Human
- Mar 12, 2019
- 96
I've been on both sides of suicidal action. First when I was fifteen, but then when I was twenty-one…
I was dating this woman who shared many of the experiences that I had. She had been locked up in mental health, medicated out of her mind, engaged in self harm, etc. Back then we thought we could multiply negatives and create a positive out of the situation. We thought we would be able to recognize the signs in each other.
In the middle of the night she had cut a leather strap from an old horse saddle she kept around for the memories and tied one end to her bedpost and the other to her neck. She yelled, I don't know what, but it was enough to wake me up from the couch. I got up and couldn't find her. I double checked everywhere, and then I saw her fingertips on the bedroom window sill. When I looked over she let go.
She blacked out and started convulsing almost right away as I tried to pull her back up. I wasn't strong enough. I was screaming, her body was hitting the side of the apartment below, and the neighbor came out and held her up enough to take the pressure off. I somehow ended up on the ground and ran into his place to get a knife to cut her down. She came to almost as quickly, but crawled around on the ground making horrible gasping noises.
The paramedics who took her to the hospital told her to do it right next time because they didn't want to come back again - she had also tried to OD some months before we started dating and they busted her door down. In the hospital, her face and eyes were bruised. But oddly enough, she seemed like she was in good spirits. Meanwhile, the skin from my chest down past my stomach was bruised and scraped off from the window sill. I went and bawled like never before on the curb outside the emergency room.
Our relationship didn't last long after that. I visited her almost every day in mental health, but the warning signs were all over the place. Her suicide note she wrote that night didn't even mention me – she talked about her last boyfriend, her daughter she didn't have custody of, her situation, but not me. It wasn't about me. And I never really had any relationships since then – that may not be the sole reason, but that was the last time I ever felt comfortable with another person. People tell me I'm good looking, intelligent, and whatever, but the few times I did try I quickly got nervous. My sense of dread I usually carry around amplifies.
But this is worth thinking about, in my opinion. We belong to a pro-choice website, and I truly believe people should have the choice, but this is juxtaposed to the reality of finding someone you know ready to drop out of the window. I think few of us would stand by in that moment and say, "I respect your decision. Goodbye!" If they would, I would be wary of such a person in all circumstances. But something else kicks in. You don't even think. You scream. You plead. And no matter how little you may think others care about you, they will do the same for you.
Add this knowledge, this experience, to the myth of suicide being easy. When I finally go, it will be anything but easy.
What's your experience?
I was dating this woman who shared many of the experiences that I had. She had been locked up in mental health, medicated out of her mind, engaged in self harm, etc. Back then we thought we could multiply negatives and create a positive out of the situation. We thought we would be able to recognize the signs in each other.
In the middle of the night she had cut a leather strap from an old horse saddle she kept around for the memories and tied one end to her bedpost and the other to her neck. She yelled, I don't know what, but it was enough to wake me up from the couch. I got up and couldn't find her. I double checked everywhere, and then I saw her fingertips on the bedroom window sill. When I looked over she let go.
She blacked out and started convulsing almost right away as I tried to pull her back up. I wasn't strong enough. I was screaming, her body was hitting the side of the apartment below, and the neighbor came out and held her up enough to take the pressure off. I somehow ended up on the ground and ran into his place to get a knife to cut her down. She came to almost as quickly, but crawled around on the ground making horrible gasping noises.
The paramedics who took her to the hospital told her to do it right next time because they didn't want to come back again - she had also tried to OD some months before we started dating and they busted her door down. In the hospital, her face and eyes were bruised. But oddly enough, she seemed like she was in good spirits. Meanwhile, the skin from my chest down past my stomach was bruised and scraped off from the window sill. I went and bawled like never before on the curb outside the emergency room.
Our relationship didn't last long after that. I visited her almost every day in mental health, but the warning signs were all over the place. Her suicide note she wrote that night didn't even mention me – she talked about her last boyfriend, her daughter she didn't have custody of, her situation, but not me. It wasn't about me. And I never really had any relationships since then – that may not be the sole reason, but that was the last time I ever felt comfortable with another person. People tell me I'm good looking, intelligent, and whatever, but the few times I did try I quickly got nervous. My sense of dread I usually carry around amplifies.
But this is worth thinking about, in my opinion. We belong to a pro-choice website, and I truly believe people should have the choice, but this is juxtaposed to the reality of finding someone you know ready to drop out of the window. I think few of us would stand by in that moment and say, "I respect your decision. Goodbye!" If they would, I would be wary of such a person in all circumstances. But something else kicks in. You don't even think. You scream. You plead. And no matter how little you may think others care about you, they will do the same for you.
Add this knowledge, this experience, to the myth of suicide being easy. When I finally go, it will be anything but easy.
What's your experience?