Sincere condolences to you and his family and loved ones. Those of us who choose to end our suffering by rescinding the life given to us end their pain, but they cannot see the gash they are cutting through the still beating hearts of the people that love, admire and respect. When we choose to end life, often we are blinded by pain to even take that into consideration, and tell ourselves that the love of other humans and the world doesn't exist. If he truly knew how much his decision hurts his family, I'd hope that he wouldn't have done it. Again, I'm terribly sorry and offer to you a big virtual hug and lots of love.
If you'd like,I'd share my view of what happens to him now, but that's not what you asked. I don't think you really want nor need to hear my existential world view. You want answers for the confusion you are experiencing.
The older I get, the more friends,family and acquaintances shove off their mortal coil. The circumstances are never the same, some make sense than others and the death of a person very close to me can have less impact upon my well being than someone less so.
There really is no rhyme to how the process goes. I'm sure you are familiar with the stages of grief and the concept is valid, you will experience all of them in your bereavement and healing process. What you don't often hear is that there is no system to it.
Over the last two years, my two closest and most loved and needed friends died, both accidentally- one by overdose the other by choking. Also,both my mother and father passed the veil, both naturally. If I could tell you a little about the grief process for these people it may help you understand your grief.
In the case of my friends, the one who ODed was not as messy, I think mainly because I knew how exhausted he was. He was alone in the world as far as truly intimate relationships go. He had lots of friends who loved him and was mutually respected by all of them, at the same time he had no family, no lover, nobody that truly understood him and his joys and pain. I understood his death.
I felt much the same as i hear you saying you do now. It's a strange feeling, a sort of guilt- "why am I not crying, what's wrong with me, am I a sociopath? No, not at all. I honestly don't know why, but it took months before it hit me. One night I was walking down the street and Bill entered my mind. I wanted to go hang out with him and it hit me that I never would again. I collapsed and cried out the hole in my heart. I still miss the living hell out of him and wish he was still here. His pain is gone, and all those who leave us are freed from their sufferation but ours has just begun.
Unless you ask, I'll spare all the details of the other deaths I referred to for the sake of TL,DR because Bill's is the most relevant here. Suicide fucking sucks. I hate that we can do it, I hate that people do it. It's the hardest thing in life for me to get, although I myself have made three attempts.
You are going through your deep and very personal process of loss. Reaching out to the community to help you grok it shows you are on a healing path looking for answers, there's nothing wrong with you friend. It sounds like the death of your cousin is senseless. He "had it all" he was "happy" to outside appearances. As said earlier we can get so far away from how it really feels inside, and cut out loved ones out of whatever we're going through so as to burden them them while inside it's a deep black pit. Especially with family.
That's will be hard to work through. Like I said the concept of the stages of grief is valid, but you may work in this for years. Upon the final loss of the four, my mom last summer, I entered into both group and individual therapy. I am lucky to have comprehensive health care coverage that pays for it thanks to the great socialist state of Oregon (much
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for cascadia), and I've found incredible relief in both modalities. In the groups, I am able to see that I'm not alone nor am I screwed up somehow in my reactions, in fact I'm pretty damn normal as are you. With individual talk therapy I'm able to unload the weight on my shoulders to a person willing to help me lift the burden. These have been indispensable and intrinsic to my healing process. I of course have no idea of your locale nor what is available to you in your financial status, but at the very very least I implore you to attend group meetings. And if individual therapy is available to you, DO IT!
I know that I would rather run into dream land, or across the seas, over snow capped mountain peaks to escape the pursuing spectre of grief and the pain it holds in wait for me, but as the great Pigpen McKernan said, "you ain't getting over it and you sure as hell ain't gonna get around it, you just gotta go right on through it". Grief is an opportunity to understand your place on this cold rock suited in a frail, soft, easily destroyed bag of flesh. We hunger, we scratch at the ground to ease that emptiness, but the love and kindness we truly need as sustenance to live and abide as opposed to just survive can be elusive. Some of us are too afraid to ask when we don't have it, and then we die inside and once that happens,while we may wear a smile to make things easier on us, the physical death is not far off without some intervention.
I fear I've rambled on too long, lost your interest and gave no real guidance, but I hope that you can see the TL, DR. That basically is, suicide fucking sucks and you are not abnormal in any way for your reaction. We often feel that since there are clearly defined stages that it should be straightforward- "okay,this week I'm pissed off, and the calendar says I'll be sad by next Friday...". That would be too damn easy. Anyway, I truly wish you peace and am glad you reached out to this community. I'm so glad we have one where we can talk about our lives with people who share our world view, but since this is a psychedelic group, I'll suggest to you a little micro dose regimen for a couple weeks would probably really help you achieve a state of neuro-homeostasis and more easily navigate your complex and confusing emotional process.
Suicide and its prevention as well as its aftermath is something I give a lot of consideration to, and unfortunately understand maybe more than most being both a survivor of loved ones who suicided as well as a multiple attempt fail. If I can help in any way, talking, helping navigate social services in your are to coordinate counseling and mental health care, please PM me, I'd be happy to be of any service. In the meantime, be good and true to you above all, and peace upon your beating heart.
Much
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for your loss, I hate that it happened and am sorry that the world does this shit. By the way, I wrote a story about both one of my attempts and the suicide of a friend's lover that may interest you, it's called
the undefended and is on one of my online whining diaries linked in my sig, I'd be honored if you took a look at it..
Sine experientia nihil sufficienter sciri potest -Roger Bacon
*γνῶθι σεαυτόν*