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< July, 2004 >
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Hidden Depression and Mental Illness
Matthew was an active, capable guy who was full of life and himself. His twin brother has great memories of their growing up years as inseparable friends. Interested in pursuing a career in the environment/recycling, Matt was employed at a greenhouse after stints during college working at recycling in New Mexico and organic farming in Australia. His parents, a medical doctor and an educator, were completely shocked when at 24 he died of suicide. Gloria Jean Akinduro was an American who married a Nigerian; they had a son, Stephen. Because of the husbandÂs job, the family was transferred several times, finally moving to Nigeria. There, StephenÂs mother became depressed, due in part to cultural adjustments. Stephen was only nine when his mother ended her life, and the rest of her family had no idea she was depressed. The families of each of these persons share their stories in the upcoming documentary, Fierce Goodbye: Living in the Shadow of Suicide on Hallmark Channel Aug. 22. (See www.fiercegoodbye.com for more information.) But everyone gets depressed. How do you know when itÂs something serious? As parents, we look at our teenage and young adult children and wonder, how well do I know them? You may even run down the lists with warning signs of depression or suicide and check off five of them and think: but everyone has these symptoms. Dr. Kay Jamison, a professor of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins University and chief mental health expert for the documentary, says that depressed young people especially become experts at hiding their symptoms, pain, and illness. They want to fit in and have fun like everyone else so they may succeed at camouflaging their pain. She gives the example that she and a friendÂboth had been seriously suicidal at various points in their livesÂmade a pact to Âcall each other if they again became very suicidal. Her friend ended up taking his life, and had never called her. This didnÂt really surprise Jamison, she said, because she had also attempted to take her own life and hadnÂt called him. ÂSuicide is not a nice business, reflected Jamison. ÂIt doesnÂt give you the kind of choices youÂd like to have. YouÂre not thinking at your best. All youÂre thinking about is there is nothing else that seems to work. YouÂre a nightmare to your family, youÂre a nightmare to your friends, youÂre a nightmare to yourself, you donÂt recognize yourself. It is a dreadful state. These feelings are frequently caused by depression or other mental illnesses. So, families most often should not take personally the death of a loved one by suicide, even though it feels personal. Persons who are struggling with depression and thinking their families would be better off without them need to know that their families will suffer their death endlessly, oftentimes to succeeding generations. But that is a difficult thought to comprehend and believe when your brain has been scrambled by illness, which prevents normal, rational thinking. So thatÂs where counseling, medication, prayer and a lot of hard hard work come in. WeÂll look at the topic of faith and suicide next time. For more on this topic visit the website prepared for the documentary at www.fiercegoodbye.com
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Contributed by Melodie Davis from her weekly columnANOTHER WAY (http://www.thirdway.com/aw/).For information on using Another Way in a local newspaper, contact:ANOTHER WAY, 1251 Virginia Ave., Harrisonburg, VA 22801-2497; or call1-800-999-3534; fax at 540-434-5556; or email me at:Melodie@mennomedia.org |
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