Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Friends fail to ‘show up’ after suicide

- Email Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com, follow her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/carolyn.hax

Dear Carolyn: My sister killed herself two months ago. She had been suffering from depression and was diagnosed with a medical issue that would have entailed long-term treatment and/or an organ transplant.

I am devastated beyond belief. The shock and horror of her death and the circumstan­ces surroundin­g it have been overwhelmi­ng. I’m getting therapy and it is helping. I have many close friends who have been incredibly supportive and caring.

However, I’m very hurt by the lack of support of any kind from a number of people I had thought of as friends. Some are members of a club; some are neighbors; some are colleagues. Some are people I’ve known for decades. I know they’re aware of my loss, and yet they haven’t lifted a finger to text, email or call me.

If I continue to participat­e in my usual social circles when I feel up to it, I will see some of these “friends.” What do I say to them? I simply cannot imagine sitting down to dinner with them or discussing a book or anything else in their presence. Do I simply stop participat­ing in these activities? If not, how do I handle seeing those who have ignored me? – Heartsick and Hurt What a terrible loss, I’m sorry. You’re not alone in seeing some of your people vanish just as you need them most. Not by a long shot; such vanishing is a common, and cruel, by-product of death in a culture where the rituals aren’t universal, establishe­d and clear.

This is not to excuse anyone’s silence, merely to explain it: It’s actually a question I get fairly often, from people who don’t know how to respond to someone’s grief, then hesitate out of indecision and fear of missteps, then realize their silence has now lasted an unseemly amount of time, then are moved to ask me or others, “Is it too late to say something?”

Deaths by suicide especially seem to trigger this kind of support paralysis. Again, cruelly so, since a compassion­ate universe would send more support for more complicate­d grief, not less.

Something else I see in your letter that suggests these people fell through this same uncertaint­y crack: You describe them as friends of proximity. They happened to join the same club, move to the same neighborho­od, work at the same place, for their own reasons … and then found a nice acquaintan­ce in you. So they’re going to care about you, but not necessaril­y feel comfortabl­e rushing to your side in a crisis, deducing you have closer friends for that.

Again – not to excuse this, just to explain. As your justifiably hurt feelings attest, the only answer to uncertaint­y around grief is to find some way to show

up. Write, call, offer to stop by.

I’m so sorry these friends failed to see this.

It would be a loss atop a loss, though, if you were to drop valued groups and activities in response. Please maintain your connection­s. And when you see the people who went silent on you, keep it simple: Say hello, then let them say what they have to say. Your response doesn’t have to be scripted or tidy or on anyone’s terms but your own. Just see truth, then proceed as you see fit from there.

 ?? Carolyn Hax ??
Carolyn Hax

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