He Told Me He Wanted to Die

The police officer took my statement and went over a few things. He was gentle with the questioning and made sure I had time to process. The questions were simple and I don’t remember most of it now. I remember showing him my phone, the simple displayed texts belied the gravity of their message. My husband had sent a suicide note via text while I slept.

“Had he ever mentioned wanting to take his life before?” the officer asked.

I barely paused to consider the question before shaking my head. No.

Later that evening, as my mind sifted through jumbled thoughts and emotions, I realized I had lied. Not intentionally, of course. But he had mentioned suicide. Years ago. And only once.

*

I walked into our bedroom and found my husband sitting on the edge of the bed. His brow was furrowed like he was deep in thought.

I paused a moment and drank in the scene.

“You okay?” I asked.

He looked up at me, concentration broken. He smiled but it didn’t reach his eyes.

“I was just thinking,” he said, “that sometimes I feel like killing myself.”

The statement was so nonchalant I almost didn’t understand it.

I must have reacted because he shook his head and stood up. He closed the space between us and kissed me. “Don’t worry,” he said. “I wouldn’t actually kill myself. I have you and our son. I wouldn’t leave you.”

I watched him leave the room and then life continued. He’d never mention suicide again. I’d never ask if he ever revisited the idea of killing himself. I’d actually never think of him as suicidal.

*

I obsessed over that moment when it was too late to intervene or do anything.

What other signs had I missed? What other ways had I failed him?

Why are we so afraid to ask if someone is suicidal?

If I’ve learned anything, it’s to ask. The question is taboo but so important.

“Have you ever thought of killing yourself?”

You’re Not Here

What a strange thought.

You’re not here anymore.

Sometimes it feels like you’ve just gone away for a bit. Maybe you’re on a vacation or visiting family. Maybe you’re deployed again and I communications are briefly down.

But you’re not.

Sometimes it hits me full force: you’re dead. You died. I buried you. You’re gone.

It hits me when I walk into the living room. I expect to see you but there’s an emptiness in that room instead.

I think of planning dinner and remember what you like, but then realize it doesn’t matter because you won’t be here to join me.

I look forward to embracing you, touching you…but that’s something that has long passed.

No more conversations with you.

No more planning a future with you.

No more.

It’s all gone.

Because you’re not here.

Insomnia

“I knew this feeling, the 2 a.m. loneliness…”

― Sarah Dessen, This Lullaby

young beautiful hispanic woman at home bedroom lying in bed late at night trying to sleep suffering insomnia sleeping disorder or scared on nightmares looking sad worried and stressed

I can’t sleep. My mind races, a tangled mess.

It keeps trying to take me back to the morning I found him. There are flashes of events: walking down the sidewalk, the unnatural warmth of a February morning, flashing lights…a bloodied shirt.

When I close my eyes, I feel anxious. When I open them, I feel weary.

I wish the black, inkiness of the night would consume me. I want to crawl into a void, a bottomless pit.

Is this what purgatory is like?

I don’t wish for death, but I don’t want life.

I don’t know what I should be feeling: fury, sadness, guilt, anger, despair. Maybe I feel all this at once and that’s why my body can’t settle down. I need to untangle myself from the events that just occurred.

I’m 24-years-old. I’m planning the funeral of my 27-year-old husband. His demons haunted him, alcohol poisoned him, our marriage trouble him. Whose doing is this? His for pointing that gun to his head? Mine for all the arguments that a dual-military lifestyle brought to us? His family for the abuse they delivered throughout his whole life? The military for worsening the depression that plagued him? Society’s for stigmatizing mental health screenings and illnesses? Is it all of us at blame?

Does it even matter at this point because he’s never coming back, my children will never really know him, and everything that we knew has ended.

That bullet pierced the fabric of before and left a mess of what’s now after and I’m left lying on a bed facing the loneliness of the night.