Suicide
Surviving after a suicide: a day for healing
(ARA) - Research shows that more than 60 percent of people in
the United States will know someone who dies by suicide during
the course of their lifetime and more than 20 percent will lose
a family member. These startling statistics translate into hundreds
of thousands of family members, friends, neighbors, and co-workers—"survivors"—who
will be left behind to cope with the loss.
On November 17, 2007, the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention
(AFSP) broadcasted their National Survivors of Suicide Day program
designed to help survivors sort through the troubling and powerful
emotions they may be experiencing. The ninth annual program, which
is broadcast simultaneously to more than 100 conference sites
across the country and internationally, featured a panel discussion
comprised of "veteran" survivors sharing their personal
experiences. The program also featured mental health professionals
who are experts in the field of suicide bereavement. In addition
to the broadcast program, each conference site offers further
programming for survivors.
The AFSP program is also broadcast via streaming video on the
Foundation's Web site at www.afsp.org,
with an online chat immediately following the program offering
an additional forum for survivors. The online broadcast ensures
that survivors can participate even if there is not a local conference
site in their area or if they find it difficult to participate
in person. For those not able to participate at a conference or
online, the entire 90-minute program is archived on the AFSP Web
site for a full year after the event, where it can be viewed free
of charge at anytime.
"Having lost my brother Stephen to suicide in 1993, I know
first hand the pain and grief many survivors experience,"
says Joanne Harpel, director of survivor initiatives at AFSP.
"The National Survivors of Suicide Day and the other programs
AFSP provides can help comfort, guide and empower survivors."
According to Harpel, more than 32,000 people in the United States
die by suicide each year. More than 90 percent have an underlying,
although not always diagnosed, psychiatric illness at the time
of their death. Despite this, survivors often feel the suicide
of their loved one is somehow shameful or that they or their family
are somehow to blame. Questions of "Why" and "What
could I have done" can further the feelings of guilt and
anger.
Also complicating grief are the stigma and misconceptions that
plague suicide. Whether real or perceived, this stigma can leave
many survivors feeling shunned by friends, the community, or even
family members. Stigma may also prevent survivors from discussing
the death or lead them to keep the cause of death a secret and
develop alternate explanations. This can leave survivors feeling
alone, abandoned, or afraid to reach out for help.
"Because suicide is often so misunderstood, it can be very
beneficial for survivors to connect with others who have gone
through a similar loss; too often survivors suffer alone,"
says Edward Dunne, survivor and author of Suicide and Its Aftermath: Understanding and Counseling the Survivors (A Norton Professional Book)
Dunne
is also chair of AFSP's national survivor council.
National Survivors of Suicide Day was created in 1999 and is
always held on the Saturday before Thanksgiving. Visit www.afsp.org
for more information about AFSP's National Survivors of Suicide
Day program, to find the nearest conference site or to watch the
program online.
Courtesy of ARA Content