Last winter, my friend died. It was a Friday. The email came Sunday. If anything, the weather was a harbinger of the news. Dark skies and rain.
Anyone who has experienced loss is probably familiar with the five stages of grief. Denial came first, heavy handed, constricting my lungs. Somehow, my body knew that even breathing was a limp acceptance of a new reality that I didn’t want to acknowledge. In the span of five minutes, I felt like I had experienced the whole cycle: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance. Over and over as if I were stuck in a barrel rolling down a rocky cliffside. In the months that have followed, they come in spurts, mostly denial, late at night during bouts of insomnia. Why did you do this? Why did you leave me? But what has stayed, selfishly, constantly, though all other emotions, is anger.
I remember the first time a mutual friend voiced the sentiment. It was earlier this year, winter dancing on the cusp of spring. We were walking by Central Park when he asked how I was feeling. Confused, mostly. We reminisced on a piece of advice our friend liked to hand out: “Discipline is more important than motivation”, I recited. The sentence is on a sticky note near my desk, a reminder to keep writing when I don’t want to. “Yeah,” the mutual friend replied, bitterly. “Says the guy who quit life.”
Those words stopped me in the middle of the sidewalk. “Yes, but also, can we say that?” I yelped. Privately, I was relieved that someone else was thinking the same thing I was thinking. Because, while the sadness and depression and denial and acceptance came in bouts, anger had refused to leave me. It was the first emotion I felt every time I thought about everything. But I was also wondering—did I have the right to be? My friend, my mentor, was dead. Shouldn’t I just keep my memories close and be grateful? I wanted to be, but I couldn’t. I was reeling, feeling the pain of losing someone—the only person, I felt—who had believed I could be a novelist. I felt like when my friend died, that dream died, too. And then I’d start to feel shame—over my anger and my selfishness. It shouldn’t be all about me and my silly little ambitions. But in the end, isn’t it always about us, in relation to who we’ve lost? However, the gnawing feeling of unjustified anger has persisted, so I decided to tap a handful of experts to ask them: Do I have the right to be angry when someone I love dies by suicide?