a site for young writers in the Philppines
Ava Guerrero
Published on June 9, 2004 By youngwriter In Personal Relationships
"I'm sorry for what I've done. I love you mom, thank you for everything..." Just a few months back, I've read this snippet from a newspaper stating that a young man took his own life in a hotel, just a few kilometers away from my dormitory. Never have I read a suicide note, even just a part of it gave me an uneasy and eerie kind of feeling. The question of why came hovering over me. It just bothered me why would some people take their own lives if they know that someone still loves them? Why? The persistent question, why? Recently, I've encountered a thread in one of the forums I've signed-up with containing a "serious suicide problem" message. I was taken aback. The thread author was right there, at the brink of committing suicide. No hesitations at all. All he wants was to ask for an advice on how to make it easy for his parents and friends to understand. Again why? I replied. I told him that I wouldn't answer his question. I won't allow him to take his own life. I won't be easy on him. I told him that I hope he's still reading my post. I hope it's not too late. It's just so undeniably true that life sucks at times. That is for me, but for others they say, life sucks all the time. They say life's full of adversities, obstacles, hardships and unending problems. Life's just too cruel for them. I can't blame them since I'm not in the same boat as they are. I don't know how great their problems are, how great their magnitude is as to end it by pulling the trigger or jumping off a sharp-edged cliff. To be honest, I'm no expert; I am in no position to tell them what to or not to do. I don't know how they feel; I'm not suffering a great deal like them. It seems that, I have no right. But as a Christian, no, I won't just let that slip away so easily. I am not oblivious to the fact that they're bearing tall, large beams or crosses at their backs. But still, it's no excuse. There are tons of other people who are suffering, who are borne with far more impelling and heavier crosses on their backs. Yet some of them, some of them never did complain. When presented with this kind of situation, I arrive a certain dilemma. Should I show these negligent people compassion and understanding or should I scoff at their miserable way of thinking? So many people are suffering, crying, almost gasping for life, while others are just so unwilling to take the offer. What kind of world is this? Is it too harsh that people don't want to live life anymore and just die, or is it just so wonderful that even the thread between life and death is thinning and is about to break, you're still there, hanging, never giving up, cause life's too precious a gift? Will someone please knock on heaven's door and tell me the answer? Life is a painful reality. So painful that it seems a burden, no longer a gift. So many sufferings, piercing through one's being, through one's very soul. True it seems, yet remember those who didn't renounce their hope and faith inspite of all the storms. Remember Hellen Keller, a person who died without even seeing her own face, without seeing the majestic, illuminating stars at night, without hearing the gushing of the wind and rushing of deep silent waters, without hearing her mother's voice, without hearing her own. Remember the little children who were born in the midst of war, or the cancer patients who keep smiling even at the face of death. Certainly, these people could attest that life is a gift, life is magnificent, life is magical, and life is precious. How about you? Would you just end that wonderful life these people held so dearly? You are given the opportunity to see the gleaming sun when it sets, to hear the melodious humming of birds at dawn, to smell the flowers that blooms in daylight, to feel the cold breeze of air or feel its warmth in summer . I can't find the reason why should you end it. Don't ever say that no one loves you anymore and that you love no one no more. Never. You are so lucky, you are endowed by our Creator with great gifts yet you keep failing to look back. You are too busy thinking desperately about your problems, about your blunders that you forget to live and to stand up once again. Forgetting how to live will slowly nudge you closer to the edge of the cliff tempting you to just jump off. It will slowly delude you into thinking that life has no meaning at all, that you have no purpose. Your thoughts will oppress you all the more, down in that muddy surface you've considered your home and your grave. But look, even the rotten apples, even the falling leaves, even the farthest and weakest star, even a speck of dust, every single one of them has their purpose and importance, why not you? Are you even comparable to them? Do you even compare yourself to them? Live. Cherish and savour this moment you are allowed to feel, hear, and see. Emancipate yourself from worries, from the predicaments of life. Embrace this very day God has given you to do great things, to do what is right, and to love the people around you. So many people are hungry and thirsty for love, yet even the poorest of the poor has something to offer, why can't you? Suicide is selfish. So selfish that all you care about is how and what you feel. You are drowned by the thought that no one cares and no one understands you. You want to be loved, you want to be cared for, you want to be understood. But have you ever, ever tried to love, care and understand whilst not asking anything in return? You are lying when you say that you love your parents, your wife, your husband, your son, your friends yet you'd just let go in those moments they're reaching out for you, just desiring to even touch the tip of your fingers, just to know you're still there. As I end this, I remember a person who was at one time about to lose hope, about to lose faith, about to die. She was once thwarted to see the brilliance of life, about to be blinded and fooled by her own wretched thinking. But she tightened up her grip of faith, she held on to those who love her so dearly, grab on to life and gave it a second chance. I remember this person who glimpsed at life once more and saw that it is a bliss, a splendor to live, to exist. I remember myself as I write this a long time ago. I kept this inside my closet, hidden, either be eaten by moths or aged by time. Yet as long as I live, I'll keep the lessons I've learned from those troubled times in deepest recesses of my heart, never to be taken away, never to be over-shadowed and drowned by the turmoil's of life. Never again -(PNX).
Comments (Page 1)
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on Jun 09, 2004
This is such a difficult subject to discuss, you raise some important points and the way you wrote it was beautiful and really touching. There's two sides of the argument, and I can't really tell you what side I'm on. For someone to want to end their own life, and for someone to post a message about it, that is a cry for help, a cry out for someone to save them. If they were truely serious about commiting this act, they would have gone and done it already, surely? For these people who think that ending life is their only option, I truely feel for them, and I truely hope they can be helped, before it reaches that point.

Having said that, is it a selfish act? Yes, it is. If someone close to me commited suicide, I'd be angry at them. For thinking this was the only option, for depriving me of them. I'd also be angry at myself though, for not seeing the obvious pain they are. For not helping them. Some people say it's the cowards way out, I'm not so sure about that. For someone to reach that decision, and to actually carry out, that takes courage, may be not in the usual sense of the word but it does. Excellent article, sorry for the waffle
on Jun 09, 2004
on a bridge yeah but over the internet? Don't know. It's attentian that they want. Why gove them so much? I don't know what I'd do or say if someone I knew was trying to off themselves. It's a pusswimp thing to do.I'm against it, but believe in a certain level of humor when things like this overtake my life. Really, how bad could life be? you have to be deranged mentally to be able to do it. No doubt.
on Jun 09, 2004
Great piece. umm... just one thing can you use paragraphs? i almost had a headache because i kept getting lost in the middle of the post, and since it was well written in the sense that i felt your compassion i just couldnt stop reading until i was finished. Anyway, once again good work.
on Jun 09, 2004
If someone close to me commited suicide


I was angry at my father for a great many years for exactly that reason. I just couldn't, wouldn't understand it. It wasn't until later in life when I was striken with severe, paralyzing depression that I finally understood what he went through. It's a genetic disorder affecting the chemical balance of the brain. A physical illness. Unfortunately, at that time medical science hadn't yet discovered this illness and he was lost to it.

Perhaps it was this that caused me to seek medical help and get better. Do I still get depressed? Yes, I do. Frequently. Fortunately, I now recognize the symptoms of the illness and have been taught how to deal with it. Certain foods to eat, ones to avoid, things like that to help correct the delicate chemical balance that keeps our brains running as they should.

There is still a stigma associated with this type of illness not associated with, say, heart disease. But it is still an illness, with a real physical cause. The person who wrote that note may, or may not, be suffering the same sort of illness. I surely hope that someone out there exncourages or even forces that person to get treatement as it can make all the difference in the world.

It is very hard to understand the thought process that leads someone to that point unless you have experienced it for yourself.
on Jun 09, 2004
I don't see how changing your diet can help quell any suicidal tendencies one may have!?! What to eat, what not to eat....makes no sense. Eat food, don't eat poisoned food. Sorry about your father, that would be hard.
on Jun 09, 2004
sorry addressed to my new Bud and chum Mason. <--woman right?
on Jun 09, 2004
Sorry miki, all male

Actually diet plays a large part in the chemicl balances of your entire body, including the brain. Adjustments in diet can and do affect these balances, especially when one has a genetic predisposition to imbalance in the first place.
on Jun 09, 2004
Once again, paragraphs = readability.
on Jun 09, 2004
But not to the point where it'll make you off yourself. No way.
on Jun 09, 2004
No miki, not on it's own, but I think you really understand that. This is too serious a subject for the normal banter. Sorry, but it is to me anyway.

For someone who is prone to chemically induced depression, diet plays an important role is PREVENTING symptoms. Diet, in and of itself, will not cause depression symptoms. But, if one is prone to these symptoms, diet does play an important role in maintaining health.

Good news is, chocolate is one food substance that actually helps. And I do love chocolate!
on Jun 09, 2004
Mason, I guess this is a subject that is difficult to comment on without actually experiencing the feelings that you have gone through. I can't begin to imagine what it is like, so all I can do is presume how I would feel, which was really what my comment was about, I'm sorry if it offended you. Thanks for sharing your experience, it must of been difficult, but I'm so glad that you are getting through it now. Chocolate helps with almost anything!
on Jun 09, 2004
Sally; your comments were honest and sincere. How could they possibly offend me or anyone else?????

If you would like a little peek inside what it is like, read my artilces The Fog I and The Fog II (or something like that)

And yes, chocolate is definately good for almost anything. Except maybe the kids with acne
on Jun 09, 2004
It is very hard to understand the thought process that leads someone to that point unless you have experienced it for yourself.


I just didn't want you to think i was presuming I knew how people in that situation feel, that's all. I'm glad you didn't take my comments that way! I'm going to read them articles now! I don't have to worry about the acne, I just look at chocolate and my hips grow, grrr!
on Jun 09, 2004
don't commit suicide folks. Ever.
on Jun 09, 2004
I suffered with chronic manic depression for around three hours in 1974, it was sheer hell.
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