Suicide is Painless…It Brings on Many Changes…
…and I can take or leave it if I please.
It was much easier to be an outsider at 25 than at 15. Not that it’s easy. Anxiety attacks, bipolar mood swings, a general inability to trust. There were still a lot of scars there. But there’s more perspective. Less drama. There’s coping mechanisms. There’s agency. And it’s gotten even easier at 28…I’m sure it’ll be easier still at 35.
At 15, I lacked those. At 15 I thought the best solution would be to set fire to my room and end my world in smoke and ash.
The fact that I’m here writing this post tells you that I failed. That detail’s not really important. Nor are the feelings about that particular incident. They’re for me and me alone.
No, what I’m writing about today is the process. The trail that leads to that day.
Being an outsider is never fun. You always end up on the lowest rung of the social ladder.
Not that this confers sainthood. My flaws are present enough, and keep me from martyrdom. I have the casual arrogance of the educated, the snobby attitude of the privileged and a sense of superiority that comes from….well I’m not sure where it comes from, but I’m inclined to think of myself as better than others. I can be anti-social and boorish, verbose and polemical, and just plain pedantical. I am, in the words of my best friends, an arrogant, conceited ass.
Which probably made me a better target.
I generally wasn’t interested in fitting in. Even as I”d move from city to city, school to school, I was okay with being myself. And that meant either being too Japanese for American peers, or too Americanized for my Japanese peers. I could’ve done better, I’m sure. Could’ve pretended one way or another.
Oh there were times when I tried. There’s a certain thrill to ganging up on someone else. Mocking them, going after them with the mob. It’s not just fun, it’s empowering. Especially when you’re an adolescent.
But in the end those times of playing along are…transitory. You deflect attention long enough for respite, then the harassment begins again. You find your gym clothes missing, only to find them in a drainage ditch. Your desk is vandalized. Things are thrown at you. You’re humiliated consistently in front of your peers. Derisive nicknames, a constant flood. It’s hard to get away.
At some point, you pull away. You look for other outlets of release. You yell at your parents, you tease your siblings. You coup up in your room and play video games all day. You become a recluse, hoping maybe they’d forget.
…then you go back, and find things even worse. For the time off has just made you an even bigger target.
At some point, it’s just too much. The world outside? You don’t want to go back. You know that’s not an option, so what else can you do? Then you see the stack of matches, the piles of books in your room and an idea flickers through…
…in the end, that’s a part of my life that I survived.
In a lot of ways, it was a good learning experience. I quit school, I left the country again, I traveled. I read, I experimented, I found what interested me.
I’m a long way from those days, and I’m a different person. And because of that, I’m okay with it. I understand the weaknesses of childhood. I know the cruelties. I can forgive that. And maybe there’s a bit of pity at my classmates. I look at where they’ve gone, what they’ve accomplished, and I wonder if they just wanted to feel smug for a little while longer. Before they felt their agency slip away.
This in all is a bit of a ramble. I apologize, I don’t know if I told a coherent story.
I see where I am now, and I wonder at the people who didn’t have my luck. Who didn’t have my resources, or my family….and my thoughts run cold.
Nob thanks for sharing this, I know it can’t have been easy. when I hear that song it gives me goosebumpsReport
I think this is ultimately easier for me to deal with now than some of my current, ongoing issues.
…and yeah, Suicide is Painless was a song I listened to a lot in my late teens.Report
It is so wonderful that the BS Romney story can bring out so many personal stories here at the League. We can all post our own personal story and have a catharsis. Now if someone would just post something relevant.Report
I’ll channel Jaybird here: Write a guest post.Report
Cheers to Nob here. I’ve always loved that lyric from the Theme to M*A*S*H, sing it while I play the Bm guitar part.
They sing it in the movie when the copiously-hung dentist [John Shattuck] decides to end it all. Shall such a splendid dick die unrequited-like?
Sorry about your exp, brother Nob. I’m pleased you’re still here.
____________
Through early morning fog I see
visions of the things to be
the pains that are withheld for me
I realize and I can see…
That suicide is painless
it brings on many changes
and I can take or leave it if I please.
I try to find a way to make
all our little joys relate
without that ever-present hate
but now I know that it’s too late, and…
The game of life is hard to play
I’m gonna lose it anyway
The losing card I’ll someday lay
so this is all I have to say.
The only way to win is cheat
And lay it down before I’m beat
and to another give my seat
for that’s the only painless feat.
The sword of time will pierce our skins
It doesn’t hurt when it begins
But as it works its way on in
The pain grows stronger…watch it grin, but…
A brave man once requested me
to answer questions that are key
is it to be or not to be
and I replied ‘oh why ask me?’
‘Cause suicide is painless
it brings on many changes
and I can take or leave it if I please.
…and you can do the same thing if you please.
Wiki: “Suicide Is Painless” is a song written by Johnny Mandel (music) and Mike Altman (lyrics), which is best known for being featured as the theme song for both the movie and TV series M*A*S*H. The actual title is “Song from M*A*S*H (Suicide is Painless)”. Mike Altman is the son of the original film’s director, Robert Altman, and was 14 years old when he wrote the song’s lyrics. During an appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson in the 1980s, Robert Altman said that his son earned more than a million US dollars for co-writing the song while he only made US $70,000 for directing the movie.”
That’s about right. Chorus is good, Verses 2, 4 and 5 blow chunks, written by the director’s son. Not one person in a thousand can tell you one of the words, but half of humanity probably recognizes Johnny Mandel’s theme music.
The only way to win is cheat…Report
+1 for using the word “lyric” correctly.Report
I’m sure it’ll be easier still at 35.
It will be.Report
And even easier at 45.Report
Share half of a story with you… feel free to disbelieve, as always.
A “friend of a friend” was half-American/half-Japanese, growing up
in Japan. It may never be easy being different — but Japan sometimes
feels a lot harder than America — more of an emphasis on conformity.
At age 14, she was designing portable stoves to help people’s houses
not burn down.
At age 15, she was dying, wasting away — paralyzed, and lacking the will
to live.
She’s dead now, and the world is poorer for her passing.Report
needle in the hay by elliot smith is the next gen suicide is painless.
cemented by use of the song in the suicide attempt scene in royal tennenbaumsReport