Chattanooga Times Free Press

PHILOSOPHE­R’S SUICIDAL STRUGGLES, SURVIVAL TIPS

- THE LOS ANGELES TIMES

I wasn’t sure exactly what to expect when I opened philosophy professor Clancy Martin’s new book, “How Not to Kill Yourself: A Portrait of the Suicidal Mind.”

Martin has tried to kill himself at least 10 times, the first time at age 6, when he ran in front of a bus. He has awakened in a hospital three times after suicide attempts, been interrupte­d by police twice, and has tried to die by drowning or hanging.

“Suicide is harder than it looks,” he writes. “It seems easy until you try it.”

The reason he never succeeded, Martin notes, is that he never used a gun.

“How Not to Kill Yourself” is in part a memoir: It chronicles Martin’s addiction to alcohol, his three marriages, two divorces and his enduring quest to be a better father to his five children, along with his suicide attempts. But more than that, it’s a primer on literature about suicide, an investigat­ion into whether there is such a thing as a “death drive” and a deeply empathetic advice book for people considerin­g suicide and those who love them.

“If I have one crucially important piece of advice to offer in this book,” he writes, “it’s this: absolutely do not keep a gun in the house. If you have one, get rid of it immediatel­y.”

Ambivalenc­e has been his saving grace; you can want to live and die, too. “For the suicidally inclined person,” Martin says, “vacillatio­n about whether one wants to live or die is the norm rather than the exception.”

In the same way that few lives have been untouched by addiction, I’d wager that few have been untouched by suicide, either directly or indirectly. Who, after all, was not moved or puzzled by the death of Robin Williams, or of Anthony Bourdain?

It is one of the existentia­l mysteries: Why do people who seem to have it all decide to end their lives?

As you would expect from a philosophe­r, Martin cites great thinkers as he puzzles out why some people are bent on self-destructio­n, either by addiction or other harmful behaviors, which he calls “parasuicid­al,” or by suicide itself.

“Thinking about killing oneself and addictive thinking have a lot more in common than is normally recognized,” Martin writes.

“Wanting to kill yourself is like an extreme version of the relief you find after drinking a few glasses of wine, and the pungent smell of yourself seems to drift off into the breeze. … This theory is really just an elaboratio­n of the Buddha’s idea that the desire for self-annihilati­on is among our most basic forms of suffering, or Freud’s idea that the desire for life and the desire for death are two sides of the same coin.”

I was not surprised to learn that women try to kill themselves three times more often than men, but men succeed more often than women because they tend to use guns.

But I did not expect to learn that middle-aged white men are the American demographi­c group most at risk for suicide, or that Black women are the group least likely to kill themselves.

I don’t know who first said that suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem (credit often goes to Phil Donahue), but it’s an aphorism that has stuck with me, and something I have shared with many a depressed loved one over the years, without realizing that many thoughtful people think it’s an extremely unhelpful thing to tell a desperate person who may well be looking for a permanent solution to their pain, which is not temporary.

And that, in essence, brings me to Martin’s ultimate advice about how to stay alive. It’s his version of the Stoics’ argument that “the door is always open.”

Yes, the Stoics say, you have the absolute right to kill yourself, but don’t walk through that door just yet.

“After all,” Martin writes, “you can always kill yourself tomorrow. Take a breath, get some space: tomorrow isn’t here yet. And maybe you’ll find you can get through today.”

 ?? ?? Robin Abcarian
Robin Abcarian

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States