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Deleted member 37085
Medic72, I hope you will allow me to post to you this moment for I so want to tell you that I do care so much for how you are falling apart over the suicide of your so beloved by you husband. Oh, hurting and aching-hearted precious Medic72. I so believe as you just posted that if your husband had been given a do-over after he shot himself, that he would not have pulled that trigger on that gun. He was not able to see his losses after he chose to pull the trigger, only you see them. I am only able to brush lightly to speak further down in the body of this post of my specific experiences on the horrible subject of suicide (attempts) and suicidal ideation.Okay so my husband committed suicide just over a year ago. Another woman I've met online lost her husband...
For so long now, I have been reading your posts and so wanting (crying now) to comfort you any way I can. I never lost a husband or a friend to suicide. No, I have not. Tears streaming down my face now @Medic72. Your pain coming from your posts is for me nearly palpable pain that I can almost feel emanating from you as you post and share about your beloved husband and your lives together prior to his death @Medic72. .
You love this man not loved him, you love him! Continue to grieve at your own pace, and not allow anyone to persuade you otherwise! And what is good and right for one woman (the one you spoke of who also lost her husband to suicide a year ago and is dating) may or may not be what you and any other woman in your position may need, as you expressed. Only you know where you stand in your love and in your grieving for your so missed by you husband. As you know from your background in medicine, we all grieve at a different pace, in a different way, and some women who have been married and have lost their spouse seemingly cannot live alone, and re-marry because of this fact. And some women like yourself for where you are at this moment in time strongly believe and know that no other man would be able to fill your beloved husband's place in your life. Your life @Medic72 is so rich with beautiful and even funny memories that you continue to share with all of us here!
You are struggling without your husband. Being alone after being with him for 20 years or so, that's hard now to be alone without him. Even sitting alone with all of your beautiful memories that you are sharing with us here, you violently at times ache for his presence and companionship, and his love. And when you have been going out into the forest in the clearing of the meadow and envisioning seeing him only for a moment.is your mind trying to wrap itself around this horrific death of your sweetie. You can picture him in the forest in that clearing where he loved to go. Your heart wants to see him so badly and your soul aches for your beloved husband. You are grieving and please do continue to share and grieve. We are all listening, caring, and some of us are crying alongside you, you just can't see us or touch us. Can you sense us? For we are here Medic72. We are here.
Briefly, I will touch on the subject of my near successful tries at ending my life; but only briefly so as not to take away from you, and your post and your pain. After hearing over and over again, following several suicide attempts that - suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem (this was prior to being diagnosed with prolonged complex ptsd and major depressive disorder) @Medic72, I still could not understand why I wanted so desperately to leave? How come I could not and still at times cannot just snap out of it and why do I need help? I had been hanging on by any and all means, and life for me was Hell on earth! What was wrong with me? Now, again this was before I was correctly diagnosed in March, 2012. After corrected diagnosis, Medic72 I began to read about pcptsd and mdd and Oh my God! Now I was beginning to get the full picture on why my brain was so screwed up to the point it was telling me over and over and over and over and over again to kill myself, and my brain had lied to me! For I do not want to die, and I do not believe your husband wanted to either. Ptsd pain is agony and HELL and makes living HELL!
Then post diagnoses, and the more reading I did on subject of ptsd (and I have prolonged complex ptsd and major depressive disorder) the pieces of my puzzle of why my brain wanted me dead, began to make perfect sense to me. Crazy sense, but still perfect sense after what I had been put through in my past history. You see, as you already know @Medic72, I did NOT want to die, nor to kill myself, I simply wanted (as you already know) my agonizing extreme mental and emotional anguishing pain to STOP! I was not crazy! The multiple events which caused the pcptsd was crazy and cruel and hideous. I was not insane. And I surviving some days moment to moment with traumatic events and pcptsd and mdd and I am grateful some moments to be here, and I will not lie here to you - and some moments my brain lies to me over and over and tells me that I want out of here! Period, so my magical whacked out mind tells me lies, lies, lies. I am intelligent yet my trauma has changed my brain to where it lies to me and tells me it's time to go. Bullsh**! As horrible as the pain gets at times, I tell my brain to take a long walk off a short ocean dock! And when I can't do that, I come here. I also come here to support beloved people who support other beloved people. A circle of love. Oh yes, indeed. A circle of love!
This moment, I will not act on my brain's impulses that tell me to kill myself. NO! Am I stronger than your husband? No! Emphatically, NO! I found this community we are in right now and it was not by mistake, that is all I will say about my spiritual background. I am unable to do this alone - this meaning survive with these horrible illnesses without such battle buddies as I now have here (crying now AGAIN!) in this forum! There are men and women here like yourself that are walking through fire, We are a community of givers and receivers of love, truth, and our mutually shared traumatic experiences. We are surviving together as a community! I am also struggling (surviving too) in emdr therapy and this is HELL. I will for this moment not give in I will not give up. I live alone. No dog no cat. No lover, no husband. Just me alone with my prayers. I do have a really super good friend that when I need her (she has a huge family and has been married 50+ years and lots of grandchildren, and plenty of life experiences (like yourself) for me to learn and draw upon. I am not alone, and neither are you. I have lost so many people that I loved (one recently) and time changes things. You know this to be true. You have only been grieving for a year, and losing the love of your life is probably the most difficult thing to have to experience outside of the loss of a child. So @Medic72 continue to love and grieve over the excruciating pain-filled loss of your beloved husband. We are here. We are listening. And we care about you, and you, as you have heard so many times before - ARE NOT ALONE! With great sadness over the loss of your precious husband, I am here. JJ