This video guts me. It filets me in a way that makes me more aware of what I should be aware of and maybe what I shouldn’t be aware of as much.
QUESTIONS, CLASS?
Uhhhhh. . .if it takes a Village
. . .maybe it really takes a
BETTER ONE!
Who Cares - What Matters
This video guts me. It filets me in a way that makes me more aware of what I should be aware of and maybe what I shouldn’t be aware of as much.
in 2021
After a Two-Year Decline
The largest increases were among men—especially young men. The age-adjusted suicide rate rose by about 3% among males in 2021 and by 2% among females (although the increase among females was not statistically significant) compared to 2020. The greatest increase among males—8%—occurred among ages 15 to 24. In 2020, suicide was the third leading cause of death for people in that age group, and the second leading cause of death among people ages 10 to 14 and 25 to 34. Past research has found that the COVID-19 pandemic has been particularly difficult for young people, who have been found to be more likely than older adults to report symptoms of depression and anxiety during the crisis.
Suicide deaths in the U.S. decreased during the 1980s and 90s, but they have been generally increasing (except for slight declines during some years) for the last two decades. In 2021, just 1% fewer people died by suicide than in 2018, which is the year with the highest suicide rate since 1942.
Experts emphasize that the causes of suicide are complex, and there are many risk factors. Though the report does not speculate about what may have contributed to increased rates in 2021, other researchers have warned that fallout from the pandemic—such as job loss, increased stress, and social isolation—could create a “perfect storm” that may contribute to an increase in suicides.
If you or someone you know may be experiencing a mental-health crisis or contemplating suicide, call or text 988. In emergencies, call 911, or seek care from a local hospital or mental health provider.
(Read More: There’s a New Number to Call for Mental-Health Crises: 988)
Speech by Robin Williams. All footage is from Robin Williams Movies, in this case (It’s from the movie Jack (1996). ——–
You know, as we come to the end of this phase of our life, we find ourselves trying to remember the good times and trying to forget the bad times, and we find ourselves thinking about the future. We start to worry , thinking, “What am I gonna do? Where am I gonna be in ten years?” But I say to you, “Hey, look at me!” Please, don’t worry so much. Because in the end, none of us have very long on this Earth. Life is fleeting. And if you’re ever distressed, cast your eyes to the summer sky when the stars are strung across the velvety night. And when a shooting star streaks through the blackness, turning night into day… make a wish and think of me. Make your life spectacular. I know I did.
Uhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Am I the only one
embarrassingly so
who has to sadly admit again
how I fail
to see just how
S P E C T A C U L A R
L I F E
I S. . .
Maybe it’s not so much
WHAT’LL TAKE FOR ME TO RECOGNIZE
HOW SPECTACULAR LIFE IS
AS MUCH AS JUST NOT FORGETTING
T H A T
i t
i s. . . ?
It occurred to Pooh and Piglet that they hadn’t heard from Eeyore for several days, so they put on their hats and coats and trotted across the Hundred Acre Wood to Eeyore’s stick house. Inside the house was Eeyore.
“Hello Eeyore,” said Pooh.
“Hello Pooh. Hello Piglet,” said Eeyore, in a Glum Sounding Voice.
“We just thought we’d check in on you,” said Piglet, “because we hadn’t heard from you, and so we wanted to know if you were okay.”
Eeyore was silent for a moment. “Am I okay?” he asked, eventually. “Well, I don’t know, to be honest. Are any of us really okay? That’s what I ask myself. All I can tell you, Pooh and Piglet, is that right now I feel really rather Sad, and Alone, and Not Much Fun To Be Around At All. Which is why I haven’t bothered you. Because you wouldn’t want to waste your time hanging out with someone who is Sad, and Alone, and Not Much Fun To Be Around At All, would you now.”
Pooh looked at Piglet, and Piglet looked at Pooh, and they both sat down, one on either side of Eeyore in his stick house.
Eeyore looked at them in surprise. “What are you doing?”
“We’re sitting here with you,” said Pooh, “because we are your friends. And true friends don’t care if someone is feeling Sad, or Alone, or Not Much Fun To Be Around At All. True friends are there for you anyway. And so here we are.”
“Oh,” said Eeyore. “Oh.” And the three of them sat there in silence, and while Pooh and Piglet said nothing at all; somehow, almost imperceptibly, Eeyore started to feel a very tiny little bit better.
Because Pooh and Piglet were There.
No more; no less.
(A.A. Milne, E.H. Shepard)
This is National Suicide Prevention Month and it could be the most important piece of information I have ever posted in the past 7 years of THE CARING CATALYST:
If you are in crisis, call the toll-free National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255), available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The service is available to anyone. All calls are confidential. http://www.suicidepreventionlifeline.org
SUICIDE
Should never a month of it’s own
especially since every year there are more people who die
from suicide
Suicide is the 10th leading cause of death in the US for all ages. (CDC)
Every day, approximately 130 Americans die by suicide. (CDC)
There is one death by suicide in the US every 11 minutes. (CDC)
Depression affects 20-25% of Americans ages 18+ in a given year. (CDC)
Suicide takes the lives of over 48,500 Americans every year. (CDC)
The highest suicide rates in the US are among Whites, American Indians and Alaska Natives.
Only half of all Americans experiencing an episode of major depression receive treatment. (NAMI)
80% -90% of people that seek treatment for depression are treated successfully using therapy and/or medication. (TADS study)
An estimated 285,000 each year become suicide survivors (AAS).
There is one suicide for every estimated 25 suicide attempts. (CDC)
There is one suicide for every estimated 4 suicide attempts in the elderly. (CDC)
Nearly 800,000 people die by suicide in the world each year, which is roughly one death every 40 seconds.
Suicide is the 2nd leading cause of death in the world for those aged 15-24 years.
Depression is the leading cause of disability worldwide.
Suicide among males is 4x’s higher than among females. Male deaths represent 79% of all US suicides. (CDC)
Rates 1999 -2017 (CDC/nchs)
Firearms are the most commonly used method of suicide among males (51%). (CDC)
Females are more likely than males to have had suicidal thoughts. (CDC)
Females experience depression at roughly 2x’s the rate of men.(SMH)
Females attempt suicide 3x’s as often as males. (CDC)
Poisoning is the most common method of suicide for females. (CDC)
1 in 100,000 children ages 10 to 14 die by suicide each year. (NIMH)
7 in 100,000 youth ages 15 to 19 die by suicide each year. (NIMH)
12.7 in 100,000 young adults ages 20-24 die by suicide each year. (NIMH)
The prevalence of suicidal thoughts, suicidal planning and suicide attempts is significantly higher among adults aged 18-29 than among adults aged 30+. (CDC)
Suicide is the 2nd leading cause of death for 15 to 24 year old Americans. (CDC)
Suicide is the 4th leading cause of death for adults ages 18-65. (CDC)
The highest increase in suicide is in males 50+ (30 per 100,000). (CDC)
Suicide rates for females are highest among those aged 45-54 (9 per 100,000). (CDC)
Suicide rates for males are highest among those aged 75+ (36 per 100,000). (CDC)
Suicide rates among the elderly are highest for those who are divorced or widowed. (SMH)
Lesbian, gay, and bisexual kids are 3x more likely than straight kids to attempt suicide at some point in their lives.
Medically serious attempts at suicide are 4x more likely among LGBTQ youth than other young people.
African American, Latino, Native American, and Asian Americanpeople who are lesbian, gay, or bisexual attempt suicide at especially high rates.
41% of trans adults said they had attempted suicide, in one study. The same study found that 61% of trans people who were victims of physical assault had attempted suicide.
Lesbian, gay, and bisexual young people who come from families that reject or do not accept them are over 8x more likely to attempt suicide than those whose families accept them.
Each time an LGBTQ person is a victim of physical or verbal harassment or abuse, they become 2.5x more likely to hurt themselves.
If you are in crisis, call the toll-free National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255), available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The service is available to anyone. All calls are confidential. http://www.suicidepreventionlifeline.org
#mentalhealth #Friends #Friendship
JAMIE DUCHARME reported in the TIME MAGAZINE JUNE 20, 2019 edition news that we might really be able to do something about that’s merely at the end of our our own hands and beats regularly, steadily in our own hearts. . .
U.S. suicide rates are at their highest since World War II, according to federal data—and the opioid crisis, widespread social media use and high rates of stress may be among the myriad contributing factors.
In 2017, 14 out of every 100,000 Americans died by suicide, according to a new analysis released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics. That’s a 33% increase since 1999, and the highest age-adjusted suicide rate recorded in the U.S. since 1942. (Rates were even higher during the Great Depression, hitting a century peak of 21.9 in 1932.)
“I don’t think there’s a one-size-fits all reason” since there’s almost never a single cause of suicide, says Jill Harkavy-Friedman, vice president of research at the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, a nonprofit that supports suicide prevention research, education and policy. “I don’t think there’s something you can pinpoint, but I do think a period of increased stress and a lack of a sense of security may be contributing.”
It’s even more difficult to assign causes to the uptick, Harkavy-Friedman says, because it’s happening across diverse demographic groups. Men have historically died by suicide more frequently than women, and that’s still true: As of 2017, the male suicide rate was more than three times higher than the female rate. But female suicide rates are rising more quickly—by 53% since 1999, compared to 26% for men—and the gap is narrowing. For both genders, suicide rates are highest among American Indians and Alaska natives, compared to other ethnicities, and when the data are broken down by age group, the most suicide deaths are reported among people ages 45 to 64—but nearly every ethnic and age group saw an increase of some size from 1999 to 2017.
Youth suicide is becoming an especially pressing problem, with rates rising more rapidly among boys and girls ages 10 to 14 than in any other age group. A separate research letter published June 18 in JAMA found that youth suicide rates are at their highest point since at least 2000.
The JAMA letter doesn’t identify causes of the youth uptick, but first author Oren Miron, a research associate in biomedical informatics at Harvard Medical School, has two theories.
Opioid use, he says, has been shown to drive suicidal behavior among drug users and their children and families, and so recenthigh rates of drug abuse and overdose may be tied to rising suicide rates. The opioid epidemic may harm entire communities’ mental health, Miron says. “The entire community is bleeding. Kids see less of a future, they see more of their friends dying,” Miron says. “This might give us just one more reason to crack down on” substance misuse.
His second theory is that social media may be contributing to rising suicide rates, particularly for young people. “We know that now it’s used in younger ages and more intensively, and we also see some new apps that allow more anonymity, which in turn allows more bullying and more kids talking about suicide without their parents knowing,” he says. Heavy social media use may also lead to fewer meaningful in-person interactions—which can protect against mental health issues and suicidal behavior—and encourage unhealthy comparison with others.
One other possibility, says Harkavy-Friedman, is that suicide may be better reported and identified today than in years past, as people pay closer attention to mental health issues.
Though suicide is always complicated at both the individual and national levels, help is available. Experts encourage those struggling with suicidal thoughts to confide in a trusted friend or family member, speak with a health care provider, or seek care at an emergency room in cases of immediate danger.
The very first step in saving a Pulse
IS
FEELING
ONE
Reach OUT
Let your hand be the one
that’s FOUND by ONE
Who’s reaching out blindly
to grasp a lifeline
Let them know
when they can’t feel
THERE’S A TOUCH
(Y O U R ‘ S)
If you or someone you know may be contemplating suicide, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255 or text HOME to 741741 to reach the Crisis Text Line. In emergencies, call 911, or seek care from a local hospital or mental health provider.
(CNN)With two high-profile deaths by suicide this week and a new government report released detailing a rise in suicide rates in the United States, a topic that’s often avoided, judged or only whispered about is now on the tips of people’s tongues.
What we say or don’t say, and how we say it, makes a difference, according to experts. Our words matter to those struggling with thoughts of ending their own lives and to those reeling from loss owing to suicide. And in a world where silence or insensitivity often makes matters worse, it’s time to talk about our language.
Top of mind to many who care about this topic is getting rid of the phrase “committed suicide,” says Dese’Rae Stage, a suicide awareness activist who holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology and is trained in crisis intervention.
“It implies sin or crime” — we “commit” sins and crimes — “and pathologizes those affected. We suggest more objective phrasing, like ‘died by/from suicide,’ ‘ended their life’ or ‘took their life,'” she said. “If we’re using the right language, if we’re pulling negative connotations from the language, talking about suicide may be easier.”
A similar guideline actually has become the rule of thumb for major news organizations, including CNN, which often set the tone of public conversation around suicide.
Stage, who is also a photographer based in Philadelphia, is on a mission to humanize the topic and normalize discussions about suicide so we, collectively, can grapple with what the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ranks as the United States’ 10th leading cause of death. She’s the force behind a project called “Live Through This,” which collects the stories and portraits of suicide attempt survivors — of which she is one.
She thinks of how cancer was for so long referred to as “the C word,” how people were terrified to even mention it. Now that people speak openly about cancer, funding, research and avenues of support have grown exponentially.
She imagines a world where suicide isn’t an off-limits or taboo subject, where we can learn to be there for each other.
Because suicide is a topic Stage is intimately aware of, she offers advice to those who are concerned about someone they love and are struggling with what to say.
Be direct and ask, “Are you thinking about suicide?” she said. “When you’re able to say the ‘S word,’ you acknowledge it. It takes the power away. Then say, ‘What can I do?’ or ‘How can I help?’ They may not have an answer, but it’s worth asking.”
For someone in a suicide crisis, Stage says it’s OK to get even more specific with questions: “Do you have a plan? Do you have a method? Do you have a time frame?”
The goal, she explains, is to make a connection, engage in conversation, validate feelings and give the person a moment to breathe.
Dr. Jodi Gold, a psychiatrist and director of Gold Center for Mind Health and Wellness, echoed Stage’s advice when she said this on CNN’s New Day: “Talking about suicide does not cause people to kill themselves. Not talking about suicide might.”
If the person you’re worried about answers “yes” when asked if they’re thinking about hurting or killing themselves, Gold suggested that’s when you reach out to a therapist, a doctor, a family member — not necessarily an emergency room — because preventing isolation and fostering human connections are key.
Don’t rattle off the list of people for whom a person must live, Stage said.
“That often makes them feel worse if you’re doing it for them,” she said. “They’re thinking, ‘I’m a terrible person, and all these people would be better off without me.'”
After Stage tried to take her own life 12 years ago in small town Tennessee, her best friend took her in to her Texas home, offering a needed escape. She didn’t watch over Stage 24/7 but offered her a safe space — “and she gave me space in it.”
So often people “fragilize” those who’ve attempted suicide and treat them as children, Stage said. “You do need to be nurtured after a suicide attempt, but you don’t need to be treated like an egg.”
Those who have lost a loved one to suicide may be reluctant to share their stories “because doing so is usually met with gross insensitivity — as in ‘Why didn’t you do something?’ or ‘Didn’t you know he was mentally ill?'” said Tony Salvatore, director of suicide prevention at Montgomery County Emergency Service, a nonprofit mental health crisis service in Norristown, Pennsylvania.
That sort of reaction, casting blame — however unintentionally — on survivors who are already struggling with guilt is just one way the stigma of suicide gets perpetuated.
It’s human nature to want to identify the reason why people take their lives. But there is no one reason, and it’s unfair to expect answers, said Janet Schnell, an Indiana social worker who leads support groups and provides suicide prevention training. She lost her younger brother to suicide 20 years ago.
Likewise, asking for details about how a person died by suicide, especially in the immediate aftermath, is not recommended, she said.
Phrases that may be meant to comfort such as, “They’re in a better place now,” or “They’re no longer hurting,” can also hurt suicide loss survivors, who might wonder, Schnell said, “Wasn’t the place where we are good enough?”
The best response she got from a friend was this: “I’m here for you at 3:30 in the morning.” Having a person to call and cry to in the middle of the night, even if the words exchanged were few, made a difference.
When Schnell’s brother ended his life, people often avoided talking to her and her family members in person because they didn’t know what to say. Instead, she remembers going out to eat and hearing people whispering about their loss.
Avoiding the truth of suicide does a disservice, and if finding the right words to say are difficult, Schnell has an easy answer.
“I always say the best thing to do is say, ‘I’m sorry,'” she said, “and nothing more.”
BEING A CARING CATALYST
simply means JUST SHOWING UP
no words, no lectures, no behind-the-back-sneak-attack-vists with an entourage that rivals the worst taken photo bombs. . .
S H O W U P
if you’re going to commit anything during this time
Commit a massive-amount-over-the-top-severely-over-flowing-abundant-
UNCONDITIONAL ACCEPTANCE. . .
C O M M I T L O V E
(non-stop)
It’s a rough world out there. . .
and there are no easy answers;
no simple solutions
no short-cuts
which SHOUTS for us to even more frantically:
Hurt people hurt people. . .
especially themselves
I don’t keep those statistics. . .
over thirty-six years I don’t know how many Celebrations of Life I’ve conducted of those who have committed suicide. . .
Personally, I find only still-born or infant/children Celebrations of Life more difficult to do and
. . .to understand.
He literally kept his truck running as he pulled into a parking lot near a bridge and ran to it, full force, until reaching the middle and then without hesitation he hurled himself over the edge to the 200 foot plunge to a ravine below.
W H Y ?
She had just had a long, but painful relationship come to an end. She ran herself a bath, lined the tub with candles and framed pictures of them–dances, weddings, New Year’s Eve parties, vacations, the recently passed Christmas, kissing under a sprig of Mistletoe they both held above their heads. A CD they had compiled was playing as she laid back in the warm water and slit her wrists and ankles.
W H Y ?
She received a diagnosis of not just cancer, but cancer that has in fact, metastasized but decided not to let the disease take her life when she could control, the how, the when and the where. . .and did with some meds that she stockpiled and went to bed, to sleep forever one snowy night.
W H Y ?
Straw is lighter than a whisper without a breeze
. . .unless it’s the last one. . .
the one that makes whatever load born now incredibly
u n b e a r a b l e
Such a piece of hay was his
as he faced yet one more strand of straw with the news of possible incarceration
and he walked in front of an oncoming train.
W H Y ?
The studies will tell you that 90% of the people are dealing with a mental illness at the time of their death.
In the end,
because there is the end,
it really doesn’t matter if it’s because of depression or psychosis,
or an impulse,
or a crying out for help,
or a philosophical desire to die or because of terrible mistake made. . .
there’s an end;
I’ve just recently come across an idea I’d never heard or seen before
that spoke to me not so much in words, but
p u n c t u a t i o n. . .
It’s called:
THE PUNCTUATION PROJECT
and it’s purpose is the use the semicolon when a sentence could have ended
. . .but didn’t;
The movement is for anyone who has ever self-harmed
has a personality disorder
or has tried to kill themselves.
The semicolon is being used as a sign,
a symbol of hope.
It’s s h o u t i n g out:
“YOUR SENTENCE IS NOT OVER YET!”
The movement seems to be catching on because,
obviously it’s not just a Robin Williams-like celebrity that commits suicide;
Many are getting it ‘inked’ on their wrists or other parts of their bodies.
;
I think it’s growing on me. . .
this semicolon symbol. . .
and if it just allows one. . .
j u s t o n e
person to keep their sentence moving,
well then. . .
Mother Theresa once said:
“THERE IS MORE HUNGER IN THE WORLD FOR LOVE AND APPRECIATION THAN FOR BREAD.”
Indeed. . .
the World is one hungry place. . .
but you have all the food necessary to feed one
or all carrying that one, single,
devastating piece of straw.
It just may be a phone call,
whether one made to you or the one you share at the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255
or share: suicidepreventionlifeline.org.
There is no greater sentence in anyone’s book more powerful than the one that’s lived;
punctuated with exclamation points of
love,
acceptance,
compassion
and understanding—
all within your DNA.
H e a l e d p e o p l e h e a l e d p e o p l e
I F
P o w e r f u l W o r d,
isn’t it?
Maybe it’s not really a lie we tell ourselves. . .
or maybe it’s the worst one we actually can’t ever help but to tell?
If we could undeniably tell what another felt just by looking at them, it would make all the difference in the world
U N L E S S
It didn’t. . . .
Maybe it’s just all merely about
d i s t i n c t i o n s ?
Empathy is the capacity to feel deeply for someone despite the fact you don’t actually share the same experience.
Sympathy is the capacity to feel deeply for someone because you actually do share the same experience.
Compassion, sympathy and empathy all have to do with passion
—f e e l i n g–
for another person because you identify with suffering. . . .
Oh come one…this is almost beginning to sound like Charlie Brown’s teacher:
“Wah-Wah-Wah-Wah-Waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaah!
She lived four houses down the street from us.
She committed suicide.
It’s been a whole year now
and her house has been cleaned out, garaged saled and sold
now newly moved into. . .
Moot point, huh?
E s p e c i a l l y s i n c e
I never knew her name, never talked to her even one time.
I certainly never shook her hand or heard the sound of her voice
as she told a story about herself or someone in her family.
I passed her only a few times when we were both in our cars and we only slight-hand-waved each other. . .
B u t,
but that was it.
I wonder. . .
I wonder if just by looking at her,
both of us keeping the shade of our truest identities behind our respective sunglasses,
but somehow looking past that and really seeing her,
I could have had a clue that this was going to happen. . .
that she was going to kill herself and not actually be found for a couple of days. . . ?
I wonder even more, just by looking at her and having T H A T hint. . .if,
if I would have done something. . .even a mere:
“Hello, how are you?”
Maybe John Steinbeck was right:
“YOU ONLY UNDERSTAND PEOPLE IF YOU FEEL THEM IN YOURSELF”
Maybe it’s time that we see someone different in the mirror because someone different is standing in front of it?
I f
I F
I F
Truly looking at someone and absolutely knowing how they actually felt, would it really make a difference or would it just be another intellectual debate about the differences between Empathy, Sympathy and Compassion and who shows, does them the best?
I wonder. . . .
We have all heard the news…and it’s sad.
Was it suicide?
Were drugs involved?
Did the Cloud of Depression become Landscape and Horizon all in one?
We may never know.
It evokes all of the UNANSWERABLES:
Why. . .How Come. . .What for. . .?
I’ve dealt with many suicides and none are neat and none come with an answer–only a supposed excuse.
She left him…he left us; bi-polarism; depression, drug addiction; alcoholism; loneliness, brokenheartism; busted relationships; loss of work, loss of money, loss of dignity, pain, disappointment, un-met expectation, un-filled dreams, embarrassment, utter exhaustion…the reason, both matters and matters not.
In my first parish, it was in a small town of about 500 people. I learned behind every door, my door, too, is a pain so deep no imagination could ever fully conjure; that words can’t be attached, feelings can’t be shared or begun to be understood and that the best of intentions, the purest of forms of love, the divine gift of Presence–none of it is ever enough, which causes an entirely different kind of pain, emptiness and ineptness.
It’s not for lack of attempt, care, empathy, love or compassion, but sometimes we just can never know the pain and the battles others are fighting–especially those who seem to have “the world by the tail on a downhill slide.” (A quote from a friend who killed himself after one more time of swearing to never do heroin again and to guarantee it, he found himself at the end of a rope).
If there’s one common painful denominator it just may be that the power of addiction and the desolation of depression DO NOT DISCRIMINATE BY HOW FULL YOUR POCKETS ARE OR HOW FAMOUSLY RECOGNIZED YOU ARE ANY WHERE IN THE WORLD.
I was very conflicted as to which film clip to use…because I’ve used several in the presentations I do.
I was very tempted to put in his clip from Patch Adams where he tearfully extols a medical board that when “You treat a disease, you win, you lose, but when you treat a Person, I guarantee you, YOU WIN!”
I was just as tempted to use the Park Bench scene from his Oscar winning movie, GOOD WILL HUNTING with Matt Damon.
I chose, DEAD POET’S SOCIETY because of the fate of an eventual death for all of us, it seemed fitting.
I don’t believe THE SEIZING is in vain. Of course we Seize until we don’t, we can’t and then, well then, I’d like to think we are CARPE’D in the most profound and purest Sense.
When I was growing up, I was always taught that Suicide was a Sin and that you will go to Hell without passing GO or Collecting $200.00.
That it was a Permanent Solution to a Temporary problem. . .a Coward’s way out. . . .
I guess I now feel Personally and Professionally that I can’t intimately wonder, let alone state, “I KNOW HOW YOU FEEL,” or “I UNDERSTAND,” because I don’t and honestly, I hope I or my dearest loved ones never do.
So. . .hmmmmm, so I sincerely implore and actually do believe, that Robin, like so very, very many before him, now unfeignedly know THE PEACE he, they, were seeking.
And, and in that vein–may his, may their Peace, now be ours, too.