Andrew Malekoff
Words matter. Today, this
is no more evident than in the incendiary rhetoric – spoken and tweeted - that
has contributed to American citizens being pitted against one another.
There is a growing
sentiment that the mass shooting in a Pittsburgh synagogue that took the lives
of 11 congregants was fueled by hate speech that ignited the shooter’s growing
rage.
Although that subject is
being abundantly covered in the media, it is the words associated with another
kind of shocking death that I wish to draw attention to here.
When someone takes their
life they are most frequently reported to have “committed suicide.” Commit is a
word that connotes a criminal act. Yet, suicide is not a crime.
Desiree Woodland, a mom
who lost her son to suicide shared her experience in a NAMI (National Alliance
on Mental Illness) publication. “My son did not commit a crime. He believed the
only way to end the unbearable pain was to end his life. He died because he
didn’t have the words to express the deep psychological/biological turmoil he
was experiencing.”
If not a crime, is suicide
an immoral, depraved or sinful act? It isn’t if it is the consequence of mental
illness, unbearable stress, or trauma.
Nonetheless, family
members who are survivors of suicide loss report the experience of others
speaking in hushed tones around them. Some people refer to suicide as a selfish
act, the result of poor parenting, a deficit in the family or all of the above.
At the same time that
there is a growing demand to tone down divisive and hateful rhetoric in order
to prevent interpersonal violence, there needs to be discussion about mental
illness and suicide.
According to Denver
psychotherapist Dr. Stacy Freedenthall, “If changing our language can help
suicidal people to feel safer asking for help, then changing language can save
lives.”
In academic journals there
appears to be an inclination to use the term “completed suicide.” However, committed
and completed are terms that advance the stigma and shame related to
suicide and should be avoided.
Increasingly there is
preference to the expression “died by suicide” which avoids the judgmental
undertone of “committed suicide.”
Perhaps a contributor to The
Mighty, a digital health community created to empower and connect people
facing health challenges and disabilities, said it best: “By shifting our
language around suicide, we have the power to reduce some of the massive shame
carried by survivors of suicide. If you feel scared or helpless about what to
say to someone who’s lost someone to suicide, take comfort in knowing that, by
changing your language about suicide, you’re offering an act of kindness.”
To be published in Blank
Slate Media’s – TheIslandNow.com
Andrew Malekoff is the
Executive Director of North Shore Child & Family Guidance Center, which
provides comprehensive mental health services for children from birth through
24 and their families. To find out more, visit www.northshorechildguidance.org.
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