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RealMiniDriver
RealMiniDriver UltraDork
8/12/14 9:05 a.m.

+1 for pinchy. My brother committed suicide. It is, indeed, a selfish act.

Tom_Spangler
Tom_Spangler GRM+ Memberand Dork
8/12/14 9:10 a.m.
RealMiniDriver wrote: +1 for pinchy. My brother committed suicide. It is, indeed, a selfish act.

I suppose in a way it is, but someone suffering from depression isn't in their "right mind" so to speak. They aren't thinking normally, they see no hope, no matter how well or poorly their actual life might be going. You can't hold someone like that to the same standards as a person who isn't suffering from it. It's a disease.

Curmudgeon
Curmudgeon MegaDork
8/12/14 9:26 a.m.

I lost one of my best friends to depression and suicide in the late 80's. It's a terrible thing and here nearly 30 years later it still affects me and some of my friends; one of the best friends I have or will ever have is the older brother of the suicide, we still occasionally pull that experience out, look around it, try to make some meaning. Yes it is/was a selfish act. But as Tom said, people suffering from depression don't want to look at the bright side and at some point may no longer care if it's selfish. I saw that first hand with my ex, over and over.

Woody
Woody GRM+ Memberand MegaDork
8/12/14 9:31 a.m.

My dad is 83. His younger brother killed himself in 1970 when he was 35. He's been dead longer than he was alive, but my father is still affected by it. It's still very sad.

Fobroader
Fobroader Reader
8/12/14 9:34 a.m.
RealMiniDriver wrote: +1 for pinchy. My brother committed suicide. It is, indeed, a selfish act.

My best friend killed himself 5 years ago and even to this day his fiancee, his friends and his sisters are left wondering why and what they could have done differently. I totally agree with you, it is very selfish.

bravenrace
bravenrace MegaDork
8/12/14 9:54 a.m.

There would be a lot less suicides if the people close to these people would pay more attention and reach out to them. It's hard for someone who hasn't suffered from depression to understand, but the person suffering from it feels helpless, hopeless. They don't have control over there thoughts and feelings. What they need most is someone to care enough to take charge and help them! I don't blame people for killing themselves. I'm more inclined to blame those that didn't notice or care enough to help them. Isn't it selfish to NOT help someone in need?

stuart in mn
stuart in mn PowerDork
8/12/14 9:57 a.m.

Even though it may be seen that way by their friends or family, I don't think the person who does it feels it's a selfish act. As Tom said above, they aren't thinking normally and see no hope.

I was just listening to Louie Anderson on a local radio station, he's friends with the host and called in to talk about Robin. They were friends, and he understands the issues of depression which was something Robin had struggled with for many years. It was an interesting conversation - this station puts their morning show up on their website in podcast format, I'd recommend listening to it later if you're interested. http://www.92kqrs.com/common/page.php?pt=KQ+Morning+Show+Podcast&id=21383&is_corp=0 scroll forward a ways, Louie was on from around 8:30am to 9:00am or so.

Bobzilla
Bobzilla PowerDork
8/12/14 10:02 a.m.
Curmudgeon wrote: I lost one of my best friends to depression and suicide in the late 80's. It's a terrible thing and here nearly 30 years later it still affects me and some of my friends; one of the best friends I have or will ever have is the older brother of the suicide, we still occasionally pull that experience out, look around it, try to make some meaning. Yes it is/was a selfish act. But as Tom said, people suffering from depression don't want to look at the bright side and at some point may no longer care if it's selfish. I saw that first hand with my ex, over and over.

I can say this with some personal knowledge, but the bolded isn't entirely true. It's not that they/we don't WANT to see the bright side, it's that we/they can't. Before seeking medical help (for me, I'm lucky that I had a great doctor and a mild case easily handled with exercise and a prescription), wife and I would come home from work and ask about each other's days. After she listened to me rant for 10 or 15 minutes, she's ask me "what happened at work that was good?" Honestly, I couldn't answer that most nights. I'd sit there for 5 minutes thinking about something good and would come up empty every time.

In many cases, it's a chemical imbalance in the brain keeping you from .... well.... enjoying anything. Getting it straightened out is not easy.... but it's worth it.

turboswede
turboswede GRM+ Memberand UltimaDork
8/12/14 10:31 a.m.

Just read this and thought I should share it with my friends here on GRM:

http://www.cracked.com/quick-fixes/robin-williams-why-funny-people-kill-themselves/

"You ever have that funny friend, the class-clown type, who one day just stopped being funny around you? Did it make you think they were depressed? Because it's far more likely that, in reality, that was the first time they were comfortable enough around you to drop the act.

The ones who kill themselves, well, they're funny right up to the end.

By now you know that Robin Williams has committed suicide, but I'm not here to talk about him. He's gone, and you're still here, and suicidal thoughts are so common among our readers and writers that our message board has a hidden section where moderators can coordinate responses to suicide threats. And in case you're wondering, no, that's not a joke -- I remember the first time John tracked down a guy's location and got an ambulance dispatched to his house. Then we all sat there, at 4 in the morning, waiting to hear if they got there in time (they did).

Because Cracked is driven by an army of aspiring comedy writer freelancers, the message boards are full of a certain personality type. And while I don't know what percentage of funny people suffer from depression, from a rough survey of the ones I know and work with, I'd say it's approximately "all of them." So when I hear some naive soul say, "Wow, how could a wacky guy like [insert famous dead comedian here] just [insert method of early self-destruction here]? He was always joking around and having a great time!" my only response is a blank stare.

That's honestly the equivalent of, "How can that cow be dead? She had to be healthy, because these hamburgers we made from her are delicious!"

So I don't know Robin Williams' situation, and I don't need to -- I can go scoop up an armload of examples without leaving my chair. As one of the head guys at Cracked, I'm surrounded by literally hundreds of comedy writers, and I inhabit the body of one. Kristi Harrison recently wrote about the psychological dark side of being funny, and was speaking from experience. Or, here's John Cheese talking about his recent adventures on antidepressants. Here's Mark Hill on his depression, here's Dan O'Brien on his social anxiety, here's Tom Reimann on his, and here's C. Coville on the same. Here's Mara Wilson on having an anxiety disorder, here's Felix Clay on regret, here's Gladstone on emotional trauma, and Adam Brown on almost dying from cough syrup addiction. Those are just the ones off the top of my head. You get the idea.

Now do you want me to tell you how many messages/comments/emails we get from fans telling a writer to "kill yourself" because said writer wrote a joke they didn't like? When I ban them, they always act confused as to why.

"What, you're saying Cracked writers are a bunch of tortured literary geniuses? You write boner jokes in list form, for Christ's sake!"

Yeah, and Chris Farley just made wacky slapstick movies about a fat guy who falls down a lot, right up until he stopped his own heart with a drug cocktail. The medium has nothing to do with it -- comedy, of any sort, is usually a byproduct of a tumor that grows on the human soul. If you know a really funny person who isn't tortured and broken inside, I'd say either A) they've just successfully hidden it from you, B) their berkeleyed-uppedness is buried so deep down that even they're in denial about it, or C) they're just some kind of a mystical creature I can't begin to understand. I'm not saying anything science doesn't already know, by the way. Find a comedian, and you'll usually find somebody who had a E36 M3ty childhood.

Here's how it works for most of us, as far as I can tell. I'll even put it in list form because who gives a berkeley at this point:

  1. At an early age, you start hating yourself. Often it's because you were abused, or just grew up in a broken home, or were rejected socially, or maybe you were just weird or fat or ... whatever. You're not like the other kids, the other kids don't seem to like you, and you can usually detect that by age 5 or so.

  2. At some point, usually at a very young age, you did something that got a laugh from the room. You made a joke or fell down or farted, and you realized for the first time that you could get a positive reaction that way. Not genuine love or affection, mind you, just a reaction -- one that is a step up from hatred and a thousand steps up from invisibility. One you could control.

  3. You soon learned that being funny builds a perfect, impenetrable wall around you -- a buffer that keeps anyone from getting too close and realizing how much you suck. The more you hate yourself, the stronger you need to make the barrier and the further you have to push people away. In other words, the better you have to be at comedy.

  4. In your formative years, you wind up creating a second, false you -- a clown that can go out and represent you, outside the barrier. The clown is always joking, always "on," always drawing all of the attention in order to prevent anyone from poking away at the barrier and finding the real person behind it. The clown is the life of the party, the classroom joker, the guy up on stage -- as different from the "real" you as possible. Again, the goal is to create distance.

You do it because if people hate the clown, who cares? That's not the real you. So you're protected.

But the side effect is that if people love the clown ... well, you know the truth. You know how different it'd be if they met the real you.

I get a dozen messages a week from people telling me they love me, I get a few a month from people saying they want to meet me in person. You know, kind of like how they watch an episode of the Walking Dead and decide they want to live in a zombie apocalypse. Trust me, kid, you wouldn't like it.

But there's more. The jokes that keep the crowd happy -- and keep the people around you at bay -- come from inside you, and are dug painfully out of your own guts. You expose and examine your own insecurities, flaws, fears -- all of that stuff makes the best fuel. So, Robin Williams joked about addiction -- you know, the same addiction that pretty much killed him. Chris Farley's whole act was based on how fat he was -- the thing that had tortured and humiliated him since childhood. So think of my clown analogy above, only imagine the clown feeds on your blood.

(Jesus, that's going to give me nightmares, and I have a side job writing horror.)

I keep mentioning Chris Farley for a reason -- in the end, he was so alone that he was hiring prostitutes just to hang out with him. Here's an account of how his last days played out:

"Farley partied for four straight days, smoked crack and snorted heroin with a call girl, then took her back to his apartment. When they argued about money, she got up to leave. He tried to follow but collapsed on the living room floor, struggling to breathe. His final words were 'Don't leave me.' She took pictures of him, stole his watch, wrote a note saying she'd had a lot of fun, and left. He died alone."

In this case, the clown was a hilarious fat guy playing a Beverly Hills Ninja. Back behind the wall, the real person was a scared, lonely, awkward fat kid who couldn't even pay someone to hold his hand when he died. "Don't leave me."

So, yeah, if you're out there and are feeling down, here's the national suicide hotline. I've been told it's great, by the numerous people I know who've called it. But I guess my larger point is that if you know somebody who might be at risk but you've been denying it because they're always smiling and joking around, for the love of God, wake the berkeley up. They don't know how to ask for help because they don't know how to relate, because when you've lived behind that wall long enough, you completely lose the ability. "Well, I tried to help him, but he was kind of a dick about it." Right, that's what it looks like. "But I don't know how to do a suicide intervention!" Nobody is asking you to. How about this:

Be there when they need you, and keep being there even when they stop being funny. Every time they make a joke around you, they're doing it because they instinctively and reflexively think that's what they need to do to make you like them. They're afraid that the moment the laughter stops, all that's left is that gross, awkward kid everyone hated on the playground, the one they've been hiding behind bricks all their adult life. If they come to you wanting to have a boring-ass conversation about their problems, don't drop hints that you wish they'd "lighten up." It's really easy to hear that as, "Man, what happened to the clown? I liked him better."

As for me, I haven't thought about suicide in a long time, not since high school when a guy talked me out of it, though to this day I doubt he realizes it. So, I lived on to wind up with a job where one of my tasks is to ban people who follow him from one comment section to another telling him he's not funny and should kill himself. Is that ... irony? E36 M3, I don't think English has a word for what that is.

Anyway. Rest in peace, Robin. You've given us a chance to talk about this, and to prove that this has nothing to do with life circumstances -- you were rich and accomplished and respected and beloved by friends and family, and in the end it meant jack berkeleying E36 M3.

-David Wong Doesn't Remember His Job Title but It Probably Has the Word Editor in It Cracked.com

Trans_Maro
Trans_Maro UberDork
8/12/14 10:50 a.m.

In reply to turboswede:

Thanks very much for passing that on.

RealMiniDriver
RealMiniDriver UltraDork
8/12/14 10:55 a.m.

In reply to turboswede:

Thanks. Thinking back, my brother was a troubled kid, all his life. In and out of counseling, the family walked on egg shells, etc. The day he checked out, though, was different. He was happy. Care free. Light hearted.

Now I see.

doc_speeder
doc_speeder Reader
8/12/14 10:58 a.m.

+2 turboswede, very insightful. Now two of my favorites are gone...Farley and Williams but the piece you posted helps make sense of it a little bit at least.

Marjorie Suddard
Marjorie Suddard General Manager
8/12/14 11:00 a.m.

In reply to RealMiniDriver:

Most suicides don't see it as a selfish act. Their self-esteem is often so low, they consider that they're doing people a favor. I know of one who obviously felt she was making the ultimate sacrifice for her kids.

Margie

Curmudgeon
Curmudgeon MegaDork
8/12/14 11:15 a.m.

Although in his case at the very end there was a lot of outwardly directed anger (getting even with those he felt had wronged him after holding it in for years), my friend felt he was doing his GF a favor, he was on the phone with her at the time he did it. To this day she can still replay the gunshot in her mind.

madmallard
madmallard HalfDork
8/12/14 11:32 a.m.

my problem that makes this such a kick in the teeth, is that Williams had been bitten by the charity bug.

He took up philanthropy with Goldberg and Crystal for Comic Relief, and such.

To think he knew the gratification of advancing his fellow man beyond their current strife, and yet still chose that way off the coil... even as he still had TONS more resources than the rest of us will ever have to continue helping others.

And I don't mean just his personal wealth, either.

People who have faced any adversity can help others just by telling their story.

Woody
Woody GRM+ Memberand MegaDork
8/12/14 12:05 p.m.

Last week, I heard a psychologist talking about suicide on the news. One line that struck me was that most people who commit suicide don't really want to die, they just want their pain to stop.

Robin Williams was an incredibly talented comedian and actor. You could laugh and scratch your head thinking, "How does he come up with this stuff?". And the answer is that we have no way of knowing the source of his inspiration. He was on a different level than most people.

In the same sense, we shouldn't expect to fully comprehend the source and depth of his pain. Not because he was a talented entertainer, but because he was an individual. Just like the rest of us.

Lesley
Lesley PowerDork
8/12/14 12:14 p.m.

Agreed. A mind capable of such brilliant flights of creativity, can also reach depths few of us can imagine.

Bobzilla
Bobzilla PowerDork
8/12/14 12:19 p.m.

With light, there is darkness. We were all allowed to see his light, it's the darkness that led him to his end. That can only be shared by him, no matter what "we" do. All anyone with a friend dealing with depression can do is listen, and be there for their friend and watch out for them. Everything else is in their hands.

Sine_Qua_Non
Sine_Qua_Non HalfDork
8/14/14 3:22 p.m.

Now his wife is saying he had early stages of Parkinson's

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