Introduction: Starting At The End & Suicidal Ideations
Dear reader: This book is a true story of the life I have known. I am writing to you to share this story in the hopes that we can make sense of things. I will share with you this story on the web, and you will have a way to respond to the questions that will arise.
Something amazing happened to make it possible for me to bring this story to you. It was Monday, December 16, 2019, and someone saved my life tonight. So, if I sounded bitter in the previous paragraph, I apologize. Let me tell you how someone saved my life. Then we will see how that relates to love, kindness, nurturance, compassion, and empathy.
I was in the hospital at the University of North Carolina Medical Center in the psychiatric unit. I had meant to end my life a few days ago. My ex-wife found out because I told her. I had expected that it would be too late when she got the message.
On this Monday morning just after midnight, I was absolutely convinced that nothing can be done to change my circumstances and that there is no hope. I knew that I would be released soon and then I wouldn't fail in my next suicide attempt. Visions of a slip noose swings in my mind along with other ideas – pills.
I can't sleep. I'm restless... sitting in a large, darkened room just past midnight – a common room. The hospital is quiet.
My ex-wife had been angry that I considered suicide, but she understood why I had been that desperately depressed. Yes, I have been through hell but that was in the past. This is not about past pain. That doesn't matter. No one can help remedy the situation because no one understands.
This is what was going through my mind when this girl came out.
"You can't sleep either?" she asks and takes a seat next to me to talk. A simple question that started a process that made this book possible!
This story about my experience in a psychiatric hospital is described later in the book so let's move on to something else...
A Love Story
This book is also about Lynn Denise Krupey.
Let's jump back in time now...
July 4, 1992. Nearly three months since I moved to Wilmington, North Carolina.
I was with Lynn.
There is a jetty that runs out to a tiny island south of Carolina Beach where the Cape Fear River meets the ocean. It is the farthest point south if you drive down Highway 421/Carolina Beach Road from Wilmington, North Carolina.
It was our first date. Sort of. If you can call it that way.
Since I was driving, I asked if she wanted to go to this scenic spot that I had selected and suggested. I had suggested that we could walk out on this jetty toward a tiny little island. I believed I had heard it was an animal conservatory.
She agreed.
So, I parked the car near the beach and near that jetty.
The water gently washes against and over the rocks but if the tide is low, like today, we could walk out to the island.
The jetty is not on the open ocean, so the waves only gently lap against the beach and the rocks that form the jetty. It is just a bunch of rocks that have been stacked against one another to make a bridge of sorts. There is pavement that is layered on top of the stack of rocks that makes this a jetty.
A photo of one such jetty/bridge is shown below.
I had just moved to Wilmington in April and I wanted to get to know the people there. So, I started attending poetry reading sessions. They were held at the lounge on the fourth floor of the convention center which overlooks Cape Fear River.
There was something serene about the setting that made it comfortable for me to get up in front of a group of people and read my poetry. The sun would reflect across the Cape Fear River casting the soft rays into the room. Dusty, the emcee for the poetry reading sessions who works at the center, made it easier too. She had that magical quality of attending to the guests of the Convention Center whether they were there for the poetry or not. Her caring way was equivalent to that of a loving mother who always made me feel welcomed and comfortable.
Sharing my poetry in front of a group was an impossible accomplishment. As a psychotherapist, I would have to lead therapy groups so being able to read my poetry to a group was perfect evidence of my ability to accomplish something that had seemed impossible. My ability to get up in front of a room of people every week was an amazing feat. This was something I never had the guts to do when I was younger. I never wanted to place myself at the center of attention.
I would see Lynn every Sunday at the poetry readings at the Coastline Convention Center. For me, she stood out among all the attendees that were present there. She was thin but shapely.
Cystic Fibrosis – a genetic disease. I overheard her talking about that. That was why she was coughing all the time.
I had come sharing poems about Celta, someone I had loved, and lost. I wasn't expecting to make a romantic connection. Something about Lynn caught my attention.
What was it about her? Did I already think that she was the most beautiful girl imaginable? Do I dare admit to myself that I am entertaining such irrational thoughts? I never thought of it as some kind of love-at-first-sight but there was something about her that intrigued me.
Her voice was hypnotic and alluring. She had all the things that one considers in feminine beauty and shape or so it seemed to me early on. She seemed perfect. I loved her voice - both when she was at the microphone and when I was close to her. And her face, her skin, her legs seemed like gentle features I might have created in my own mind if I had the imagination to do such a thing.
Yet, I noticed she was alone. I guess that was one of the reasons why I was so lucky.
It took me some three months to find the courage and the right words to ask her out. I waited to see if she already had someone else. I wanted to avoid being rejected. I can still feel the fear now as I write this some three decades later. I guess that was a sign of how much I wanted this to work out. It was scary.
Asking Lynn if she would spend time with me was an accomplishment.
So, here we are, at this gentle beach on July 4th.
I did not expect the pavement to be this slippery. It was a cause of concern for me but not because I was afraid of falling. It was imperative that I must not let Lynn slip and risk bruising or scratching her perfect skin. Putting my nervousness aside, I offered my hand.
She took my hand.
She took my hand!
Wow!
You must be thinking that I am exaggerating but this was amazing! Her gentle hand around mine!
"Do you want to keep going?" I asked.
"Sure," she said, pausing to take in the scene with me. Her straight blonde hair swayed in the gentle wind.
We walked a little further but then decided that this was getting too slippery. And dangerous.
What's next, I thought. Jean works at Fort Fischer, a Civil War museum site, and they have a tour around the historic site. We could go there.
It was an amazing day. The first of an amazing weekend that we would spend together.
We saw the fireworks in downtown Wilmington that night, over the Cape Fear River and near the Battleship. My friends regarded me as a pacifist. I suppose Lynn was too.
After the fireworks, we were walking back to the car, passing by the place where she worked along the way. Some co-worker asked her if I was her boyfriend. "No, we are just friends," she said.
Darn. I thought this was a date. Nevertheless, we were still just friends.
I can wait.
It was the 4th of July 1992, and everything would change from this day forward.
Time has a way of changing fates. We became more than just friends. Over time, we fell madly and passionately in love. Two years after this day in July of 1992, we were picking out an engagement ring for her.
Oh, and I was in graduate school in Social Work. Everything was falling into place. It was perfect.
More than that, I felt things I never knew I would or could feel. It is impossible to comprehend what I felt that day when she first held my hand.
The world was full of hope for me. Anything seemed possible. I had clear ideas about what I wanted and where I was going. So, while it might seem that this was just about my social life and making friends, it was also a vision of life for me in some sense of the bigger picture of what really matters to me.
We would get a home together north of Wilmington on Brucemont Drive. Her mother bought the home and we rented it from her.
I became successful in social work. I became a Licensed Clinical Social Worker - a psychotherapist. I opened my own private practice. I gained respect from my colleagues who told me that Wilmington was a saturated market, meaning there was no need for an additional therapist in the area. The person who warned me that Wilmington was a saturated market and that an additional therapist is not needed had the best of intentions, but it was so great to know that despite all the challenges I found success.
I saw a life with Lynn Denise Krupey. I proved to myself that I could accomplish my dreams. It was all built around me and my family - meaning around Lynn and me; we were a family - the two of us.
I dedicated my life to helping others.
I could not imagine anything different or anything better than this other than more of the same.
Halfway through 2000, a meteor would come crashing down on this life I had tirelessly built upon. The shocking events that began to transpire that year would incinerate everything in my world leaving ashes to blot out the sky. I saw only darkness, the fog of ashes blowing fragments of the familiar home, the furnishings, the words, and dreams.
I was in desperate need of compassion, empathy, kindness, and love but I wasn't thinking too clearly about where to look for these things and where to find them.
To understand what I had accomplished, we need to consider what life was like growing up what I was like and the challenges I would face. In the next chapter, we will pick up there.