hypatia wrote:Thank you all for your words of sympathy. However, I truly did want and need a variety of personal views on what happens after suicide...for the victims as well as myself. A couple of you added links I have looked at and are helpful...
I am "stuck" in a spot where I thought I would never be and I don't know where to go or what to do to make things better. Half of my family is gone--my husband and my only daughter at 22. I waited 36 years to have her. We were so close. I am at a lost. There is now only my son who lives in Louisiana and myself. He has built a life for himself and is looking towards the future, as he should.
What about my future? I planned it once with a husband; I reconstructed it once again after his death. Presently, I am out of personal reconstruction energy. I am supposed to be entering those Golden Years we worked so hard for.
I just wish I could have my old life back.
I am angry with my husband. By his own suicide he has given my children permission that suicide was an option, an avenue to solve seemingly insolvable problems. One incredible daughter has already been taken from me...
By LDS theology, the person who committs suicide is understood to have been not held responsible for that action, and the Lord will be merciful. A dear friend of my mother lost a son to suicide. Some years later she received a personal visitation from him to assure her that he was fine. You need have no worries or concerns about them.
As for you and your other child, you both need counseling. Your anger at your husband is to be expected. You are right. His suicide did, in essence, give your daughter a model of behavior of how to react to excruciating pain. It is also to be expected that you would feel a deep sense of betrayal. Surely any individual would know that if they committ suicide the grief that would visit on the surviving family members would be terrible. It isn't far from that to question whether or not they cared for you.
I was not a grief counselor, but I taught a course or death and dying for years at a college. I spoke with many people who had experienced horrific loses. (The course drew many people who had suffered great losses.) My advice is for you to get into a support group. Get counseling for both of you. Realize that the answers to some of the questions you have now will be revealed in time. You will be able to find a satisfying life. You don't need to make decisions now. In my personal circle of friends is an individual who's husband commiitted suicide, two families whose sons were killed by drunk drivers, a family whose child was murdered. They have all been able to put their lives together again and have good lives now.
Please know that there will be brighter days.