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Kintsugi
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I feel for you Simply Simon. I am so sorry that Bill committed suicide. I have a lot of feelings about it. I have been there to that point. I am so glad you are talking to us. Keep posting.
I am overwhelmed (in a good way) by all who have posted support here. I want to respond individually, but I'm in a funk these past few days.
I went to the grocery store yesterday. I'm a literary type, you know. I went to get some milk, and the expiration dates were just staring me down, rows of 1/27/15. I dug through to find a different date, rearranging the milk like a madwoman.
When I worked at a convenience store, there was a woman who would spend a good hour looking through our eggs. She would take out almost each one, looking at the dates, and re-stack them. Maybe she just had more dates to avoid.
He didn't leave a note. It's out of character for him to just up and make a decision with no explanation left behind. @scout86 , I know he did not think his death would hurt anyone. I've been there before. But now I see the truth, and I wish I didn't have to come to that conclusion through experience.
B got off of the phone, eyes wild, posture immaculately tense, and said "Bill is dead." He walked out of the house, ran around the block to his mother's house. My head was spinning. I kept thinking I heard him wrong. But that thought came over me, and wouldn't leave. It wanted to overtake all other possibilities. I knew it almost instantly. Bill had struggled with depression his whole life. My head would fight with itself:
He was fixing something, and he fell.
He killed himself.
I didn't hear him right.
He killed himself.
He had a heart attack.
He killed himself.
When B came back, he was giving us instructions. Hide the drugs. Hide the paraphenelia. Stay here. And then,
He hung himself in the basement.
And he left. And my stupid brain thinks, Hanged. You hung a coat. You hanged yourself. He hanged himself in the basement.
But the diction stays with me today. Bill hung himself in the basement.
Afterward, when people started arriving the next day, I wanted to know how he died. It was important to me. It still is. I asked B's grandmother.
"He hung himself," she said.
"I know," I said, "I mean how did he die?"
She didn't know. I wanted to know if he had made it high enough somehow to break his neck. I wanted to know that he did not asphyxiate. I see it--gruesomely, in impossible detail--in my head. Bill stepping off a platform. Bill's face turning red, his feet struggling for height. Thinking what have I done. Wanting to undo it.
I think part of me thinks that if he asphyxiated, we are all so much more to blame. I know that's not fair, but my head wants to argue that if someone had been there, we could have undone it before it was finished.
I think of a section of one of my favorite poems, "Whale Watch" by Dean Young.
You may try to hang yourself but be saved
By a kid come home early from school
Or you may be that kid who'll always remember
His mother that day in the basement
How she seemed to know he'd done something wrong
Before he even knew
And already forgave him,
The way she hugged him and cried.
There is a very popular show called Community. In one episode, the six characters are sitting around a table waiting for a pizza to be delivered to the apartment. When the buzzer rings for the delivery, no one wants to get it, and they ask one character to roll a di. The character with the di warns that once he rolls the di, seven different timelines will instantly be created, one for each side and one where it is never rolled.
The episode plays out all seven timelines when the di is tossed. In one timeline, everything goes as wrong as possible, and it forever alters that reality. This is the timeline they call The Darkest Timeline.
"This is the darkest timeline," B says after Bill's death, after the funeral, all of us still somewhat frozen in place by the loss.
"I don't think it's the darkest timeline," I say, trying to reason that the darkest timeline has everything, everything, go wrong.
B yells "This is the darkest f*cking timeline!"
It is nearly one year later, and so much is going so well. All of my success mocks me.
The last thing I remember Bill saying to me was the Saturday before his Monday death. He was hanging curtains in my guest room. He came up to me and said he was proud of me, that he was proud of both of us.
The next day, he discovered his beehive was dead.
The next morning, he did not go to sleep. He was supposed to go to sleep. On Mondays he would have been up for a good 24 hours, waking up at a normal time on Sunday, then working at a factory all night. A man with an MA in social work, assembling little parts of cars for 8-12 hours a shift. And he would come home on Monday morning, walk the dog, have a drink, and go to sleep. He was drinking a martini when my MIL left for work that day. She said she asked him if he was all right. He said he was fine, and she left.
A couple hours later, he made a noose.
When we would smoke in the basement with him, B was always using pieces of rope to make a noose, and he would talk about it. He would say, A true noose has thirteen rungs of rope. We would all laugh.
I'm sorry if this long thing belongs in my diary but I have no energy to move it and no concentration to make it better.
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