This is Wiltshire | CommuniGate | Surviving After Child Suicide Feedback
This is Wiltshire -  CommuniGate
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Content * * *
Welcome

Handling Schoolyard Bullying

Are You Feeling Suicidal? Please Read This First

Building Self-Esteem in The Child Who Feels Different

About Jan Andersen

A Poem For Kristian

How to Communicate With Your Teenager

Chasing Death - Losing a Child to Suicide

Plain Talk About Depression

Is taking a Drug for Depression the Secret to your Recovery?

Kristian's Grave

Contact Information for Surviving After Child Suicide

Links for Surviving After Child Suicide

Message Board

Guestbook

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Chasing Death - Losing a Child to Suicide


 
O
n 31 October 2002, Jan Andersen's 20-year-old son Kristian found a permanent solution to his unhappiness. He left two suicide notes alongside his favourite jacket, before injecting himself with a lethal dose of Heroin. He spent his final night alone, propped against the wall in the stairwell of an ice-cold, dark and inhospitable concrete landing. He died on 1 November 2002 at 12.20pm.
In Jan's frenetic search for understanding and support, she had difficulty finding any resources that truly connected to her raw grief. The very nature of suicide, the stigma, the helplessness and the unanswered questions that accompany the self-murder of a child can isolate grieving families and send them into the wilderness of relentless, silent torture.
Whilst many books on bereavement talked about the range of emotions that one can expect to feel, such as guilt, anger and disbelief, few of them explain how these feelings can truly manifest themselves through uncharacteristic and frightening thoughts and actions. They may talk about stages of grief and recovery, but anyone who has lost a child to suicide will agree that it is a brutal ordeal from which you will never fully recover.
Chasing Death attempts to put honest, but heartrending words to the often incommunicable pain that suicide survivors endure, not only through the telling of Kristian's story, but through the stories of other parents mourning the loss of children who have killed themselves. It will also be an enlightening resource for anyone who knows of someone who has experienced the loss of a child to suicide, by helping them to respond more appropriately - and less insensitively - to the suicide survivor's grief.
Your heart will break as you read this book, but it will provide some sort of solace to other child suicide survivors in knowing that their thoughts and feelings are normal and that they are not alone. This book clearly demonstrates how debilitating the grief that follows suicide can be and how it can still cripple a survivor, ten, twenty, thirty and even forty years or more after the event.

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Welcome |Handling Schoolyard Bullying |Are You Feeling Suicidal? Please Read This First |Building Self-Esteem in The Child Who Feels Different |About Jan Andersen |A Poem For Kristian |How to Communicate With Your Teenager |Chasing Death - Losing a Child to Suicide |Plain Talk About Depression |Is taking a Drug for Depression the Secret to your Recovery? |Kristian's Grave |Contact Information for Surviving After Child Suicide |Links for Surviving After Child Suicide |Message Board |Guestbook