‘See you in two minutes, Ma!’ The words echoed in the hallway as the front door closed and re-opened in a burst followed by a trundling of long legs up the stairs and down again as quickly. All over in a blur and this time the silence left uninterrupted.
Me, standing in the kitchen ironing some innocuous piece of clothing in a mundane way on an ordinary Saturday evening, in an ordinary house in a Cul de Sac with a green area, where children kick ball and have tea parties with plastic tea-sets and he and his crew set up a tent to camp out, where they tumble wrestle with each other and take selfies, plan battles on xbox, dance, sing, shout, share a smoke behind a wall. Here in this ordinary life the unthinkable happened. My life was transformed forever that evening as that was the last time I saw him alive.
That scene plays in my mind over and over, etched forever in my memory as I examine those last moments with forensic determination looking for a clue, an indication, a something, there has got to be a something that could have, that would have changed the outcome, what did I miss? But like a scratch on an old vinyl record the needle returns to the same thought processes, the outcome remains unchanged, he’s no longer here, he left us by his own hand, his own choice. My mind is screaming so many words but the truth is unwavering. He’s fifteen years-old, he is supposed to be here! But he’s gone. Our beloved Darragh has left us.
And so my life stopped and began again as the mother of a suicide victim. Those words sit uncomfortably in the air. What was he a victim of? Love? Teenage Angst? Depression? Are these the words associated with him now and forever more as some sense of this event can be attained and his absence means there is no defense? People can make up their own minds about what ailed him.
But, but, but, he was the life and soul of the party, the glue that held his crew together, the laughter, the joker, the music maker, the risk taker. He bustled in and out of the door always accompanied by mates. He danced around the kitchen, opening and shutting the cupboard doors looking for food that stared back at him from laden shelves as he declared there was nothing to eat. Boisterous in his enthusiasm for music and socialising, loving his friends in a deeply loyal way, things were never quiet in his wake. Mature in so many ways as his body grew and changed overnight into a manly composition. Hairy legs in training shorts, shadow over his lip. Hair gel and deodorant became prized possessions, almost a crisis if either were in short supply. Such a paradox of emotions emanated from him, such a typical teenager.
Boundaries were made to be reverberated against and tested and did he give that a good innings? And so when two minutes didn’t return him home I thought not too much of it. Gone for a smoke I thought discontentedly, yes I knew he smoked and he knew I knew and I knew because he told me. He told me a lot of the things he and his friends did, hardly the typical profile of a young man contemplating suicide.
In fact he had been at a party the night before and he was to fill me in on the details on the way to his fathers. I liked those short trips to and from his fathers. The car was a space where, uninterrupted, we could really connect. Of course some trips he put earphones on, music playing and his enthusiasm for a song would find his hands drumming the rhythm on his legs. “Now that’s a tune, Ma”, he’d exclaim, having blasted the volume on the car radio. I enjoyed music of all genres and he liked to educate me on the latest. He and some of the crew had taken to learning Ed Sheeran songs, very wordy pieces with barely time for a breath and would perform them in front of my TV before leaving the room with an air of electricity generated by their intensity hanging in the air.
The need to plan and arrange his funeral arises and we are with no blue print in place. Choosing to live outside the confines of the church, although an informed choice, we had at no time given to planning or arranging a funeral, least of all of our teenage son. The local priest calls in to offer support but our belief system does not find solace in the traditional church teachings and so we decline. This balancing the needs of our circumstances, as a divorced couple, in a small traditional town, at such a traumatic time is a significant piece of the picture. By some miracle and with the broad support offered by friends and the community we created a poignant, remarkable, personal ritual in the community centre, where his friends and family spoke, sang and shared memories.
And then me, his mother is left asking the unanswerable questions over again into a vacuum where no answer offered by my mind, heavy laden with guilt and shame, can suffice or appease. How could I not pre-empt his act? What was distracting me so? How could I have failed so miserably at the most important job in the world? Protecting my son even from himself? How can I support his sister in navigating the outcome of this act of his?
And yet in the midst of all this pressure, stress, disbelief and trauma, simultaneously there is a deep feeling under the surface, one that permeates through the mind ramblings, one that fills me with light as if to fan the flame of love and drives me forward. One that keeps me looking in the direction of something greater than the frailty of the human mind and body. One that sees the beauty in nature as a source of nourishment and healing. One that brings me to watch the ocean waves breaking on the shore without pause, that reminds me to smile through tears and to feel and grow in love in the face of this adversity. One that feels the power of music as it provides a vehicle for the expression of feelings and emotions and how it becomes a place that me his mother and Darragh’s friends can meet and share the impact of his loss from our differing age demographic. Their heart breaking rendition of “Timshell” by Mumford & Sons, in our sitting room, a poignant piece of song writing that could have been scripted just for this circumstance. And all the while he smiles at us from the framed photo above the mantle, frozen in a moment behind that frame. Not gone but transformed. Like our lives now.
This is sample of my story written in the aftermath of my son’s suicide 3 years ago. A book full of raw emotion and a journey to replenish Spirit and reclaim purpose. Find out more here.
Support Our Campaign
We rely on the generosity of the public to fund our work and so far together we have achieved great things! Please do continue to support us so we can provide future generations in Ireland with the resources to recognise and talk about their emotions, and equip them to navigate the ever-changing world around them as they grow