All Nonfiction
- Bullying
- Books
- Academic
- Author Interviews
- Celebrity interviews
- College Articles
- College Essays
- Educator of the Year
- Heroes
- Interviews
- Memoir
- Personal Experience
- Sports
- Travel & Culture
All Opinions
- Bullying
- Current Events / Politics
- Discrimination
- Drugs / Alcohol / Smoking
- Entertainment / Celebrities
- Environment
- Love / Relationships
- Movies / Music / TV
- Pop Culture / Trends
- School / College
- Social Issues / Civics
- Spirituality / Religion
- Sports / Hobbies
All Hot Topics
- Bullying
- Community Service
- Environment
- Health
- Letters to the Editor
- Pride & Prejudice
- What Matters
- Back
Summer Guide
- Program Links
- Program Reviews
- Back
College Guide
- College Links
- College Reviews
- College Essays
- College Articles
- Back
dear diary, she is dead
***Disclaimer: content contains suicide***
dear diary,
i wish i had been gifted with bliss.
i wish i could open my eyes to the smiling sun every morning
and giddily accept the world as it is, not wasting
a precious moment to think about everything
and anything bad.
some say bliss isn’t worth it, that once you see and
accept the troubles of humankind,
the acceptance is even sweeter.
but is it worth that lifetime of struggle?
i say no, personally. the struggle to achieve acceptance is
a long, difficult journey, worse than words can possibly describe.
first, there is a long period of intense depression that hits
you once you have the first epiphany of what life and society are,
then comes a rush of worthlessness when accepting
there isn’t much you can do.
if you escape both of those stages,
acceptance is your well deserved award.
here’s the funny part. you only get to live
in acceptance for a tiny fraction of your life,
the part near death that couldn’t possibly
change the path of the bulk of your sad life.
hahaha.
i’m at the stage where i feel worthless accepting everything
as it is. fortunately, i am past those years of
feeling too miserable to do my favorite things,
despising my family and friends,
and desperately wanting my body in a coffin
miles under the dewy grass. now that i am at
stage two, i really don’t think i can do it over again.
i don’t have the energy or the willpower.
more importantly, i can’t sit back and
let the meaninglessness of life be the truth.
i can’t accept that we are born and bred to work
as automatons in order to graduate and rise in our job
standings to even more tireless positions. i can’t even accept
the lifestyles of all play, no work as constant play ever so quickly
numbs your happiness, or those who work tirelessly to be known.
they will inevitably be forgotten once humans die out and the earth
is scorched and then their legacies they worked so hard for will be
pointless.
why are we put on earth to live like this?
i’m ending it now by my choice,
not because i want to but because i have to.
i never understood why people fear death.
death is the unknown realm, maybe the freeness
we all need. so why not take the chances
before it’s too late?
i have nothing to lose.
she is
a good-- sorry. she, she was a good kid:
naturally brilliant, incredibly curious,
unbridled with enthusiasm even from a young age.
she always had the sweetest smile on her face
and the most charming laugh on the
tip of her tongue. she took the most challenging
classes she could and maintained near perfect marks,
had a lovely group of friends-- and was generally
well liked at school-- and excelled
in a plethora of extracurricular activities.
i never knew that i would wake up to this girl
just hanging. hanging lifeless, from-- from the
rafters in her room. i never expected this
pure girl to have suicidal thoughts. i never thought i would
have to live to see the day my own child dies before my eyes.
she was always so happy and maybe that in itself
should’ve raised my suspicions that she was hiding
something deeper. but parents never jump to that
conclusion because they are happy when their kids are happy.
i can’t help but to think this is all my fault,
not consoling her when she needed it.
i don’t think i could’ve provided
the help she needed because her thoughts were far past
my comprehension and that breaks my heart since i
couldn’t do the one duty i am supposed to do as a mother:
care for my child.
the things she could’ve done, all the
possibilities that could’ve sprouted from
her being haven’t left my mind since the day
she died. she could’ve been the valedictorian. she
could’ve gotten her dream career as a defense lawyer.
she could’ve defended innocent people, saved them from a
life of horror, gave the people their much needed justice. she could’ve
married and had a husband and some children. she could’ve provided a man
with the most happiness in the world and brought new lives of wonder and joy into this world.
she could’ve done great things.
dead.
my sister is dead. the only other person
crafted from the same blood, flesh and bone,
the only person who truly understood me, really
loved me with all her might, is a dead girl.
i couldn’t cry when i saw her
because it was impossible
for me to register that my big sister
was just a concept. i sat in shock for days,
until outside my window i saw
two young sisters walking in the street.
it then occurred to me that i will never get
to her hear voice or listen to her
laugh or see her smile ever again.
then i cried and cried and cried til
i couldn’t breathe or see out of my eyes or talk.
i wanted to stop crying, so badly, because
crying over her life was an understatement
and those tears wouldn’t bring her back or patch my broken heart,
yet tears kept rolling down my cheeks.
i can’t accept her death because in my mind,
that would associate me with giving up on her spirit,
with being compliant with her death.
after i saw her last words, as hard as it was,
i accepted that she never wanted your life, she wanted to be free
from the bounds of humanity. that’s when i finally understood the real her,
when it was too late. when her truth was already cut short.
Similar Articles
JOIN THE DISCUSSION
This article has 0 comments.
Visit https://www.teenink.com/HealthResources if you or a loved one is feeling depressed, overwhelmed or suicidal.
Christina is a junior at Hathaway Brown School in Shaker Heights, OH. In her free time, she likes to play violin and ice hockey, experiment with new types of writing-- specifically humor that isn’t all that funny and playwriting-- and is a huge classical music nerd. Her work has been recognized by Scholastic Art and Writing Awards and The Incandescent Review.