How Truthful Depictions of Suicidal Ideation Help Me Resist My Own
If we’re going to spend so much time with suicide in pop culture, I do believe we are owed an honest reckoning with what ideation is, as well as depictions that are truthful rather than dangerous.
The Room
The Room
The Virgin SuicidesThe House of the Devil
Harold and Maude
One example that comes to mind is the aimless melancholy of Louis Malle’s The Fire Within, as Alain (played by Maurice Ronet with surprising tenderness) can’t help but feel alone despite the support of those around him. Its one of the rare depictions of a suicidal character that feels genuine.
Melancholia
MelancholiaAnnihilation
Chantal Akerman’s final film, No Home Movie, is, in part, about feeling adrift. Surrounded by landmines like mine, and starved for an anchor in this world (for Akerman, it is her late mother), the fire of ideation in Akerman’s mind is fueled. The film is weighted by the traumas her mother suffered, and their generational impact. And she is what’s left, with nothing to tether her to the earth. (Akerman committed suicide two days before the film’s premiere, in 2015.) In my lowest moments, after being burst, I take stock of my options. Do I own any rope? My belt is unlikely to be strong enough. My sheets are dirty, so that would be embarrassing. I live on the second floor of my building. I certainly don’t own a gun.
But those moments soon terrify me, planning my own death like laundry. It is enough, I think, to terrorize myself into repulsion at the thought of my demise. I’m terrified that, one day, this repulsion won’t come. I will know it’s coming, and will plan it precisely. Can you imagine? I can. Akerman’s No Home Movie shows the significance of anchors. Of course, you cannot risk such dependency that the loss of your anchor means your own desolation follows. But anchors won’t let you feel alone. I cling to mine.
None of these examples, though, are truly able to represent ideation as it is actually experienced. I’m not convinced it is something that can be translated into an artistic medium, let alone expressed or communicated in a way that makes sense and is understandable by a third party, someone not privy to the inner-workings of my mind. I’m struck by the realization that our media does not necessarily have a responsibility to strive for that kind of articulation.
But if we’re going to spend so much time with suicide in our entertainment, as I believe we should, I do believe that we are owed an honest reckoning with what ideation is and how storytellers can avoid using it in dangerous ways. Life with ideation is a war, one that will not end, and we can see elements of its processing in films like The Fire Within, Melancholia, and No Home Movie. The challenge is finding the right way to expose what is inside, to render the internal in external terms.
This is what storytellers do, we should remember. Emotions, feelings, thoughts, intimate ephemera are all exorcised into something expressive, intended to be shared with others, to make them feel less alone about whatever feeling they may be dealing with. Suicidal ideation is ugly, incomprehensible, and a central tenet of my daily life and routine. Show me this quotidian conflict. I need it. It’s a reminder to keep living.
Jake Pitre is a freelance writer and academic based in Ottawa, Ontario. His work has appeared in Pitchfork, Real Life, Buzzfeed News, the Globe and Mail, Lapham's Quarterly, the Outline, and Hazlitt.
If we’re going to spend so much time with suicide in pop culture, I do believe we are owed an honest reckoning with what ideation is, as well as depictions that are truthful rather than dangerous.
If we’re going to spend so much time with suicide in pop culture, I do believe we are owed an honest reckoning with what ideation is, as well as depictions that are truthful rather than dangerous.
If we’re going to spend so much time with suicide in pop culture, I do believe we are owed an honest reckoning with what ideation is, as well as depictions that are truthful rather than dangerous.