I am a Loser… It’s OK.

On March 11, 2018 Lena told me that I was a loser.  We were talking about my brother, Andy’s, children and I mentioned that Andy wasn’t taking my advice.  Lena turned around and looked at me and said, “Why would he listen to you.  What have you done…”  The end of the sentence kind of trailed off, but the message was clear.  What had I done with my life?  I, after all, was a loser.  It was one of the most hurtful things anyone has ever said to me.  I didn’t say anything at the time but it devastated me inside.  It was then that I knew our marriage was over as far as Lena was concerned.  She had no respect for me at all.  I assume she had some respect for me when we got marriage, but at some point all that was left was anger and a total lack of love and respect for me.

I have suffered with mental illness from the earliest years of my childhood.  I was openly suicidal by the time I was ten years old.  As a child and young adult I never had dreams of what I wanted for the future or what I wanted to be when I grew up… because I had no intention of growing older.  As a high school student I could not imagine living into my twenties.  I didn’t care about grades or doing well on standardized tests because I didn’t think I would live long enough to go to or finish college.  Throughout college I never thought that I would live long enough to graduate; so I made NO plans for an adult life post college.  When I did graduate I didn’t have dreams or hopes to live up to or fulfill.  I got married shortly after graduating and started my own business, but even engaging in these seemingly “rooting” tasks, I did not think of the future and was actively suicidal.  In my mid to late twenties, after my two serious suicide attempts, the doctors told my family that I would most likely never live to see thirty years old.  So… as a kid I didn’t care much about grades and as a young adult I didn’t care much at all about money because I did not think I would live long enough for those things to matter.  If you combine that lack of caring about grades and money with the fact that I have suffered with various mental illnesses such as depression, suicidality (which is a separate illness and not just a symptom of depression), ADD, and some anti-social traits… I guess it would be fair to say that by societal standards, I have always been a loser and that I remain one to this day.

The first half of my life was spent as a student where despite being “obviously bright” I never did particularly well.  I graduated from both high school and college with a 2.9 GPA.  I got a 1070 on my SATs.  Considering that I come from a very academically oriented family and that I have an IQ that has tested anywhere from the mid 120s to mid 140s, my scholastic life was a continual question of when would I fulfill my potential?  As an adult I have never been financially independent.  I have worked some, here and there, but never earned enough to support myself.  I have lived in homes owned by my parents or my wives.  If it were not for my parents and wives there were many times that I would have ended up homeless and hungry… and if that had happened, I would have simply killed myself… without deliberation.

Despite all of the changes during the last seventy years surrounding acceptable roles for women in our culture, societal norms for men have changed very little.  Men are judged by their ability to provide financially for their family.  Our society measures a man’s worth by his net worth.  If given a choice, the parents of most young women would rather their daughters marry a doctor or lawyer over an artist.  The doctor or lawyer is statistically much more likely to be able to support a young family than is an artist, many of whom spend a great deal of their lives living in poverty.  Women can choose a career or choose to stay at home with children and either choice is acceptable to society.  Men have choices in their lives but should be prepared to be judged more harshly than women based on career choices.

Manya-Milaslava (think of a large bitter mean old Russian woman who demands her family glorify her), my mother-in-law, never supported Lena and me getting married.  Her objections were so loud that Lena had to give her mother an ultimatum the week before the wedding: come and be quietly supportive or don’t come at all.  Throughout the seven years of our marriage Manya was always whispering in Lena’s ear that I was a loser and that she could do better and deserved better.  Manya berated me as a loser to my face more than once.  It should be noted that Manya never liked or got along with anyone Lena was with for very long.  Lena’s mother was a large factor in her first marriage falling apart and in our marriage ending.  I once joked with Lena that my only solace was knowing that her mother was so mentally ill herself that she wouldn’t be able to help herself but to be a bitch to the next guy.

My friends and family will tell me that I am not a loser… and I love them for their support.  They will point out my many talents and tell me that I have a big heart.  All of that is true but may, in fact, prove the loser point.  Despite my many talents and my tremendous potential, I have never been a fully autonomous individual.  I am not saying here that I am a loser definitively… just by societal standards.  And, that’s OK.

19 Years as a “Dead Man Walking”… and Another Chance in Life

On April 24th 1999 I was facing an impossible decision.  My wife at the time, Ava, was demanding that I sign our divorce papers by that day,  She said that if I did we could remain friends {which she knew was very important to me}, but that if I didn’t she would get the divorce without my signing and she would never speak to me again.  I had had the papers in my possession for several weeks and just could not bring myself to sign them.

That morning I went to church seeking guidance from God.  I took the divorce papers, a photograph from our wedding, and a bag with 1,000 pills in it that I had been hoarding for my eventual suicide.  I sat in the church for hours praying for God to give me some sign that I was strong enough to get through this divorce.  I loved Ava more than life and could not imagine living not being married to her.  After hours of sitting there I just started to take the pills.  Apparently I took 900+ pills sitting there in the church pew.  I don’t remember the rest of the day as I blacked out.  I ended up in a local hospital in a coma for three days.  When I walked out of the hospital I had no physical ramifications from the overdose which was a miracle.  Ava was true to her word, she has not communicated with me since that morning.

Surviving the overdose was the second miracle I had experienced in six months.  In November of 1998 I shot myself in the chest at point blank range with a 9mm handgun.  The bullet went through my chest and exited my back.  The skin over my chest plate has a scar, but there is no hole in the chest plate.  Between the entrance and exit wounds are my heart and lungs, but neither were hit by the bullet.  There was zero medical explanation for how I survived the shooting the way I had.  The doctors called it a miracle!  While I was in the hospital everyone came to visit and see “the miracle.”  To this day there is no scientific explanation for how I survived either the shooting or the overdose.

After the second suicide attempt I ultimately ended up being a patient at the Austen Riggs Center in Stockbridge, MA.  At my entrance interview Dr. S. said that statistically I was a, “dead man walking.”  There was no explanation for how I had survived and according to all of the psychology and psychiatry statistics I would not live.

I had developed suicidal ideation before reaching puberty and spoke of it often as a child and teen.  My serious attempts did not happen until my divorce in my late 20′s.  Since then I had one long term relationship and then got married almost seven years ago to my second wife, Lena.  Last month Lena asked me for a divorce… 19 years since my first divorce.  During that nineteen years I have done many things and thought I had made all kinds of progress.  I have had some depressive episodes.  There have been a few times when I drank too much or drank too much and took some pills.  I even ended up in the ER twice because of these types of episodes.  But I have not had a serious suicide attempt since 1999.  As of a year ago, I would have said that the possibility of a real suicide attempt was behind me.

When Lena told me that our marriage was over and she wanted out… to my shock and dismay… all of those old feelings came flooding back.  It was as if I was back 20 years ago hearing those same words and feeling the same feelings.  All of the work I had done and the progress I had made seemed to just go out the window and meant nothing.  Now… I did not try to kill myself.  I don’ t want to kill myself.  I have no plan to kill myself,  But I do suffer from terrible anxiety surrounding this separation and that anxiety sometimes lends itself to suicidal ideation.

I love Lena and her children with all of my heart.  I know that I was not the best husband and that there were many things that I could have done better.  There are times when I feel like I cannot imagine living away from her… but I know that I can.  This blog is going to be about my journey through this divorce.  I will journal about my feelings and what I am going through (probably ad nauseum to some people).  I will compare how I am dealing with things now versus 20 years ago.  I will talk about the psychology of suicide.  I will discuss things like therapy and medications.  What worked for me and what didn’t.  I have some very strong opinions, some of which go against current medical models and societal norms.  I will write about love, marriage and divorce, step parenting and not being a biological parent.

I don’t know how this journey will end.  I have lived now for 19 years as a dead man walking.  I hope this current situation doesn’t end me and I live for another 20 years.  I always saw my marriage to Lena as a 2nd chance.  Well, here is to hoping for a another chance at life.  I hope to offer some insight for people suffering with some of the same issues, or family members of people who have suicided.  Please feel free to comment or write me and let me know what you think.