tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9263167.post4268313133886935157..comments2024-03-27T13:25:58.065-04:00Comments on Stayin' Alive: The deadly giftCervanteshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11302076828795198187noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9263167.post-86876919590358365822011-12-09T08:36:22.124-05:002011-12-09T08:36:22.124-05:00This crisis is just theory in real life people sti...This crisis is just theory in real life people still likes to hear other people.Viagra Canadahttp://www.viagracanada.orgnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9263167.post-10491831096832956102011-11-11T06:49:09.920-05:002011-11-11T06:49:09.920-05:00Off course, i am very glad to have your post here....Off course, i am very glad to have your post here. Which is very awesome information and i want to say that its worth, thanks for sharing......mobile application developerhttp://www.mobiapps.com.au/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9263167.post-69904816000593956812011-10-24T23:11:51.593-04:002011-10-24T23:11:51.593-04:00i've also heard that suicide survivors -- thos...i've also heard that suicide survivors -- those who wanted to die but that was somehow prevented -- usually don't feel the same way later. the depths of despair seem endless, but they are not; and often whatever fed that despair is treatable or fixable to a tolerable degree.<br /><br />those left behind -- oh, man. it is a real and painful burden. all those questions about why. all that guilt. and the anger, the betrayal, even as they are trying to remember why they loved this person. i know there are recommendations against guilting a person who is suicidally depressed, but think the flip side is mentioning that they are loved and that they are important to others. <br /><br />i'm really glad that nurse and i flushed all the morphine and god knows what else the afternoon my friend's son died. flushing is not the environmentally-sound method of disposal, but it was an emergency. it probably wasn't totally a lie about this being "protocol" with hospice; i'm pretty sure the nurses are trained with suicide prevention, somewhere in the training about helping with grief.kathy a.https://www.blogger.com/profile/14479337952651746193noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9263167.post-32934606528799778132011-10-24T22:43:27.357-04:002011-10-24T22:43:27.357-04:00thank you for writing about this, and for the link...thank you for writing about this, and for the link to a suicide prevention resource.<br /><br />i've dealt quite a few times with people who were suicidal, and at least one turned out to do it. one whom i knew to be depressed died some years after we lost contact, and i'm pretty sure that was a suicide. it's really difficult. taking it seriously and trying to get them to help is good advice. <br /><br />i'm told that having a plan and having access to means are real danger signs. when my friend's son died at age 12, she was definitely ready to follow him; i enlisted the hospice nurse and got the heavy meds out of the house immediately. (and bless that nurse; she understood exactly my concern, and told the family it was normal protocol.)<br /><br />one of my son's friends died recently, an overdose and possible suicide a few months after his beloved girlfriend died in a bike accident. this young man's friends were all worried -- he spoke of suicide after his GF died, was in bad shape -- and then he seemed to be doing better. his friends carry this sack of grief and guilt, wondering what they could have done; i can't imagine what his parents feel.kathy a.https://www.blogger.com/profile/14479337952651746193noreply@blogger.com