The Mercury News Weekend

Son’s suicide moves father to try to help other parents

- By Martha Ross mross@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Whenever San Jose State alum Reggie Burton looked at his son Avery Burton, he saw a smart, athletic overachiev­er with a bright future.

In the summer of 2017, Reggie Burton was delighted that his 22-year-old was about to pursue his dream: getting a a doctorate in physical therapy so he could help people recover from injuries. He never imagined that his son was privately overwhelme­d by depression, saw himself as worthless and thought he had to die.

On July 24, 2017, Avery Burton drove to the bridge crossing the Colorado RIver, near the Hoover Dam and the family’s home outside Las Vegas. There he left his car and iPhone. In a suicide note posted to Facebook, he wrote that his death was “nobody’s fault …. I was living a fake life.”

Like other parents whose children

die by suicide, a grieving Reggie Burton was left to pore through his own memories, as well his son’s social media posts and other writings, to try to understand what happened and what he had missed.

“I had blinders on,” said Reggie Burton, a former reporter who runs a Vegas PR company. “When you look at my son outwardly, he was the image of a kid who was just excelling. But the signs were there.”

The search to better understand the major depressive episode that afflicted his son is the subject of Reggie Burton’s new book “This Is Depression” (Rushmore Press, $10). Reggie Burton will do a book signing at Barnes & Noble Blossom Hill in San Jose at 10 a.m. Saturday.

Reggie Burton said he wrote the book because his son’s death revealed how little he and his wife, Ann Burton, understood about mental illness. He wanted to help other parents identify when their adolescent and young adult children are struggling.

Statistics show why parents should pay attention: 1 in 4 college students suffers from depression. The suicide rate among Americans ages 15-24 is at its highest level since 1960, and suicide is the second-leading cause of death for this age group.

Reggie Burton says such facts should resonate at this time of year as the school year ramps up at Stanford, UC Berkeley, San Jose State and other schools.

Helen Hsu, a staff psychologi­st for Stanford’s counseling services, said Reggie Burton’s book offers an important family perspectiv­e that focuses on an age group when mental illness tends to surface. In her practice, Hsu regularly sees students whose anxiety is in part fed by the high expectatio­ns placed on young people in achievemen­t- oriented Bay Area communitie­s. “Young people these days are feeling a bit scared and anxious and hopeless,” said Hsu. “There are wars, environmen­tal devastatio­n, economic worries and the feeling that if I don’t become the next start-up founder, I’ll be a pauper.”

Shortly before Avery Burton died, his dad assured his son that he had set himself up for a great life. Avery Burton graduated with honors from UNLV in May 2017 and won a spot in a selective doctoral program at the school.

But depression doesn’t discrimina­te. “It doesn’t care about your socioecono­mic status,” Reggie Burton said. “When your brain starts to fail and the chemistry doesn’t work, it doesn’t matter who you are or where you’re from.”

As a young boy, Avery Burton had a slight stutter and was a bit introverte­d, but he gained confidence as he got older, his father wrote. He thrived on new challenges, learning to play tennis the summer before high school so he could make the school team. In high school, he was a three-sport athlete, a natural leader and had a “squad” of friends who looked up to him, his father said.

In college, Avery Burton worked out and ate healthfull­y. Reggie Burton teased his son that his “ripped” abs could help him launch a successful modeling career if graduate school didn’t work out.

“In the top 20 things I worried about with my sons, depression and mental illness were 41,” the dad said. “With all my kids, I thought I knew their strengths or weaknesses. Other than they don’t clean their rooms, they stayed on top of the things they needed to be on top of.”

A therapist later told Reggie Burton that stress over going to graduate school probably spurred his son’s depression. Avery Burton told his mother, “Mommy, life is hard” — and he told his father he wasn’t sure he had the people skills needed to be a therapist.

Reggie Burton was puzzled by his son’s sudden loss of confidence. Avery Burton tried to hide his depression, but his dad said he also wasn’t cognizant of the classic warning signs: The son had begun to withdraw from friends and lose weight. Digestive issues that had bothered him since high school recurred. Reggie Burton later learned that his son had started to drink more and use marijuana to self-medicate.

Several weeks after Avery Burton’s graduate school “freakout,” his dad received a text from one of his son’s friends saying he had talked about suicide but didn’t want his parents to know. Reggie Burton and his wife didn’t bring it up, worried they would make things worse. Instead, they hoped to ease his mind by taking a family vacation to Southern California. Avery Burton seemed in good spirits during the trip.

Reggie Burton wishes he had talked to his son about his suicidal thoughts. He later learned that it’s important to be direct and ask depressed people if they’re considerin­g suicide and to let them know that others care. “If he was already thinking that, it wouldn’t have put the idea into his head,” the dad said.

Over the past two years, the dad has tried to get past blaming himself, accepting his son’s word that no one else is at fault. Still, he hopes sharing his son’s story could make a difference for another family.

“I wrote the book to honor my son’s memory and to reduce the stigma around depression,” he said. “No family should go through what we went through. It’s 100% preventabl­e.”

If you or someone you know is in emotional distress or considerin­g suicide, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-TALK (8255).

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