by Christopher Ketcham
Suicide has gotten a bad rap. In our culture of endless imbecile optimism, the culture of self-help and medicated despair, we have lost respect for the suicide. For my part, I have on a few bad nights thought of suicide but never seriously; more contemplatively, as in: death is of course the other half of our equation, a partner always growing stronger. I have a pistol here at home: how to use it effectively? In the temple? Or up through the palate, directly into the brain? Coward thoughts because anodyne, without the context of real pain – you haven’t lived the long deaths of places like Iraq, the Congo, Colombia…the murmurings of one who’d like to have this balls-out vision of death and reflect on it as if it were cake.
Still, to call the suicide a coward is an insult. The suicide enters the greatest unknown in human history. He steps willfully toward an abyss that the priests and philosophers build gossamer webs to conceal. Schopenhauer writes that suicide is the last act of a free man. Such a freedom is not to be dismissed. The prison, the county jail, the merest municipal lock-up confiscates the tie and shoe-lace of the incarcerated to curb this final freedom – implicit in the lock-down of a man is that suicide is indeed his last act of full agency, therefore it must be thwarted.
Suicide as ultimate freedom is excised from the popular discussion.
When Hemingway pointed a shotgun into his mouth, the observers demanded
‘What went wrong?’ and few asked what went right. Can we fault a man,
such a man who has loved the joys of the body, for his despair at the
failing of the body while the mind putters on, horrified at the
situation? Hunter S. Thompson in 2005 also killed himself with a
shotgun for similar reasons. A hero of mine, a figure who was to me
I.F. Stone and Lincoln Steffens on acid, someone to follow into the
breach. And even among the publications that Thompson might once have
been proud in which to publish there was the unspoken trope that here
was a tragedy, darkness upon literary journalism, a moment for
hesitation at the “irrationality” of the event.
Yet Thompson went with clear eyes. "No More Games. No More Bombs. No
More Walking. No More Fun. No More Swimming. 67,” he wrote in a letter
to his wife four days before he killed himself. “That is 17 years past
50. 17 more than I needed or wanted. Boring. I am always bitchy. No Fun
— for anybody. 67. You are getting Greedy. Act your old age. Relax —
This won't hurt.” The living presume so much about these dead, about
the shape and meaning of a death whose math is incalculable and has no
shape beyond our imaginings. Death as circus act, or strip-tease, or
blog.
My father is 69. He demands, in subtle ways and never serious, that I
shoot him in the head with one of our shared pistols if he gets to the
vegetable point, drooling on himself, stuck to machines – to the point,
that is, where he is no longer, as both of us understand it, a man of
agency. I tell him, “Dad, I can’t kill you.” (It’s against the law –
goddamn, who makes these laws that say that I can’t kill my own
father…if this is the thing to be done….)
My father imparted to me at a very young age the joyfulness and
irreverence of atheism, which came with the caveat of a high moral
order. A moral fiber as intense as a lightning storm and based on
nothing more than a social instinct, something like Kant’s categorical
imperative without the thousands of pages of bullshit. That is: I’m
five years old and I steal double-A batteries from a hardware store in
Brooklyn, and he quickly finds out and kicks the living shit out of me
(not really – a spanking that felt like a kicking). Ditto when a year
later I try to drop a flower pot on the head of a friend outside my
window. Message is clear: 1) no stealing; 2) don’t hurt other people.
The only two moments when my father physically struck me.
In that moral order from my father there was later developed,
implicitly, the idea that at some point your body is no longer worth
keeping to feed on the planet. That death is final and should be
embraced and accepted as such and may possibly be a good thing.
Someday, I hope to have the guts to kill myself, if it should come to
that (I hope it doesn’t!). I know several people who are slowly
suiciding themselves through mortgages, home ownership, prescription
drugs, monogamy, insomnia, alcohol, work, perversions of marriage
(“ohhnlee yooo” as the song goes), the
ressentiment of ambition, the silence of resignation. Better to leap than to slouch thus toward Bethlehem.