The Week (US)

Editor’s letter

- William Falk

When my wife told me amid our morning rush that she’d just heard on the kitchen radio the words “Anthony Bourdain” and “suicide,” I was sure she was mistaken. Not Bourdain. On his CNN show and in his writing, the culinary adventurer radiated a deep appreciati­on for life, for people, for culture, for beauty. He hungrily slurped in experience like a bowl of noodles. I confess that I irrational­ly grew angry when I realized that yes, he’d surrendere­d to the darkness he battled throughout his life. Fame, of course, serves as no shield from despair. But I know and love people who share his struggle, and worried what they would take away from the fact that someone so widely admired could see death as preferable to one more day in this disappoint­ing world.

Every year, about 45,000 people commit suicide in the U.S.— twice as many as are killed in homicides. Each of these deaths has its own circumstan­ces, but as Kirsten Powers says this week in USA Today, the steadily rising toll of despair tells us “something is wrong with our culture.” (See Controvers­y.) Family and community bonds are disintegra­ting; loneliness is rampant. At the heart of human experience is a paradox: We are each trapped inside the boundaries of our flesh, alone with our histories, our wounds, our brokenness. Yet our isolation is an illusion—a constricti­on of perception. All the great spiritual traditions teach the same truth: We are connected in a fundamenta­l way to everyone and to everything. As he traveled the world, delighting in the ordinary people he met, Bourdain seemed to understand this intuitivel­y. But friends say he worked himself into exhaustion, and Bourdain once noted that although he had “the best job in the world,” he often woke up in hotels far from the people he loved. “The truth is,” he said, “I’m alone for most of that time.” If this master storytelle­r left us a lesson, it is this: You are not truly alone. People care about you more than you realize. Please don’t leave us. Reach out. Editor-in-chief

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