
The_Hunter
Hunter. PMs always open.
- Nov 30, 2024
- 287
In the paper "Suicide and language" Doris Sommer-Rotenberg criticizes the custom of using "commit" to describe acts of suicide; attacking it for alleged implications of criminality & sin that have no place in a compassion-based paradigm towards the understanding of suicidal individuals. If you have the time; I highly recommend reading all 2 pages of this paper; it's hosted publicly via PDF in this link right here. Cheers.
For the person contemplating suicide, the opportunity to freely express suicidal thoughts, to vent negative feelings against oneself and the world, to be listened to empathically and nonjudgementally is one of the best means of overcoming despair.
For the counsellor or physician, this presents an opportunity to use language in a positive way, to assuage pain and avert destructive outcomes.
But if the response is one of disbelief, horror and hollow engagement, of comfortless platitudes such as "Oh, you can't feel that way, you have so much to live for," the suicidal person is likely to withdraw from discussion and feel unbearably ashamed of his or her feelings. Such shame can lead to a lonely journey burdened by an increasing sense of unworthiness. Powerful, destructive emotions are internalized, growing stronger and more urgent the longer they have no release. Eventually the only relief the suicidal person is able to perceive may be self-annihilation — not a rejection of life, family and friends, but a rejection of the pain of living.
The language we use to describe events not only reflects our own attitudes but influences those attitudes as well as the attitudes of others. A change in the words we use will not immediately dispel deep-seated prejudices, but it will inhibit their expression and, in so doing, prepare the ground for attitudinal change. When racist remarks are viewed as socially unacceptable, for example, the social environment becomes less hospitable to racism itself.
The language of suicide, like the illness leading to suicide, are both mired in denial. The term "commit suicide" should be excised from the language. There are other and better alternatives: Hamlet's "self-slaughter," "death by one's own hand," "ended one's own life," "self-inflicted death," "a casualty of suicide" or the raw "killed oneself." Even the expression of a former Vietnamese prisoner of war, who described his feelings during his incarceration as a desire "to be off the planet," avoids the judgemental connotations of "commit suicide." And any of these expressions is better than the obituary euphemism, "died suddenly."
Physicians can send a powerful message to colleagues, patients and society at large by using neutral and compassionate language when they refer to suicide. By their leadership in this revision, they will be better able to help those with suicidal feelings to take a crucial step back from despair, and to help those who have been bereaved by suicide to resolve their feelings of anguish and regret.
The rejection of the term "commit suicide" will help to replace silence and shame with discussion, interaction, insight and, ultimately, successful preventive research.