Michel Martin, the host of NPR's Tell Me More, shares the story of losing her only brother to suicide three years ago. The piece was prompted by Martin's reporting on the increased suicide rates in the United States among middle-aged men, about which she says:
Is any of this really news to anybody? Is it really that hard to figure out? My question is the same question I find myself asking a lot these days, which is, "How many more?" How many more funerals do we need to have, before we look the problem in the face, and fix it?Laurie Loisel, managing editor of the Daily Hampshire Gazette, writes about her 83-year-old father's death in "My Family's Decision to Tell the Truth about Suicide":
My father's death felt unnatural, unacceptable, violent and, in my heart, avoidable ... It's not a choice I agree with, or even understand, really. I don't oppose this choice under all situations -- I voted in favor of the physician-assisted suicide referendum that failed in our state last November. But in my view, my father still had vital years ahead of him.