Losing a Parent to Suicide:
Reflections of a Brown University Alum
A Daughter's Grief
She learned to cope with her mother’s suicide.
Then everything fell apart.
By Dara Huang '99, '04 MD
My mother hanged herself in the basement of my house.
I was 15. This is the most significant event in my
life.
From that day on, I learned never to accept 20/20
vision only in hindsight. My acuity for social
dynamics became sharper, my appreciation for my family
and friends became richer, and my appetite for
learning life’s meaning in all of its complexity grew
stronger. I was determined to train myself to have
perfect vision in the present day.
Although I didn’t know it at the time, I lived under
the consequences of the stigma surrounding my mother’s
death. The survival of my family and myself was my
only priority. My two older sisters were away at
school then, leaving only my father, my younger
sister, and me to fend off feelings of grief-stricken
emptiness. Every night, dinnertime would come, and the
three of us would eat in silence. We managed as best
we could. I learned to marinate chicken before
starting my homework, and on weekends I cooked in
bulk, so as to have leftovers for the rest of the
week.
Still, though, fear carried the day, and I’m not sure
whom I was more afraid for: my little sister or my
father. My sister was still in elementary school, and
the smallest one in her sixth-grade class. She had
once used my mother as a shield in our sibling
rivalries, but now she relied on her “enemy” for
support. My father’s age quickly accelerated. He
swiftly lost forty pounds, his hair grew white, and he
often wondered aloud if he could survive long enough
to pay our college tuitions.
My life had crumbled at home, but I survived by
holding on to what I did have. I depended on my family
for motivation and strength amid the tears, and held
on to my academics steadfastly, to provide myself a
world of “normalcy.” I was accepted by the Program of
Liberal Medical Education at Brown. By May 1999, I had
received a dual degree in East Asian studies and
biology. It would seem that my confidence in academic
achievement was relatively secure at this point;
however, no one knew of my depression. I was unaware
of it myself. And when I entered medical school,
things started to fall apart.
There the integration of my academic and personal
lives hit closer to home. I was privileged to learn
everything about the human body, from memorizing its
most basic genetic components to looking at cells
under the microscope and dissecting its gross anatomy.
I studied the mind and body in their healthy state,
and learned what happens when an imbalance or trauma
is inflicted on that living system. I learned a great
amount from reading textbooks.
I was faced, however, with the unforeseen challenge of
trying to dissociate the human aspect from the
objectivity of science. I quietly mourned for my
mother while I dissected cranial nerves in my
cadaver’s skull, held back tears when I learned about
psychiatric disorders, and trained myself to quickly
gain composure when patients told me of losses they
had endured. I expressed sympathy but could not reveal
that I personally knew their pain.
By the middle of my third year, I realized I was not
ready to become a doctor. I had not yet fully grasped
the effect of my mother’s death on my life. My
unresolved bereavement may have influenced my personal
development and accounted for potentials yet
unfulfilled. Self-perception of my experiences was my
oppression. I did not feel safe expressing my personal
losses; I was afraid of the judgment that would be
passed on my family and me. I still feared the stigma
attached to my mother’s death.
I began bereavement therapy, devoting my energies to
reclaiming my own general welfare. And by working on
my own mental health, I eventually became strong
enough to work with the Samaritans of Rhode Island,
helping others understand suicide. I realize that my
loss had only been exacerbated by my silence. I had
been raised to accept the adage “Time heals all
wounds,” and been told to continue to lead a “normal
life,” despite a hidden past. Yet nearly twelve years
after my mother’s death, I realized that I could not
find closure to it without first accepting that this
was a traumatic experience, which had inevitably
altered the course of my life. Only by confronting the
anger and guilt that envelop the stigma of suicide
could I inch closer to finding “normalcy.”
Suicide is a dirty virus, whose secret aftermath is
tormenting and relentless. It does not discriminate by
age, race, or educational or socioeconomic status. Yet
depression and its most serious consequence, suicide,
can be prevented by promoting awareness and by
reducing the stigma surrounding mental illness.
Ironically, the road to prevention and healing is
simply bringing attention to mental illness. It is
suicide’s shame that promotes its wrath.
Dara Huang graduated from Brown Medical School in May of 2004.
Another version of this essay appeared in the Providence Journal.
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For more on this topic as well as information regarding campus resources, please check out the following links:
Dealing with Death and Grief
College Suicide: Myths and Facts
Or for the RI Samaritans Suicide Prevention website check out:
RI Samaritan Suicide Prevention
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