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Originally posted by ShankS
Not nice hearing about people you once knew, having their lives ended in tragic events....especially when you can associate with them so easily as you were in the same class.
went through a few bad occasions like that myself, think one of the worst was a friends suicide. Went to infant school together and both to the same secondry school and stayed good friends throughout. When we left he went to a different college, me another, but we kept intouch.... then out of the blue my mum got a phone call from his mum, as they were friends too, that he'd killed himself ...jumped infront of a train one night.
He'd been going through a rough patch, no one even knew the full extent to what it was about about, or the cause. Even his parents wern't too sure as he distanced himself from many people. I was pretty shocked, especially as the place where the tragic event happened, was a train crossing over a foot path near the woods, we used to go to as kids and watch the trains.
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Wow! I knew a kid that did almost this exactly same thing! I knew the dude since we were in middle school but havent talked to him much since, then last year my dad (Who works with his dad) told me he jumped in front of a train and killed himself. Total shocker.
I've actually had to deal with suicides (Which to me is worse than accidental tragedy because its totally preventable) quite a bit more than the average joe. I'm 25 and I've personally known 5 people that killed themselves. (If you're doing the math, that's an average of one person I know killing themselves every 5 years.) There's the train one, a jumper (A co-worker), 2 hangers (A childhood friend and the older sister of a childhood friend), and an exhaust pipe carbon monoxide in the car one (My boss at the grocery store I worked at got cheating on his wife with the cashier. He couldn't bare the guilt I guess and never turned up for work again. They found him like 2 days later a few miles from his cabin, duct taped inside his Suburban with a hose to the exhaust pipe. It was the middle of summer and evidently the inside of the vehicle got up to like 400 degrees before they found him and most of his skin had boiled off so it was a closed casket.)
I also knew a guy a couple years ago that had his car break down on a freeway late one rainy night. He got out and tried to flag down someone for help, but all of the traffic was on the other side of the freeway. So he jumped the median and went over there to try and flag someone down except that he didn't quite make it. He got smeared by a 16-Wheeler in the last lane he was crossing. Needless to say he didn't make it.
It really sucks dealing with death all the time. In the last year I've had to be a pall bearer for 2 dead relatives too. (Both of natural causes, but still!)
The one good thing about people you know dying is that it makes you appreciate your life
that much more. As well as appreciate those around you more.