AnneMoss Rogers and son, Charles Rogers, 9/26/1995-6/5/2015
AnneMoss Rogers and son, Charles Rogers, 9/26/1995-6/5/2015

How I Survived My Son’s Suicide

August 9, 2023
58

Guest Post speakingofsuicide.comMy husband and I were sitting in a police car when we got the news my son Charles, 20, died by suicide in 2015. That’s the moment I left my former self on a shelf somewhere in the past and this new self, a person I didn’t want to be, had to find a way forward.

My first thought was, “How could I be such a bad mother that my son would kill himself? Didn’t he know we loved him? How could I have missed his monumental pain?”

My son struggled with the physical pain of substance withdrawal and the emotional pain of a deep depressive episode when he took his own life.  What’s more, he hid his pain behind the mask of a clown. It took a long time before I recognized his death wasn’t about or because of me.

The drugs and alcohol he used to numb feelings of suicide ultimately drove him towards that end. While I didn’t know about his thoughts of suicide, his journal of rap music revealed his struggle, and I now understand his pain.  I included his rap lyrics in my memoir, Diary of a Broken Mind.

People look at me now after I give a keynote speech and say, “You are so strong,” thinking I am just naturally that way. But I was very intentional about my grief recovery and worked at it.

I’ve survived a brain tumor, a broken neck, an organ-eating infection, a brief death during a surgical procedure, an attack at knifepoint where I barely escaped rape and murder –all of which were a piece of cake compared to losing my younger child to suicide.  After my son’s death, I was emotionally underwater for at least three years, but I did find healing, joy, and a way to give back. And I’m going to share some tips in hopes that it helps you find your own path forward, if you also have lost somebody you love to suicide.

1.   Believe You Will Survive

You are confused, heartbroken, overwhelmed, numb, angry, bitter, sad, disbelieving, relieved, feeling guilty and so much more and all at once.

When I thought, “I can’t survive this,” I pushed back and told myself, “I will survive.” I didn’t know how or what that looked like. And I wanted to shed my skin, jump into shiny new life, and leave all that pain behind for someone else to sort out and let me know when I could return and continue forward. But I kept bumping up on the fact that I could not change what happened, and I would have to find a way to accept what happened.

The whole time, I clung to carrying forward my son’s legacy. Because if I didn’t, who would?

2.   Focus on Sleep

Grief after a poor night’s sleep is worse. So, at first, I asked my doctor for a non-addictive anti-nausea medicine that made me sleepy, because hypnotics had proven dangerous to members of my family.  This med was prescribed for two months so at 15 days before it ran out, I cut the pills in half and then quarters and researched other methods of finding sleep.

Singing bowls
Photo by Chiara David on Unsplash

I started with an 8-minute meditation I found online and later extended it to a half hour. Then I found a local class on sound baths with Tibetan Singing Bowls that inspired restful meditation and deep sleep. Between classes I use a singing bowls video I found on YouTube. I made natural sleep strategies a religion because it’s so important to healing.

3.   You Can’t Heal if You Can’t Feel

Your pain has a purpose, and that pain makes up the building blocks to emotional healing.

Push grief away, and it will come back like a boomerang on steroids. Try and numb the pain with food, alcohol, or drugs, and it will keep you pinned to that early, ugly raw place for much longer. I trust that’s not what you want for yourself.

No emotion or condition lasts forever and the intense, soul-crushing stabs of grief last about 60-90 seconds. It feels like an hour, or forever, but the acute, breath-stopping pain is temporary, survivable, and healing. The emotion may re-fire, but it also subsides.

So, cry, bang on the floor, scream, and lean into your waves of grief. Allow yourself to feel it, and when the intensity lifts 60-90 seconds later, distract yourself with a healthy coping strategy. This doesn’t mean you will feel a rush of joy after. But distraction is a way to keep the intense pain from re-firing.

4.   Build a Toolbox of Healthy Coping Skills

While nothing will take the pain away, coping skills help lessen your suffering.

What might work for you? Journaling, an ice pack on your chest, intense exercise, cleaning house, painting, writing music, reading a Bible, talking to a friend, finding a group or therapist – all are examples.

The mornings were the worst for me. I didn’t want to get out of bed or face another day without my child. Life seemed useless, fruitless, senseless. I used a coping skill called opposite action and broke down the steps of getting out of bed into micro steps, so they were more do-able. I would say, “AnneMoss, just sit up, turn around and put your feet on the floor. That’s all you have to do.”

Hand under shower
Photo by Jakayla Toney on Unsplash

From there I would coach myself to go to the bathroom, wash my hands, and brush my teeth. Many times, the morning routine was interrupted because I would drop to the floor, curl up in a ball and cry. Once the wave of grief ran its course, I would lift myself back up and continue getting dressed and find myself outside. It was important that I get some exercise even if it meant crying the first third of the way.

Opposite action got me out of bed, got me to support group when I didn’t want to go (I was always glad I went.) In short, it helped me do hard things that helped me.

5.   Talk to Yourself and Be Kind

Tell yourself you are doing the best you can, that you feel such pain because you were capable of such love. Use your own name when you talk to yourself and address yourself as you would a friend. Would you be mean to a friend? Probably not.

“AnneMoss, you hurt so much right now because you loved so much. You tried so hard to help but it’s hard to fix something you don’t know exists and you can’t control another human.”

6.   Find Support

Look for other people who have survived this loss. Look for suicide loss support groups, a therapist, an empathic friend. I had lunch with others who’d lost a child to suicide or overdose because I needed those who’d gone before me as proof it was possible to survive and thrive again.

7.   Manage the Coulda, Woulda, Shoulda’s

While this could be tucked under coping skills, it’s so pervasive after a suicide loss, it deserves its own section. Others will try to talk you out of it, but it’s part of a suicide loss process.

We’re sure it’s our fault because we couldn’t stop it even though we know we can’t control the actions of another. You might even feel like you didn’t do enough or love enough and that’s why they died.

I’m going to share with you how I handled the coulda woulda shoulda episodes.

Timer set to 3 minutes
Photo by Marcelo Leal on Unsplash

I told myself I could torture myself once a day at first but no more than 5 minutes. If I started torturing myself again in the afternoon, I reminded myself I had already tortured myself that morning and could re-torture myself all over again the next day for 5 minutes but for that day it was done. I tapered down by reducing it to 4 minutes, then 3 then every other day and so on.

Create a taper down strategy that works for you. If you find you are being worn to a nub by these thoughts, do seek professional help because it could be “complicated grief.”

8.   Forgive Yourself

Even though it’s not your fault, you probably still blame yourself. You’ll benefit from offering yourself forgiveness. You don’t have to set a date, just set the intention.

After about a year, I woke up one day and said, “Today is the day,” and I marked the occasion with a blog post called Forgiving Myself. It was the single most difficult entry I have ever written but it allowed me to process all the pain.

In that article, I pulled back the lens and saw the bigger picture. My son grew up in a house of love– it wasn’t something I said or did that caused him to suicide. For over a year, I had been hyper-focused on the 5% of parenting I did imperfectly, ignoring the 95% I did right.

Do I still have nicks of regret? I do. And I have to remember all those videos from the 90s that illustrate my love and the great times we had. I have to remember the birthday parties and sleepovers, times I stayed up all night when he ran a fever and those moments when he’d hug me with those arms scissored behind my back and told me how much he loved me.

I had been hyper-focused on the 5% of parenting I did imperfectly, ignoring the 95% I did right.

9.   Forgive Others

It’s OK to feel and acknowledge anger, bitterness, and blame, but drowning in those emotions long term hurts you.

Bullying or someone’s actions could have been a contributing factor to your loved one’s suicide. But for your loved one to have taken their life, there had to be so many other factors that made them vulnerable to suicide. I’m not saying drop a pending court case if there was criminal intent but as grieving loved ones, we often embrace blame which can delay our healing and poison the relationships we have left. Ask yourself if it serves you.

10.   Help Others Understand How to Help You

Silhouette of two people talking under tree
Photo by Harli Marten on Unsplash

Not all your friends will know how to sit with you in your grief and some will avoid you because they don’t know how to fix it. Their own fear of what to do or say paralyzes them.

So, tell your friend that watching an old movie together with a bowl of popcorn is fine.  Ask them to allow you to cry, talk about your loved one and that you simply need to feel heard. Tell them you need others to remember your loved one. Encourage stories and memories because we want to know our loved one mattered.

11.   Think of One Thing You are Grateful for Every Day

Because of my tragedy I couldn’t see any of the positive things happening in my life. This exercise helped open just a crack of light in my head so I could see the beauty happening around me. It took a few weeks, but it worked.

12.   Remember, Even the Wrong Things People Say after a Suicide Come from a Place of Love

I decided no matter what someone said that I would appreciate they had the guts to say anything at all.

13.   Address Suicidal Thoughts if You Have Them

If you think of suicide, call 988 suicide and crisis lifeline or text 741741 to reach Crisis Text LineIt is not uncommon for grieving people to feel suicidal. If you are thinking of suicide, please tell someone and get support. Call 988, or text 741741. This post also might be helpful to you: Are You Thinking of Killing Yourself?

It’s also OK to live at first because you feel obligated to live. A friend of mine with depression lost her only child to suicide and struggled a lot with suicidality. Her best friend got her to a therapist she still sees many years later. And I’m happy to report that she wants to live these days.

As a self-help step, write down your “reasons to live” on an index card in your own handwriting, fold it in half, put it in your pocket, and bring it out when you are at a place of despair.

14.   Let Your Grief Transform You

The soul that emerges after this tragedy will be a beautiful, wondrous human. You will never again skim the surface of life or take your relationships for granted. Grief makes life matter more. And while you will never be the same or get “over it,” your wounded heart will heal, and you’ll learn to accept grief as part of your life and recognize that it represents the love and the bond you have with the one you lost.

Glass lantern with candle glowing inside
Photo by Cathal Mac An Bheatha on Unsplash

For More Information on Coping with Grief

You can find more tips in the free, downloadable ebook I co-authored with Karla Helbert, LPC, Coping Strategies for Grief and Loss.

© 2024 AnneMoss Rogers. All Rights Reserved. Written for Speaking of Suicide.

AnneMoss Rogers

AnneMoss Rogers is a suicide loss survivor, suicide prevention speaker and trainer, and mental health keynote speaker for educators, workplaces and conferences. She has written two books, her memoir, Diary of a Broken Mind, and co-written Emotionally Naked: A Teacher’s Guide to Preventing Suicide and Recognizing Students at Risk with Dr. Kimberly O’Brien.

58 Comments Leave a Comment

  1. I don’t think so. It’s pretty obvious why we are here. Sins are greater than summation

  2. I have messaged this Web site before when i was feeling down and depressed…. I have read certain articles posted by others, their stories of going through a loved one committing suicide and others that may hurt themselves….I believe it may of helped me. I am 60 years old I have pack of pills that will send me to heaven … i probably will feel no pain ,, i have been thinking on taking them . i took three last night just to see what they may do. My car went Kaplut dont have the money to fix it i have my rent money .i make 193 dollars a week cant afford to fix my car or buy food no way to get to work if i try to borrow money there is no one .one person say i help but if i accept i can not pay back so thats out the door. i am tired My car needs too much work over 600 dollar someone offer some help to fix but it wont totally fix and i cant pay them back My car bad shape they wrote on estimate not safe to drive . i drive it again to work i have no choice. but i dont make enough money to pay rent food car insurance health insurance gas and work to far away to walk have no money to give for gas.

    • I am so sorry Victor. It sounds like you feel very defeated and overwhelmed right now and that no one cares. While I can’t fix what is going on with you I do hear you and I do care. I just wanted you to know.

  3. Anne,
    I also appreciate your post. Our sons were both 20 years old when they succumbed to suicide, our Andrew in 2009. So much of your experience we share. The detective called to investigate the cause of death described his case as “the most considerate suicide” he’d ever encountered, so sorry for our loss, but sharing it was apparent Andrew had loving, caring parents. A bittersweet compliment, to be sure. I have found that the lack of timely integrated healthcare and counseling is what’s missing to be able to prevent suicides in our society. Our son went in for help twice within 3 months of his death but they did not listen or take appropriate action. Given your son had addiction issues, have you given some thought about how to get our culture and society to transform to prevent the next suicide, like my wife and I have? I have grown weary of speaking at conferences only to be patronized afterwards. I’d be interested in your thoughts on a video chat, if you are up to it.

    • Hey. Pam & George- I’m so sorry you, too, lost a son to suicide. It sounds like your son and mine were both very empathic.

      My son was actually taken to the hospital by the manager of his recovery house for a suicide risk assessment but they refused, despite the fact he had insurance because they did not screen “those people” anymore. Meaning they didn’t screen those with OUD (opioid use disorder.)

      That was just two weeks before he ended his life. It was not on my radar at all so I didn’t even know it was a possibility or to ask. Our mental health system is indeed in need of repair.

      I see my presentations and training as opportunities to share what people say, what they do, and then give them the words to use. I do speaking and training at school conferences, I consult with universities and schools. I like to go upstream and present ways to build coping strategies because those are lifetime skills.
      I have also developed a course for parents that has been very popular because they get 9 tips on preventing a child from getting to crisis. None of this was possible without a lot of training, working with those who do research, working with NIMH and other nonprofits but most of all listening to the stories so generously shared with me by those with lived experience–both parents like you and me as well as those who’ve survived and continue to survive thoughts of suicide.

      Finding that place to give back takes a long time, doesn’t it? And a lot of different turns. Stacey can share my email with you and then we can go from there to set up something.

    • George, I agree ..”I have found that the lack of timely integrated healthcare and counseling is what’s missing to be able to prevent suicides in our society” My 22 yr old son died by suicide two days before Christmas 2021. He self medicated with marijuana, THC concentrates caused psychosis. So many young adults are causing more harm while using illicit drugs to self medicate. The mental healthcare system was completely useless in helping my son.

      • I get that. My son also became addicted. And while THC was a gateway drug and not a destination drug for my son, I saw that thc did trigger psychosis in him when he used marijuana. The high concentrations weren’t as available in 2014 so he didn’t use those that I know of. I am so sorry you lost your son Sonia.

      • I’m so sorry Sonia. I think I have met you and heard your story. Through Laura Stack I think. I want you to know that I include marijuana education in my presentation. It’s not “harmless.”

      • Sonia,
        As we always say, so sorry for your loss. Thanks for responding. I think we all feel there has to be a prevention reason to continue on in this exclusive ‘club’ we have found ourselves in. I apologize for the poor sick-care system we have developed in the U.S.A.. As a physician who gets it, I couldn’t help my son even though I sent him in for care. After he died, the clinic chief uncovered 14 ways they could have intervened and saved his life. She spoke up, and was summarily dismissed. Accountability and transparency are missing in my professed profession, sad to admit. I am embarrassed for my colleagues who continue to say “You know you can’t stop all suicides if they really want to do it.” My response is, “I agree, we won’t, if we keep doing the same thing, expecting a different outcome, saying we can’t and keeping our eyes and ears closed to the loved ones afterwards who are telling us how we missed the opportunity to do the right thing when their loved one was still alive. Universal Healthcare with Primary Care would go a long way to making a dent in this epidemic, along with education about appropriate uses and dangers of marijuana.

  4. You are a great woman ! A perfect example of strength, resilience and real grace for all the women not only for mothers. From the
    bottom of my heart I thank you for the life lesson you gave us and
    I wish you all the best . Stay always strong and take care of yourself !

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