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Depression
is Depression
is when you can't sleep and you get so bored
looking at your roof, that you spend weeks
nights contemplating what to do with it only to
find that you wouldn't have enough determination
to do it.
depression isn't always suicide.
depression is ovbious to only yourself. suicide
is ovbious to everyone.
depression is, and always will be, my, and many
others, mays of life.
depression runs my life. makes me do things i
shouldn't do.
depression is that voice in the back of your
head telling you, that you need help.
depression makes you gain weight, loose weight,
not eat, eat too much.. do drugs. give or take a
few.
depression has the feeling of death, without the
dying part.
depression is still killing you even if you have
the best things in the world.
depression isn't just having too little, it's
having too much as well.
depression is never seeing your father happy.
depression is loosing your brother too his
girlfriend.
depression is the killing of the broken pieces
of your heart.
depression is slow motion and fast motion at the
same time.
depression is the illusion that the world has
turned it's back on you and everyone in it.
depression is seeing happiness everywhere you
go.
depression is hoping to survive and hoping not
to at the same time.
depression isn't contemplating suicide, but
wishing you were already there.
depression is when the only thing that cares is
the depression itself.
depression is when you are at school and you
can't remember things you learnt in grade 5.
depression is falling alseep in your favourite
subject.
depression is hating yourself because your
parents hate you.
depression is the hatred of your family.
depression eats your insides witha smile on it's
face.
depression is the look in your eyes when you
wake up in the morning, knowing you have to live
another day.
depression is yourself. you are depression.
depression makes you who you are and who you'll
always never want to be.
depression makes you miss your old self, but
once your better, you miss depression.
but for me, mostly, depression is all of these,
plus, depression is when you have had it so long
that you are scared of who you will be when and
if you get better. you wonder if you could
survive happy and if the happiness would eat
you.
now ask yourself.. do you have depression?
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ANGRY ENOUGH TO KILL
YOURSELF? CHAPTER 9 |
When
you were a little kid and were angry with your parents, did you
ever threaten to hold your
breath until you died? Or did you threaten to run away and never
come back knowing, as best a
little kid can, that one way to get people to say they love you
is to threaten to leave them.
Looking back on it now, holding our breath until we died or
threatening to run away from those
we love may seem childish and foolish but, I will ask you,
couldn't a suicide threat be an adult
version of the same thing? Couldn't we, when we are angry and
frustrated with the people around
us, begin to feel the same way - that if we just upped and left
them, once and for all and forever
and ever, that they would be sorry. And I don't mean sorry; I
mean sorry!!!
I think we could. In another place I will talk about how we may
try to control others by
threatening to end our lives, but in this chapter I want to talk
with you about anger - maybe help
you understand that anger can be your ally, not your enemy.
It is quite possible that right now you may not see yourself as
angry. You may be perturbed,
pessimistic, bitter, annoyed, aggravated, irritated, or, as one
client told me, "I'm too depressed to
be angry.”
Anger takes many forms and has many names. But by any name, the
effects of anger can be
harmful to us, especially if we turn our anger on ourselves.
Therefore, it is important to know
about our anger; its source, what it does to us and how it
affects the way we think and feel.
Maybe you have never thought of yourself as an angry person.
Maybe you can say, "I never get
mad." But my guess is that if you can say this of yourself, you
may not be in touch with what is
troubling you. It is even possible that you may not even know
what is making you angry. Or, if
you do know, you may be ignoring or minimizing or playing down
those obstacles and
roadblocks or people that stand between you and your dreams.
Since we learn how to express our
anger at an early age, maybe it was not okay to get mad in your
family.
Over the years I have met many people who said, "We were not
permitted to lose our temper at
home. It just wasn't allowed." If this was your situation as a
child, then maybe you are out of
touch with your anger. Like many others, maybe you do not even
realize how angry you are.
And, since suicide is often an angry act generated out of
frustration and burning resentment, it is,
I think, important that you come to grips with the possibility
that you may be mad enough to kill
yourself.
Ask yourself this: "Is any part of my wish to die because I am
frustrated with the way things are
going?" If your answer is yes, then you may be a lot more angry
than you think. So let's talk
about anger.
Of all the emotions, anger is maybe the least complicated. It is
part of our biological makeup and
a necessary part of living. Unless everything goes smoothly for
you every single day and you
never break so much as a shoelace, then you must experience
frustration. And if you experience
frustration, then you must experience anger - even though you
may call it something else.
Here's what happens inside us when we become frustrated and
begin to feel anger: our heart
beats faster, our blood pressure rises, sugar is released into
our blood stream, our muscles tense,
and our bodies get ready for physical combat. Biologically, we
are preparing to deal with some
pain or threat or fear and, though we may try to stop a rush of
anger, there isn't really much we
can do to override the reaction. Or at least it seems that way.
I have met many people who do not even know when they are angry.
They say they are "upset."
Or they say they are "down." Or they say they would just as soon
be left alone. Even though they
are experiencing a strong emotion (and you can see it by the way
the veins in their necks bulge
or their faces turn red or they clench their fists or jaws),
they will smile and say, "No, of course
I'm not angry. I'm just fine.”
They may be denying their anger or simply don't know what to
call it. It doesn't matter much for
our purposes right now, except to illustrate that many angry
people don't know what's going on
inside them or, if they do, they attempt to deny the feeling.
How you come to know your anger has a lot to do with the way you
were raised. In some
families, expressions of anger are simply not permitted. In
others, anger is not only permitted,
but encouraged. In families where anger is understood as natural
and, therefore, accepted and
channeled into healthy communication, anger is not an enemy. But
where children are raised to
fear their anger as if it were some kind of raging beast that,
once released, would run amok and
kill everything in sight, anger can become an enemy. To
experience anger in such a family is to
be taught that your angry feelings don't exist or, if they do,
something must be wrong with you.
Over the years I have met many people who thought feeling angry
was the same thing as being
crazy. When they were extremely angry, they often felt they were
about to lose control and
maybe do something terrible and awful. Not infrequently, what
they thought to do was to hurt
themselves.
Anger and Culture
If you look to your society for guidance about the meaning of
anger and how it should be
expressed, things may get suddenly confused. It is okay for a
football player to get angry in a
game and try to "kill" the guy on the other team but it is not
okay for the fans to do this to the
visiting fans.
It is okay for our heroes on TV to punch, gouge, knife, and
shoot just about anyone who deserves
it; it is not okay for those of us watching the show to do this
to equally deserving bad guys we
know.
Our governments preach peace, but if we get angry enough we
launch retaliatory "air strikes"
and drop huge bombs on those who are frustrating us. You might
even say that too many of our
leaders teach peace but practice vengeance.
For what it is worth, I think there is something crazy going on
here. What I think is crazy is that
many of us are convinced that once we become angry we have to do
something aggressive. We
say we hate violence, but we love it in our sports, our movies,
and our TV shows. We believe
that once we are angry enough, we are justified in doing
something destructive. If someone
makes us mad enough, we seem to take the position that, "Okay,
now you've done it. You'd
better watch out!"
Our religious leaders try to talk us out of our
frustration+anger+aggression habits but, just
between you and me, I think they've got their hands full. It
seems that hardly anyone "turns the
other cheek" these days.
So what, you are probably asking, has all this to do with
thinking about suicide?
Let's suppose for the moment that you, like many others, do not
know your own anger very well
- how it feels, where it comes from, and what to do with it when
you feel it. Let's suppose that
when a rush of anger comes over you, you begin to get more and
more upset until, at the peak of
it, you feel like you are going out of control. You are mad as
hell about something and, before
this fit of anger is finished, someone or something is going to
pay.
But who should pay? The person you're mad at? No, you can't
punch a teacher, the boss, a
husband or wife or a brother or a sister. Hit a friend and you
buy loneliness. Besides, we're not
supposed to strike out at others. So, all dressed up with no
place to go, what will become of your
anger? Where does it go?
If anger always leads to aggression, how can anger ever be your
friend?
I personally don't think raw, pure, unadulterated anger can ever
be anyone's friend. Runaway
anger is always an enemy. Anger with no place to go can lead to
suicide.
So what can you do? You can do what Charlie, a client of mine,
used to do when he became
uncontrollably angry. "I just double up my fist and punch the
wall,” he said.
"How often do you do that?" I asked. “A couple of times a week,”
he said. "It's better than hitting
people. Besides, it's plasterboard and most times my fist goes
right through. But sometimes I hit
a stud.”
Charlie had broken the bones in his hands so many times he'd
lost track, and he laughed when I
said it was a good thing he didn't live in a brick house. Anger
was not Charlie's friend.
Or you can learn the art of cutting people down with sarcasm.
You can learn to say mean and
nasty things to people to make them feel bad. Verbal aggression,
though physically less harmful,
is still harmful and, if you use it, you will end up short of
friends and not liking yourself very
much. Of all the things people do to hurt each other, sarcasm
leaves the deepest scars. And,
again, anger is not your friend.
Or you can hold all your anger in until, one day, you may
develop high blood pressure or
headaches or ulcers or some other illness that the researchers
say may be the result of constant
tension built up by unspent anger. Working slowly over time,
such anger may one day make you
sick.
But the worst way in which anger is our enemy is when we turn it
on ourselves, when we
become so frustrated in our desire to get back at someone that,
finding no one else to hurt, we
start looking in the mirror for a victim. This is why, even
though I do not like the term, suicide is
sometimes referred to as self-murder - the assumption being that
the suicide was an act of
destruction directed at the self.
Options for Anger
Now let me suggest something to you. What if I told you that
just because you're angry, you
don't have the right to go around breaking things or calling
people names or hitting them or, for
that matter, hurting yourself?
What if I told you that just because you are mad as hell, it
doesn't mean you automatically, like
some robot, have to blow your stack and lose control of
yourself?
What if I told you that, no matter what you've read or heard
about how good it is to "get your
anger out" that, in fact, letting your anger out was the most
stupid thing you could do?
Especially if you should attempt kill yourself in the process?
Well, I'm saying all of that. Despite what was once believed
about anger, research is showing
that once you explode and lose control of your anger, you are
more likely to do it again.
Research is showing that the way we express our anger is a
learned habit, just as we learn to read
or ride a bike. If you learned how to express your anger in ways
that make anger your enemy
then, as I see it, you can unlearn the old ways and learn new
ones.
I can hear you thinking, "Ho. Ho. Ho. He doesn't know my anger.
My anger is different!"
If you were sitting in my office right now and said this, you
would have an argument on your
hands. I would argue that since you are from the same galaxy,
the same planet, and the same
species, that you are no different in the anger department from
me or from anyone else. You
learned how to express and handle your anger just the way the
rest of us learned how to express
and handle our anger. The lesson may have been different, but
the process was the same. And,
since you've a large and generally useful brain perched up there
on your shoulders, you can
probably do something intelligent about your anger. You can
learn to handle it differently,
maybe learn to manage it in useful and productive ways.
If you are willing to accept the idea that the way in which you
express your anger is not
automatic and out of your control, then I think there is a good
chance you can change. You can
turn an enemy into a friend. I can't do this for you in a book
like this, but I know professional
help is available. In some cities agencies even offer what are
called anger management
workshops. And there are several good self-help books on the
subject. The point is: you don't
have to go on being stuck in the frustration- anger- aggression
formula.
The basics of learning to know and use your anger well are as
follows:
1. Learn to identify your anger quickly. If you feel a sudden
bit of tension, or a flush come to
your face or you find yourself clenching your jaws or thinking,
"Damn, that makes me mad!"
then say to yourself, “Ah ha! This is the first sign of anger. I
know you.”
2. Next, say to yourself, THINK! When we are angry, our brains
switch off and our glands run
the show. Given where anger can sometimes go, this is just plain
stupid. When you have a
runaway freight train, you don't tell the engineer to kindly
leave the train. No, you ask him to
stay on board and try to get the brakes working. Thinking is to
anger what brakes are to a
runaway train.
3. Now ask yourself why you are feeling angry. Try to identify
just who or what is making you
bristle. Ask yourself: Am I frightened? Am I threatened? Has
someone just said something to
hurt me? How am I being frustrated? Answers to these questions
will help you enormously
because you will at least begin to understand whence your anger
arises. And it will lead you to
the next question.
4. What is it I want and what will I do with all this power?
Anger is a powerful emotion and,
when you are feeling it, you are feeling strong. What, you
should ask, can I do with all this
power and strength? How can I direct it to benefit me and those
around me?
Admittedly, this is the tough part of knowing how to use our
anger and requires the greatest
creativity. Pretending that nothing is wrong, or exploding, or
turning the anger inward and
against yourself produces nothing and benefits no one - least of
all the angry person. What we
need when we become angry is to set a goal, something to aim
for. We need to know what is
making us angry and what, in the short and the long run, we want
to change.
When you have identified that you are angry, know who or what it
is that is making you feel that
way, and have instructed yourself to THINK, then that is exactly
what you should do. Step back,
count to ten, and start to think.
Thinking while angry is difficult, but not impossible. And some
wonderful things begin to
happen when angry people start to think instead of going on
being angry. Remember, it was
because of his anger over racial discrimination that Martin
Luther King Jr. thought to change a
nation and, maybe one day, a world. Martin Luther King Jr. did
not lose his temper. No, he knew
his anger, he knew the face of it, and the source of it and knew
that aggression and violence need
not automatically follow from anger. He did not strike others.
He did not burn things. He did not
get sick and die from his anger. And he did not turn it on
himself. No, Martin Luther King Jr. put
anger to work for a great good. And, in so doing, his was a
wonderful anger. It is a sad irony that
a man who could not manage his own anger assassinated one of the
greatest men who could.
But back to you.
Since your anger is as natural as your breathing, you might as
well get to know it. You might as
well just walk up and shake hands. Anger is a great source of
power and a great teacher of what
we like and don't like in this world. From our anger we can
grow. From our anger we can set
goals and do good things for ourselves and others. Once we have
come to know and master our
anger we can have a strong and trustworthy friend. We do not
need to be anger's slaves. Most
importantly, we need never be its victims.
So, if we can come to know and name our anger and learn who or
what it is that is making us
feel this powerful emotion, we need not be frightened by it and
we need not be controlled by it.
Rather, we can stop, think, set a goal, and plan a move that
will change our situation for the
better.
Please remember: To be angry is natural. To be angry at
ourselves and others is normal. But to
be so angry at another that you turn this awesome aggressive
power on yourself is neither natural
nor normal. It is, rather, an expression of the formula that
frustration leads to anger leads to
aggression. And, if you are not careful and smarter than the
average bear, you may become a
victim of it.
So before you kill yourself to "show" someone just how mad you
are at them consider that,
should you succeed, your suicide will have created nothing,
contributed nothing, and changed
nothing. True, you will have made a statement about how angry
you were, but ask yourself, "Do
I have to say it this way?"
I hope not. |
Suicide Teen Suicide the forever
decision
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