I’ve been tracking the shape of grief since the first nightmare months after my son Noah’s suicide in 2013. The intensity of traumatic grief once filled every moment. The core of my identity, relationships, and activities was being a suicide loss survivor. Over 11 years, grief has gradually receded from the forefront. It takes up less space in my heart and mind and daily life. This has opened up space for new emotions, experiences, and purpose while still mourning my child.
How did this shift happen? I’m honored to visit this excellent blog to reflect on my grief process and offer hope to other bereaved families.

Noah was one of those full-of-life guys with many friends, interests, and talents who hid his troubles. He struggled with depression and anxiety after the suicide of a friend and found little help in treatment. While home from college on medical leave, two days after running the L.A. Marathon, he took his life. He was 21.
In the first few years after Noah’s suicide, I saw everything through the agonizing lens of grief. Every line from a song, every intention for a meditation reminded me of the shock and pain. The world was a hotbed of triggers, from gruesome Halloween decorations to intact families at a restaurant. I found signs of Noah everywhere, in rainbows, hummingbirds, oceans.
I was immersed in—sometimes swamped by—what psychologists call a “loss orientation,” focused on mourning. Moving toward a “restoration orientation” that allowed me to re-engage in life wasn’t quick, linear, or finite. It took the balm of time, but also lots of work and support.
When you lose someone to suicide, you call on everything you have to survive. I was lucky to have family, friends, community, and spiritual practices that grounded me. I had access to traditional therapy, mind-body approaches like EMDR, and support groups for suicide loss survivors. My oldest friend was a social worker who accompanied every step of my journey with love and wisdom. All these were lifelines that allowed me to move through grief at my own pace, back and forth between loss and restoration orientations, without pressure to “heal” quickly.

It also helped that I was well-acquainted with grief from losing my parents in my 20s and from researching laments and mourning customs in a Greek village when I was a grad student. So I wasn’t afraid of death, and I was inclined to express grief openly.
I was also inclined to write my way through tough emotions. After scrawling incoherent cries in my journal, I began blogging out of a fierce need to order my thoughts, tell my story, and recover my agency. The suicide made me feel small, silenced, betrayed. It shattered my dreams for my child and everything I believed about life and relationships. A key to healing after suicide is rebuilding those “assumptive worlds” of trust and belief, says Dr. Jack Jordan. I started doing that work on the blog, in a grief memoir, and in outreach to fellow survivors.
Meanwhile, I lamented Noah through poetry, finding comfort in speaking directly to him through elegies. As in this excerpt from “Tending the Shrine, Two Years On,” in my new poetry book:
I dust your album and open
to a boy with a handful
of grasshopper, a grinning teen
atop a sailboat mast, then
a student home for winter break,
gaunt and haunted as a refugee.
When did the end begin?
Like a scrim it shades
every picture,
each moment captured
nearly eclipsed.
The more I bore witness on the page, the more I noticed shifts in my grieving. Like when I made it through a day without crying or woke up breathing deeply. Or when I could list the good things I did to counter my long rap sheet of should-have/could-haves. Gradually, I could face holidays like Mother’s Day or Passover with less dread. Slowly, gratitude, joy, and faith crept back in.
Experts say that exploring one’s grief and ruminating on traumatic loss can open the way to “post-traumatic growth” with new relationships, strength, and purpose. Though I scoffed at this idea in the early years, eventually it made sense. I realized I’d become more attuned to and compassionate toward others’ suffering. I was giving full attention to my living son, Ben, and deepening our connection. I’d sought out suicide prevention training and added that messaging to public speaking about Noah and my book. I dreamed of publishing a collection of grief poetry to honor Noah.
By ten years after the suicide, I was more focused on intentional remembering than on intentional mourning. My husband and I made a round of visits to Noah’s friends to share memories. I wrote love notes to everyone who’d been part of the circle of care after the suicide. I decided to make marking Noah’s birthday a bigger deal than his death anniversary.

Suicide loss has shaped me in many ways, but it no longer defines me. Grief waves still come, though less often and less intensely; I let them wash over me and feel closer to Noah. I still write elegies to him, like “Ripped” (below). But lately, my poems have been venturing beyond the key of grief into new tonalities.
I’m letting myself be happy when I feel happy, despite being the mother of a suicide. The pain of losing Noah, once so piercing, has become an ache that flares and fades. I carry him with me always.
Ripped
Between the unmanned
lifeguard stations
surfers drift and bob like seals
in the swell. Big red lifeboats
lie beached on their sides.
I used to drive you here early
Sundays, after the donut shop,
before the taco place. You
suiting up behind the van
(that rip in the shoulder we never fixed),
eyeing older surfers with cool
nods, trotting fleet-footed
across the sand; me straining
to spot your lean torso in the lineup.
Once the fog was so thick I lost
sight of you before you reached
the break—weak with fear
thank God
you got out quick.
I never saw you catch a wave. Maybe
I missed it. Maybe it was enough
to paddle out and float inside
that briny vast embrace, lulled
by the brightening horizon.
Driving solo five years later,
you came back to claim
that peace, any peace,
but found it
gone.
You got out
quick.
Now I write your name on every beach,
scan the waves for your wake.
To my fellow survivors: Every path through traumatic grief is unique. I hope you can be with your grief, seek support, practice self-care, and open to growth. You might revisit these questions from John Schneider to notice shifts over time: “What is lost? What is left? What is possible?” Wishing you hope and healing.

© 2024 Susan Auerbach. Essay written for Speaking of Suicide.


Dear Susan,
I lost my son, Paul, one year after you lost Noah. With a shattered soul, I discovered your blog. Reflecting back, I realize that your beautiful writing somehow helped me to process the immense pain I was feeling for years. Although my heart can still constrict with this feeling of loss, it can also expand warmly when I am able to feel Paul in all the beauty that surrounds me. Thank you for continuing to share your wisdom.
Hi Jean,
My apologies for the very long delay in responding. I’m so sorry for the loss of your son, Paul. Even after 11 years, I’m sure the pain is still there. How fortunate that you are also able to feel love and beauty! Very glad if my words have been helpful on your journey. Take good care,
Susan
I lost both parents to suicide. My mom when I was 13 and my dad in 2014. I’ve struggled my entire life with fears of rejection, depression, anger, trying to control things and people. I have attended Griefshare several times and now facilitate at my church. I have gone to therapy several times. I have a team every year for the suicide prevention walk Out of the Darkness and attend other suicide related events. The death of my mother shaped my life but I continue to grow and change in positive ways and have more compassion for others who are struggling. Thank you for sharing your story.
Dear Lisa,
I’m so very sorry for these deep losses, especially losing your mom at such a tender age. It sounds like you’ve been doing a lot of important work to strengthen and heal yourself. May it continue! Thank you for sharing.
In shared sorrow,
Susan
Eight years in June, Fathers Day, my son took his life. With a wife and two young children whom he loved to the core of his being and still as his note said “I can’t do this anymore”. Try to look happy, hold it together, keep pretending, when inside he was not even close to being happy.
I now know what “trauma” is. His death is my past trauma that has changed my outlook on life. I’ve come a long way but I am still a trauma victim. Always will be. I think I’ve healed about as much as I’m ever going to. I always fear the worst. I secretly worry about my daughter and my grandchildren. Will they experience trauma in their lives? I lay awake at night worrying about them. I fear that’s what trauma can do. I’ll never be naive again. Now I know. I know horrible things happen, people suffer, no one is immune. It leaves an indelible mark on the mind, heart and psyche. I miss him and I’ll never have him back. No counseling, no writing, nothing will bring him back. And so it is.
Hi Janet,
I’m so sorry for the loss of your son. I know what you mean about the finality of it all, how nothing will bring them back, and how devastating that fact is. I hope you are getting the support you need so that, while trauma will always be a part of you, its weight can lighten a bit over time.
All the best,
Susan Auerbach
A powerful statement, that to me shows the complexity of depression and suicide. For me, depression is primarily due to loneliness, an inability to connect with anyone.
The case here seems very different. I think I have accepted my own situation, but reading this makes me consider how different life can could have been.
Dear Susan, what you have written will be tremendously helpful for many. I have left comments before on this website but you have rung an alarm bell in my mind, about the notion of achieving “closure”. I have never used that word, partly because it sounds like a sudden and permanent end to emotional pain. I tend to think more in terms of a ‘transition’ from being overwhelmed with grief, to discovering how to live with it, without it preventing enjoyment of life. I am unable to remember, if there is a single word which defines that. It allows for what you describe as “grief waves” to come and go and for various “shifts” to take place, such as to “intentional remembering”.
I heard someone say, that their mind clears whenever they are in the countryside on warm days, with lots of natural sights, sounds and smells around them. That changes, when they enter a building, have closed the door and are looking at static furniture and ‘enclosed’ by ceilings and walls.
You have also reminded me, that at some point in the recent past, I am sure I heard mention of research, which concluded that it is or may be better to suppress experiences of bereavements and possibly other crises. If there is such research, I suspect that it could not possibly be about all crises. We experience bereavements in our own unique ways and that means, our ways of coping with the consequences, will be many and varied.