The Beginning-An Unexpected Journey (Part 2 Of The Summer That Could Have Been Idyllic)

Everything was going well the summer of 2018. Having just arrived in Canada after a wonderful trip to Alaska, I was at the cottage with my husband, two oldest children, and mother. My youngest daughter was at camp.  We were in the one place that has always brought me happiness: Muskoka;  a wonderful place to continue an already idyllic summer. Life, however, has a funny way of sneaking up on you.  Just when you stop holding your breath waiting for the next bad thing to happen,  you are hit hard. The path you thought you were taking changes course completely.

The day started like any other. I was getting ready for an early morning run because I was training for a half marathon, the first in many years. Outside, the sun shone bright; we were promised a beautiful day ahead. My husband had been over at the cottage. I heard him walk up the stairs and enter the bunkie (the rooms over the boathouse where the two of us were staying). When he walked into the room, I heard him say: “Bay is ok, he’s asleep, but we have a problem”. Confused and readjusting my thinking, I sat down on the couch.  

As my spouse sat down beside me, I was handed a letter my son had written the night before. The only words I remember are “I’M STILL HERE”. The letter went onto explain the depression and plans of suicide that he had over the last few years. My middle child had planned to take his life the night before, but instead wrote us a letter. We were lucky. 

I was stunned and in shock. My husband and I both were. Over the last year we had asked Bay to talk with us, but he kept insisting everything was “FINE”.  My middle child did not want to let us know just how much he was suffering. Everyone has their breaking point. The point that tips someone over the edge can be something that others would find insignificant, but to that person it is everything.  Bay had reached the edge and was at a critical point.

Memory is a funny thing. Sights, sounds, smells, and music are among the things that can trigger a part of your brain that pulls a vision from the past, forward. Sometimes it is the wind blowing, with undercurrents of cold, or the way the sunlight plays upon the landscape that allows me to recall years gone by. When I think about that day just over four years ago, I remember the numbness. For me time stopped and I didn’t know what to do…..

How should we proceed? Would the correct thing be for both my husband and I to take Bay home? With both our daughters in Canada, maybe one parent should stay at the cottage and the other take our son back to the states…..we went over many scenarios about what to do for our child. In the end, the answers was staring us right in the face, but it never even occurred to me.

That morning while, Bay was still asleep, we went over to the cottage and told my mother what had happened. We all sat, with tears in our eyes, while we talked about the best path forward. Suicide was not new to my family: my aunt was schizophrenic and took her life in the late 1960’s, then my dad took his life in the September 0f 2010.

The phone rang, it was our neighbor. My mother automatically picked up the phone, although she was too choked up to talk. The friend on the other end of the phone line knew something was wrong. Down the road our neighbor drove in her golf cart. When she walked into our cottage, she asked my mother what was wrong. Our neighbor was told what had happened. This no nonsense woman looked directly at me and said: “take him to the emergency room”.  If my child had an accident or was extremely ill physically, I would have done just that.  For a mental health condition, it never occurred to me that an emergency room would be the right place to go. The advice was taken. We woke Bay up, grabbed him something to eat, then headed into town.  The whole way to the hospital I asked myself: “Is this my fault?”; “Has DNA been the cause of Bay’s suicidal ideation?”; “Did I make a mistake in finally telling my two youngest children, just the summer before, how their grandfather died?”.   These thoughts circled, around in my mind.

Once we arrived at the emergency room we were seen quickly. The morning was long however, with all of us being spoken to: Bay by himself, then my husband and I together, then the three of us. We needed to give the history of our family’s mental heath issues.  My family had the conditions that were known, so my part in the discussion with the doctor and social worker were detailed and tiring. Little did I know this would not be the last time I told of my family’s past.

The morning turned into early afternoon. In the end, it was determined that our son was safe to return to the cottage with us. Weekly we drove to town, Bay would meet with social worker that he felt comfortable with. Calls were made, and mostly unanswered, to find a therapist for him to see when the summer ended and we were home. For the time being our middle child was free from self harm.

That summer I needed to talk. Not having a therapist to talk to, I was fortunate to have a life long friend that I could confide in. We took some long walks together. During one of these excursions, she said to me: “you are only as happy as your saddest child”.  For months, those words felt solid and true. This morning, four summers later, I look over the calm lake and think about how far this unexpected journey has taken me….

Authors note: As a mother, I feel fortunate to have a strong bond with all three of my children.  Each relationship is different, yet wonderful. This story, although mine, surrounds my middle child. For those of you who do not know me, the name of my second child has been changed to “Bay”, to protect their privacy. As this is a story of my experience, it will be continued, most likely with other stories in between.  Keep reading to find out where this journey leads. Perhaps my story will help some of you.

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Author: Sarah

sarah@tell-me-your-story.org

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