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Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Relationships

Zoe Ball programme, so sad.*trigger warning*

44 replies

justbinthefeckinbyebyebox · 21/03/2018 22:09

My dh was going to commit suicide twice. Once before I got pregnant, the other just after.
He decided after 10 years of attempting to have a baby, he was too old, couldn't cope.
First time he said he backed out of it, just couldn't do it.
The second time he told me that he was going to do it. We have a fantastic doctor, and he organised a mental health team within 2 days!
He pulled around with talking therapy. We now have a wonderful dc, whom we both think the world of.

My problem is, how do you ever forgive them? Watching Zoe has brought it all back big time. I just about coped myself at the time, had to really.
Everything was a haze, I couldn't enjoy my pregnancy or baby's first few months because of the worry, I can never get them back.

I know that he is far from any more attempts now, but I don't think that I can get over it. (I appreciate the fact that he is still here)

Anyone else had similar?

OP posts:
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Whywonttheyletmeusemyusername · 22/03/2018 21:05

Thanks perfectlydone and just....a little touch like that from strangers on the internet means so much. Sorry I derailed a bit just

mumontherocks Flowers and hugs for you

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Mumontherocks1 · 24/03/2018 00:04

Put don't be ashamed you were not well at the time. It's crucial that your experience is heard. People skirt around the topic of suicide. It's spoken about in hushed terms. Very few people know my DD is suicidal. I don't tell anyone bar family & my partner.

I had a meeting with DD psychiatrist today to discuss my fears. DD came too. It was really helpful. Just talking about it openly with DD present helped bring a lot of things out in the open.

I feel less anxious and I have had a good day. DD was allowed out with me for a few hours and we actually had a good laugh at times. I watched a film and enjoyed it.

One day at a time. Love to everyone on this thread.

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pog100 · 24/03/2018 00:30

I just wanted to say that this thread is amazing. Mumsnet at its absolute best.

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Mumontherocks1 · 24/03/2018 10:33

Exactly Pog. Being able to be frank on this thread made me feel less alone and spurred me on to arrange a meeting at the hospital.

It's not over for me yet but I feel supported knowing that it's not just me.

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PutUpWithRain · 24/03/2018 22:39

@Mumontherocks1 keep talking to us - it's lovely to hear that you had a good day and some happy time with your DD. Little moments like that are what will keep you going when it feels hopeless and overwhelming. And when it is all too much, you can come and vent here to us - it's such a huge strain to be placed under, so you do need some support, or at the very least, just be able to be honest, instead of keeping it all inside.

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Wolfiefan · 24/03/2018 22:44

My TV is off! What programme? Such a harrowing subject and one people too often shy away from talking about.

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GrimDamnFanjo · 25/03/2018 00:53

My best friend committed suicide. I spent around 5 years reliving the experience every day. It was exhausting. Eventually I had hypnotherapy for what I thought was an unrelated issue and it all came up. It was like switching a light off, although I occasionally think about him and miss him, all the noise just went away.
All loss is painful but suicide is just so hard to bear.

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SlowlyLosingThePlot · 25/03/2018 09:00

My DH attempted suicide, and by some miracle it didn't succeed. He had planned it very well so it not succeeding is very unusual.

But the trauma both of what he was going through and the attempt has now caused his brain to shut down. He is physically and mentally a shell of the person he was before.

I spend my time ferrying him around to medical and legal appointments, desperately trying to earn a living in impossible circumstances after being a SAHM and trying my best to protect my 2 DC from the effects of his current state.

I've been offered some help, but perversely because the help is related to helping me cope with being HIS carer, which has been caused by HIS attempt I feel rage at the offer, and don't want to go near them.

I know it's pretty bloody stupid, but I feel as though my sole identity is now as his carer and everything is being given to me solely to help me cope with HIM. And I don't want to. I don't want to have to cope with him.

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junebirthdaygirl · 25/03/2018 09:15

Slowly l get that. My dh has bipolar diagnosed in his 40s and for a few years life was crazy as he was very unstable. Nurses in the hospital would give me cards with support groups on for me to access support. It made me so angry. I wanted to shout f.....o.... l have enough problems without going into a room hearing more about depression. I am not the one with the problem.But eventually l did go and l did find it helpful and l suppose l realised l could offer support to others too.
But op l find a small thing can trigger the pain and anger but l have learned now to let myself feel that ..not fight it off..but go with it until it passes as l know it will. I do write in a journal too which helps to get it out. My dh is stable now but l have learnt that the best thing for me is really taking care of myself.
I am sorry to hear everyones story as that trauma is life changing.

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Mumontherocks1 · 25/03/2018 21:13

It's very very tough going. June your post made me laugh, I hope you don't mind me saying so. I desperately need to find a way to deal with my DD's illness.

II'm going to ring a suicide helpline for advice on how to communicate with her. If I don't I am going to lose it myself and end up in the bed beside her.

The hardest thing for me is when my DD is so horrible to me or about the staff who are really trying to help her. It makes me resent her which doesn't help things. You would need to be a saint to hold your tongue.

I wonder if mental health is as bad as cancer or any other very serious illness or is it worse? Who knows.

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tigercub50 · 25/03/2018 21:25

No personal experience but from the outside looking in, wouldn’t the anger be with the illness that can be the cause of suicide or suicide attempts rather than with the person suffering? Because if they are ill, there is no room to think about the effect on others or the illness takes over so that “ normal” thoughts no longer exist. Until we are in that person’s shoes, surely we can’t be angry with them?

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Mumontherocks1 · 25/03/2018 21:54

My DD has bipolar disorder and one of the symptoms of that illness is aggression. It's really upsetting and frightening when you are faced with an angry aggressive irrational person.

You are spot on when you say the anger should be with the illness. It's just sometimes very hard to stand back and separate the two. I need to work much much harder to understand it is the illness and not the person.

It is genuinely hard to cope as a carer and sometimes exhaustion, fear and worry can take over.

My DD also has a mood disorder and this can make things very difficult. Her reactions can be extreme. All in all it is a very complex illness.

You are right though and the anger should be directed at the illness but carers are only human and don't always know the best thing to do.

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SlowlyLosingThePlot · 25/03/2018 23:11

Yes, it is the illness that is the problem, but unlike other illnesses the person has a lot they can do which affects the severity if they illness. And there are shades. There are points in the illness at which they have the ability to realise where they are heading, particularly if they've been there before. And the treatments of therapy have limited assistance if they are unwilling to engage.

It gets very, very hard to separate them.

And, thinking about it. There were probably bits of my DH's personality that I was drawn to which were actually parts of the illness, but at such an early stage that they seemed to be interesting quirks rather than mental health problems. Not sure how I feel about them now. Sad

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justbinthefeckinbyebyebox · 26/03/2018 20:38

Why you haven't derailed the thread at all! There are so many sides of this to share.
It's good to here that this thread has helped at least one person, besides me.
I have tried so many times, but always felt that I couldn't word it properly.
Sorry to all affected Flowers

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Whywonttheyletmeusemyusername · 28/03/2018 18:49

Flowers to all of us, and unmumsnetty hugs x

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Branleuse · 28/03/2018 18:57

Its really hard. My first boyfriend made several suicide attempts, and I would always rush and help him and be there and support him, and then one time I came home from town and he had tried to slit his own throat again. I just looked at him and thought "you must really hate me" and I remember just falling out of love with him. Tried to keep going for about another year, but it never really worked. I was really young too. Far too young to deal with that sort of thing.

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Tiddlywinks63 · 28/03/2018 19:09

💐 indeed And bugger hugs being unMNetty.
I worked with family Carers for most of my career and it's far from unusual to be resentful and angry about the position you find yourself in- no one signs up for what it can, and does, entail.
It's often a bloody thankless task.

There are organisations that can help- The Carers Trust is one //www.carers.org and Carers UK //www.carersuk.org is another.

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SingleAgainThen · 28/03/2018 19:20

This is a heart breaking thread to read, I’ve suffered with depression for coming on 11 years & have done therapy, counselling, anti-depressants etc. I’ve never seriously thought of ending it all - because of my kids - but I’ve had dark thoughts for sure.

A few years back, I met an ex-GP who had attempted suicide & his late teens daughter couldn’t forgive him & punished him massively- obviously very angry.

It has always stayed with me, his poor family who had to go through such a trauma, but the guy I met was so sad & damaged - I probably saw a side of him that his family couldn’t because of the raw emotions.

He deserved my pity, sadness & sympathy- such a lovely man that couldn’t see a way through but I totally understand his family’s feelings.

I have no sage words of wisdom just a look from a stranger’s point of view of how these individuals might feel.

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zebrano · 28/03/2018 21:23

Interesting perspective, I do, of course, feel very sad for my dad that he is so broken that he will sometimes feel suicidal. Maybe the difference with me is that my dad was also a domestic abuser (although he doesn't see slapping and punching my mum's tooth out as abuse) and the first suicide attempt was made when she finally got the courage to file for divorce.

He didn't change either, he followed the same pattern with his next partner. Domestic violence then a suicide attempt when her son came and whisked her away from the situation.

It's so hard for me to not be angry because it's all just mixed up in one big war zone of a childhood, and now into my thirties I am still picking up the pieces. I swear I will die young from all the stress!

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