Showing posts with label Suicide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Suicide. Show all posts

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Like the Raven

Dear whoever can see this text,
I need help.

It started a week ago, I know. Why not go to a hospital? How can I?

September 23, 2011
It began. I woke up in a cold swet, the taste of adrenaline and sleep in my mouth. The taste was potent and relentless. I couldn't remember my dream, but it must have been some shit. I was crying. My face was red.

I breathed in and went to the bathroom. When I looked in the mirror, I noticed my eyes were darker. It wasn't just the iris, but the pupil and whites, too. They were a kind of grey...a silver, if you will. Yes. Silver.

September 24 - 26
I can't sleep. My eyes are engulfed in black - not white, no blue iris...just black. I'm alone and scared shitless. My body aches. I can't take it anymore. There are lacerations forming on my shoulders. They're deep. They smell of blood and rotting flesh. I'm in so much agony.

September 27
Kill me, please. I'm choking up blood. The stains cover my chest, covering my breasts. I can't wear a shirt or bra any more.The pain is too intense.

September 30
I passed out in a pool of blood. I can barely breathe. These things, they're like wings. They stick out of the cuts. They're like a raven's wings - black, big, and devilish. I'm going to die - if not by this, then by suicide.

HELP.

(This story is credited to a person called Midnight Agony.)

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Out with a Bang

I've decided to kill myself.

I think it's important someone understands why, so I'm recording this video before I blow my head off.

The first time I remember it happening, I was nine. Johnny Weller and I were playing in his backyard. The sun was setting over his back fence, warm oranges and red shining through the bone-white slats like a creamsicle against pearly white teeth.

Johnny was the cowboy and I was the dirty redskin, stealing his horse. We ran around the swing set, him laughing and me whooping and threatening to scalp him. When he tripped, I ran to where he laid in the dirt, scooped up a handful of air, pointed my finger at his nose, and proclaimed, "I got your gun now! BANG!"

Johnny's head exploded in a tremendous blossom of crimson blood, slate-gray brain and chips of skull that sparkled in the setting sun. My hand fell to my side and I stared, open-mouthed, unable to understand what just happened.

Someone was screaming. At first, I thought it must be Johnny's mother, until she tore open the back door and I realized I was the one screaming. Johnny's mother crumpled against her son's headless body, adding her broken sobs to my horrified cries.

Johnny's funeral was the next week, closed casket. I forgot the sparkling light shimmering across the cloud of Johnny's blood. I forgot Johnny's mother rag-dolling my little body, begging me to tell her what happened to her son.

I forgot the sheriff telling my mother that a falling bullet, one of twenty-six cases each year, hit Johnny. I forgot my father's quiet talks with my mother about how they never found the round that spattered Johnny's smile across the grass. I adjusted. I coped. I forgot.

I didn't forget the next time it happened. I never played cowboys and indians again. In fact, I can't remember a single instnce of any shooting game played by little boys anywhere in my childhood after that.

However, I do remember the little girl in the park, pop pop popping her little nerf balls as she bounced around. She ran up to me, brandishing the weapon and shouting, "Hands up!"

I smiled and complied, dropping my sandwich in mock terror. I lifted my hands to the sky and petitioned for mercy. A true homicidal maniac in the making, she executed me with a flurry of staccato pop pop pops. I dutifully played dead, sprawling across the bench. She giggled and proclaimed, "Your turn. Shoot me!"

A sudden sensation of intense discomfort slithered up my spine. I thought of flowers, glittering crimson roses, wet with morning dew. She eyed me impatiently, apparently convinced she might have to nerf me once more to provoke a response. I liftd my finger weakly, pointed at her, and whispered, "Bang."

This time, I wasn't the one screaming. Her mother cradled her baby's dismembered limbs, frantically clutching an arm and a leg. I had pointed my finger at the little girl's belly button. The momen the word left my lips, she ruptured like a water balloon filled with punch and soaking bits of crimson colored fruit. Johnny Weller's decapitated body filled my vision, the slow red of sunset sliding down the front of his striped shirt. I ran.

I can't do this anymore. I got pissed at Laura yesterday and put my finger in my face to tell her off. I didn't even say it that time. In the end, I couldn't bring myself to sop my girlfriend's brains off the kitchen floor. I can't do this anymore.

All I have to do is put my finger against my temple and say it.

At least I'll go out with a bang.

(This story is credited to a person called Myth.)