www.TheCitizensWhoCare.org
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; I'm still
here.
The power in your story can reach help
at risk people.
Has a conversation changed your
life?
Do you want to be part of national movement to prevent
suicide?
Help the Semicolon Campaign convince
more Oregonians to ask 'R U OK? (are you
ok?') by sharing your story for use across media. Stories by
community members who seriously considered suicide at some
point in their lives and either failed in their attempt or,
for some reason, didn't end up attempting suicide. We want
to hear your story, hopefully in 1,000 words or so.
- Why were you considering suicide?
- What prompted an attempt?
- What turned the table that
prevented your death?
- What do you have to say to someone
who might be in your shoes right now?
We want to hear from veterans,
farmers, fisherfolk, loggers, moms and dads, students and
teachers, business owners, religious leaders, police, health
professionals, LGBATQQI individuals, politicians,
everybody. Email a summary to gordonclay@aol.com
and we will follow-up with you directly. Every conversation
counts and we look forward to hearing yours.
As a community, let's end the stigma
that prevents too many of our at-risk neighbors from getting
help. Remember, suicide is preventable. Join other
Courageous Oregonians who want to prevent another Oregonian
from putting a period at the end of their life. Write us
today.
When writing your story, think
about these points:
Dont glorify or
romanticize suicide. Vulnerable people, especially young
people, may identify with the attention and sympathy
garnered by someone who has died by suicide.
Dont normalize suicide by
presenting it as a common event. Although significant
numbers of people attempt suicide, it is important not to
present the data in a way that makes suicide seem common,
normal or acceptable. Most individuals, and most youth, who
seriously consider suicide do not overtly act on those
thoughts, but find more constructive ways to resolve
them.
Dont present a suicide
attempt as an inexplicable act or explain it as a result of
stress only. It misses the opportunity to inform audiences
of both the complexity and preventability of suicide. The
same applies to any explanation of a suicide attempt as the
understandable response to an individuals stressful
situation or to an individuals membership in a group
encountering discrimination. Oversimplification of suicide
in any of these ways can mislead people to believe that it
is a normal response to fairly common life
circumstances.
Dont present overly
detailed descriptions of a suicide attempt or method.
Research shows that pictures or detailed descriptions of how
or where a person died by suicide can be a factor in
vulnerable individuals imitating the act. Clinicians believe
the danger is even greater if there is a detailed
description of the method.
Having
suicidal thoughts? Watch
this video.
Serious about
commiting suicide? Text 24 hours a day, any day
TCall
Crisis Text Hotline
741741
Want to talk?
800.273.TALK
(8255) or TDD
800.448.1833
Curry County
Crisis Line - 877-519-9322
For other
Emergency
Numbers
International
Suicide Prevention Resource Directory
National Domestic Violence Hotline -
TCall
741741
or
800-799-SFAE (7233)
Substance Abuse
Helpline - TCall
741741
or
800.923.4357
Veterans Crisis Line - TCall
838255
or
800-273-8255 press
1 or
Chat
Youthline for Teens - TCall
741741
or
877.968.8491
Related Stories:
What
is a TCall?,
Newburg
Oregon Girl Got A Clever Tattoo To Get The Conversation
Going About Depression,
Stigma,
Crisis
Text Line Information,
Safe
and Effective Messaging for Suicide
Prevention
Under
Construction
2:01
Former Senator Gordon
Smith
1:57
Stories of Hope and
Recovery: John Saunders
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Gordon
Clay, 76, retired advertising executive and U.S. Army
veteran
I had gotten my girl friend pregnant
over Christmas break during my senior in college. I hadn't
planned to marry and was actually planing to go to Europe
for several months after college. My fraternity brother's
had all acquired jobs following college. We got married in a
judges chambers on or around Valentine's Day. It was the
responsible thing to do.
I rushed to get a job. We would have
to move to Chicago since I had accepted a sales job with the
Kansas City Star in their Chicago office. We moved to Oak
Park and our daughter was born on September 28,
1965.
I hadn't really desired a marriage and
this all changed my view of my future. I was never a
faithful husband, though I was committed to be the best
father I could be.
It was a rather normal evening in
1974. My wife was leaving early to pick up her father at the
airport. She was going to have dinner with a girl
friend.
I was the editor of Checkpoint, a
monthly publication of the Kansas City region of the Sports
Car Club of America. One of our columnists was Gordon
Smiley, a Formula Ford driver who went on to race Indy Car
and was killed at the Indianapolis 500 in 1982. We were
getting close to our deadline on the publication and I knew
my wife and Gordon had lunch at times and played tennis
together. Off the cuff, not having any indication of
anything special, I mention that "The next time you see
Gordon, tell him I need his article."
I wife headed for the airport and
about a half-hour later I got a call from Gordon saying that
he'll have his article to me by the end of the week. The
timing of the call struck me as too much of a coincidence. I
stewed and finally decided to drive over to his house. Suer
enough there was my wife's Mercedes. I parked up the block
and at one point actually stood on top of a trash barrel to
look in the kitchen window. Feeling that was too close, I
crossed the street. There was a four foot retaining wall and
I climbed on top. I could see into the house and watch
Gordon take my wife upstairs and lay her on his
bed.
I was furious. Thoughts of killing
them both right then and there plagued my mind. Then I
thought of killing myself. After all, I was a successful
advertising executive in Kansas City My grandfather had been
the head chemist at Procter & Gamble. My uncle was
the president of the Federal Reserve. My dad was the chief
quality control manger at Pratt & Whitney. Everyone
thought we had the perfect marriage. How would it look in
that community? I couldn't control my wife. (Yes, it
was the early seventies and the early stages of the women's
movement.
I headed back home and stewed. When
she go home from taking her father to a motel, I took her
purse and emptied it on the front porch. I didn't know what
I was looking for but what I found was birth control pills
and I had a vasectomy.
I stormed out of the house. I didn't
know what to do. I went down to Louis Park and sat. I didn't
want to live. I've lost track of much of that evening but
what I do remember is calling my medical doctor from a phone
booth and telling him I was suicidal. He told me to go back
to Louis Park and either he would meet me there.
It wasn't long before he showed up
with another man. That man was a therapist named Cliff Wolf.
My doctor introduced us and excused himself. I don't know
how long Cliff and I spent that night be Cliff ended by
asking me to promise that I wouldn't attempt suicide until
we met the next day. I promised.
\I slept in the guest room that night.
I didn't want our daughter to get suspicious. The next day I
met with Cliff again. I was still distraught and I wanted a
divorce. In Kansas it usually takes six months unless one of
the couple is in danger of hurting themselves or someone
else. I didn't feel that I was a danger to my wife but I
still hasn't stable enough to trust not killing myself.
Cliff made me promise not to attempt suicide until we talked
the next day. I promised. That afternoon I contact a
fraternity brother who was also a divorce attorney in Kansas
and filed a motion for dissolution of our marriage with
Irreconcilable differences. No mention was ever made for the
real reason. We went to court and the judge required my wife
to get a lawyer and meet the next day. She did and we did.
My wife wanted me to have custody of
our daughter. She felt that the other Gordon didn't want
children and she trusted me since I had had such a close
relationship with our daughter from day one. I was Chief of
the Sacagawea nation of Indian Primness (a
YMCA program) and had been very involved in her
school's PTA and education and sports activities.) I
accept my wife's request. It was the responsible thing to
do.
We went to court. Both of our lawyer's
felt that my wife should have custody. This was before
Kramer versus Kramer. The judge agreed. However, my wife was
on the stand and refused custody. The judge recessed our
trial until the next day. You see, he was a Kansas judge,
was 62 yeas old and had never given a child to a father,
especially a girl child. His decision was between letting me
have custody or putting our daughter in a foster
home.
I got home that night. Our daughter
still didn't have a clue. I suggested we go to TG&Y for
ice cream. While there, I got passport picture of her and I.
The next morning I went to get passports for the two of us.
I this is what the legal system was going to do to our
family, I was going to take our daughter and leave the
country.
That afternoon, the judge ruled that I
would be granted custody but lose 80% of my financial wealth
that I had built up from working since I was 8 or 10 years
old. I'd get to keep the house and my Mercedes but buy her a
new Capri since she didn't want to do the upkeep on a
Mercedes.
We came home after the hearing and
told our daughter what had transpired and that my former
wife will be moving in with Gordon the next day. That was
the only downside of not having a six-month waiting period
for a divorce. However, I'm sure the six-month process would
have worked out the same way and would have prevented all
three of us from moving on with our lives.
In retrospect it's good that I was
awarded custody. Little did I know, at the time, that if my
daughter and I had gotten to Mexico and didn't have a
notarized letter from my former wife that our daughter could
travel with me, we would have been pulled off the plane in
Guadalajara and sent back to the United States and be
remanded over to the authorities.
Interesting how things work out. My
former wife passed away of Ovarian cancer at 44. Our
daughter married at 34, has two teenage daughters and lives
in Hood River, OR.
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