Since Memorial Day, it seems as if the world has moved at full throttle (5 points to you if you picked up on the two Ozzy references in the first 17 words, including the title). How many pictures have I taken? Not many. How many real photographs have I made? Even fewer. The plan to take a side trip to Yosemite fell through (but the consolation prize was dinner at one of my favorite restaurants in
One of my all-time favorite movies is The Shawshank Redemption. There’s a line in the movie where Andy says, “Get busy living, or get busy dying.” Somewhere near the time that line was uttered on a network television broadcast of that movie two weeks ago, Joelle Glaysher of Bentonville took her life. How she did it—although shocking—is not important. Why she did—none of it was worth dying over—is not critically relevant either. The first thing many people would say about Joelle after meeting her is that she was beautiful, and indeed she was a pretty woman. She was happy (not so much, it turns out), and she had the biggest smile in the room. I could go on. Seriously, she was just the All-American girl next door, and everybody loved her. To say I was shocked upon learning of her death would be the understatement of the year. This is the second unexpected death of a dear friend from high school in about 14 months. I guess that’s where we are now—no more weddings and babies and reunions. Is it really going to be the case that our own funerals are next on the list of life events? I hope not.
Suicide is an everyday occurrence. According to data compiled by the Centers for Disease Control, for 2006 it was the eleventh leading cause of death in the United States , with one death occurring every 16 minutes. With more than 33,000 deaths annually in this country attributed to suicide, most of us surely know at least one person who has committed it. And for all who have succeeded, more have attempted it. Death is a part of life. We’ve all lost friends and family members, expectedly or not. We all are aware of the pain and grief that comes from losing a loved one. For me, I can right off think of four people I knew that took their own life. One was a friend of mine from church camp, who killed himself while we were freshmen in college. Two others were family friends of my wife’s family (one of whom I didn’t know well and the other a dear friend). And then Joelle.
So get busy living.