I can’t get the haunting downward strains of
Lamentations out of my head after hearing it chanted over and over at synagogue
last night. It was Tisha B’Av, a lesser-known Jewish holiday that mourns the
destruction of the ancient temple in Jerusalem. “The existential question of Tisha B’Av is not, ‘How mournful
can we be?’”, writes Rabbi Noam Raucher. “Rather it is, ‘What can we rebuild
after our hopes and dreams are left in shambles?’” Grievous loss contains the
seeds and the imperative for renewal, he and other rabbis suggest, turning a
curse, over time, into a blessing.
I take this
as a message to suicide loss survivors like me. It still pains me to remember how bereft I felt in the first few years, not only of my precious child but of our irreplaceable relationship and
the dreams it carried.
What is a
child to a parent but a dream embodied? From birth, we invest our kids with our
hopes—scrawls on a blank slate, our best soil for the seed. They are everything
we aspired to be or do, our comfort in old age, our stake in the future. We
launch them into the universe not knowing where their dreams will land.
I envisioned
Noah emerging from the confusion and depression of his college years to find
his passion, deep love and fulfillment. I yearned to feel close to him again,
to resume our late-night conversations (even if sporadically), to share great
food and art, holidays and vacations, life passages. I was excited by his young
adult dreams of living in Europe and making films and all the as yet unformed
dreams that would follow.
When the
dream that is a child dies, the act of dreaming dies with them. The garden lies
barren; the launch pad, abandoned; our pathway, blocked under rubble. The whole
edifice of what was and could be, of what we believed about love or life, laid
waste. I don’t know what hurts more after suicide, the loss of our child’s hopes and
dreams or our own. Maybe it’s having to give up both at once. I can’t bear to
think of what it was like for Noah to lose hope that he would ever get better
and, one by one, let go of his dreams.
Where do we
want to go after we’ve sat in the ruins and let grief pour out of us? How can
we crawl through the curse of suicide to come out on the side of blessing? Initially,
I resisted the conventional wisdom of finding silver linings and new doors that
open when others slam shut. I was still finding and grieving each dream that we’d
lost in losing Noah. Meanwhile, new opportunities and compassion arose, opening
a return to joy and a life of purpose.
This week marks a year since the publication of my
book, I’ll Write Your Name on Every Beach: A Mother’s Quest for Comfort, Courage and Clarity After Suicide Loss. I had always aspired to write a memoir but never expected that it would be about the end to all my child’s dreams.
My book and book talks have widened my world and put me in touch with many people in the past year,
from fellow survivors to concerned therapists, from young mental health
advocates to spiritual seekers. I’ve felt the release of baring tender,
vulnerable parts of myself that others can honor and recognize in themselves. I’ve
been showered with love by friends and strangers. The sweetest praise I’ve had
is that the book is a tribute to Noah and that for one new suicide loss survivor, reading it
was “like getting a big hug.”
As I continue to promote the book, I’m expanding my
public speaking to bring suicide prevention information to as many people as I
can. With young people, I want to spread the message of “be a lifeline” for
others and, if in distress, “stay” --for the sake of your dreams and your
future self. With parents, schools, and faith communities, I want to help nurture
youth resilience and understanding of suicide risk and response.
These are my new dreams for the moment, along with continuing to write in the key of grief and see where it leads me. The new dreams will never replace the ones I had for Noah, but they are a sign of rebuilding in progress.
These are my new dreams for the moment, along with continuing to write in the key of grief and see where it leads me. The new dreams will never replace the ones I had for Noah, but they are a sign of rebuilding in progress.
The Three Weeks of mourning in the Jewish calendar,
capped by today’s holiday, are followed by Seven Weeks of Consolation. I’ll try
to keep that proportion in mind.
To
my fellow survivors: What dreams have you had to set aside? What new dreams may be
starting to form? Take note of any sign of rebuilding, no matter how
tentative, and take heart.
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