Night falls fast, p.33

Night Falls Fast, page 33

 

Night Falls Fast
Select Voice:
Brian (uk)
Emma (uk)  
Amy (uk)
Eric (us)
Ivy (us)
Joey (us)
Salli (us)  
Justin (us)
Jennifer (us)  
Kimberly (us)  
Kendra (us)
Russell (au)
Nicole (au)



Larger Font   Reset Font Size   Smaller Font  

  35 People, when manic or depressed: C. Hammen, “Generation of Stress in the Course of Unipolar Depression,” Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 100 (1991): 555–561; X.-J. Cui and G. E. Vaillant, “Does Depression Generate Negative Life Events?” Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 185 (1997): 145–150.

  36 no consistent strong relationship: R. D. Goldney and P. W. Burvill, “Trends in Suicidal Behaviour and Its Management,” Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 14 (1980): 1–15; D. M. Shepherd and B. M. Barraclough, “Work and Suicide: An Empirical Investigation,” British Journal of Psychiatry, 136 (1980): 469–478; S. Platt, “Unemployment and Suicidal Behaviour: A Review of the Literature,” Social Science and Medicine, 19 (1984): 93–115; H. J. Cormier and G. L. Klerman, “Unemployment and Male-Female Labor Force Participation as Determinants of Changing Suicide Rates of Males and Females in Quebec,” Social Psychiatry, 20 (1985): 109–114; A. Beautrais, P. R. Joyce, and R. T. Mulder, “Unemployment and Serious Suicide Attempts,” Psychological Medicine, 28 (1998): 209–218.

  37 Most research finds: G. W. Brown and J. L. T. Birley, “Crises and Life Changes and the Onset of Schizophrenia,” Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 9 (1968): 203–214; A. Ambelas, “Psychologically Stressful Life Events in the Precipitation of Manic Episodes,” British Journal of Psychiatry, 135 (1979): 15–21; D. L. Dunner, V. Patrick, and R. R. Fieve, “Life Events and Onset of Bipolar Disorder,” American Journal of Psychiatry, 136 (1979): 508–511; A. Ambelas, “Life Events and Mania: A Special Relationship?” British Journal of Psychiatry, 150 (1987): 235–240; R. Day, J. A. Neilsen, A. Korten, et al., “Stressful Life Events Preceding the Acute Onset of Schizophrenia: A Cross-National Study from the World Health Organization,” Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry, 11 (1987): 123–206; A. Ellicott, C. Hammen, M. Gitlin, G. Brown, and K. Jamison, “Life Events and Course of Bipolar Disorder,” American Journal of Psychiatry, 147 (1990): 1194–1198; F. K. Goodwin and K. R. Jamison, Manic-Depressive Illness (New York: Oxford University Press, 1990); P. Bebbington, S. Wilkins, P. Jones, A. Foerster, R. Murray, B. Toone, and S. Lewis, “Life Events and Psychosis: Initial Results from the Camberwell Collaborative Psychosis Study,” British Journal of Psychiatry, 162 (1993): 72–79.

  38 although the influence: R. M. Post, D. Rubinow, and J. C. Ballenger, “Conditioning and Sensitisation in the Longitudinal Course of Affective Illness,” British Journal of Psychiatry, 149 (1986): 191–201; R. M. Post, “Transduction of Psychosocial Stress into the Neurobiology of Recurrent Affective Disorder,” American Journal of Psychiatry, 149 (1992): 999–1010.

  39 Patients with mood disorders: A. Breier, “Stress, Dopamine, and Schizophrenia: Evidence for a Stress-Diathesis Model,” in C. M. Mazure, ed., Does Stress Cause Psychiatric Illness? (Washington, D.C.: American Psychiatric Press, 1995), pp. 67–86; B. P. Dohrenwend, P. E. Shrout, B. G. Link, A. E. Skodol, and A. Stueve, “Life Events and Other Possible Psychosocial Risk Factors for Episodes of Schizophrenia and Major Depression: A Case-Control Study,” in Mazure, ed., Does Stress Cause Psychiatric Illness?, pp. 43–65.

  40 Psychologist Sherry Johnson: S. L. Johnson and I. Miller, “Negative Life Events and Time to Recovery from Episodes of Bipolar Disorder,” Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 106 (1997): 449–457.

  41 Sudden heartbreak: E. S. Paykel and D. Dowlatshahi, “Life Events and Mental Disorder,” in S. Fisher and J. Reason, eds., Handbook of Life Stress, Cognition, and Health (New York: J. Wiley and Sons, 1988), pp. 241–263; M. Heikkinen, H. Aro, and J. Lönnqvist, “Life Events and Social Support in Suicide,” Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 23 (1993): 343–358; E. Isometsä, M. Heikkinen, M. Henriksson, H. Aro, and J. Lönnqvist, “Recent Life Events and Completed Suicide in Bipolar Affective Disorder: A Comparison with Major Depressive Suicides,” Journal of Affective Disorders, 33 (1995): 99–106.

  42 Difficulties and conflicts: G. E. Murphy and E. Robins, “Social Factors in Suicide,” Journal of the American Medical Association, 199 (1967): 303–308; G. E. Murphy, J. W. Armstrong, S. L. Hermele, J. R. Fischer, and W. W. Clendenin, “Suicide and Alcoholism: Interpersonal Loss Confirmed as a Predictor,” Archives of General Psychiatry, 36 (1979): 65–69; G. E. Murphy, “Suicide in Alcoholism,” in A. Roy, ed., Suicide (Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins, 1986), pp. 89–96; C. L. Rich, R. C. Fowler, L. A. Fogarty, and D. Young, “San Diego Suicide Study: III. Relationship Between Diagnoses and Stressors,” Archives of General Psychiatry, 45 (1988): 589–592.

  43 Sometimes the reasons: T. F. Dugan and M. L. Belfer, “Suicide in Children,” in D. Jacobs and H. N. Brown, eds., Suicide: Understanding and Responding: Harvard Medical School Perspectives (Madison, Conn.: International Universities Press, 1990), pp. 201–220, p. 201.

  44 In a large Finnish study: M. Heikkinen, H. Aro, and J. Lönnqvist, “The Partners’ Views on Precipitant Stressors in Suicide,” Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 85 (1992): 380–384.

  45 Young or adolescent boys: D. Shaffer, “Suicide in Childhood and Adolescence,” Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 15 (1974): 275–291; C. L. Rich, D. Young, and R. C. Fowler, “San Diego Suicide Study: I. Young vs. Old Subjects,” Archives of General Psychiatry, 43 (1986): 577–582; D. J. Poteet, “Adolescent Suicide: A Review of 87 Cases of Completed Suicide in Shelby County, Tennessee,” American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology, 8 (1987): 12–17; D. A. Brent, J. A. Perper, C. E. Goldstein, D. J. Kolke, M. J. Allan, C. J. Allmen, and J. P. Zelenak, “Risk Factors for Adolescent Suicide: A Comparison of Adolescent Suicide Victims with Suicidal Inpatients,” Archives of General Psychiatry, 45 (1988): 581–588; H. H. Hoberman and B. D. Garfinkel, “Completed Suicide in Youth,” Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 33 (1988): 494–504; D. A. Brent, J. A. Perper, G. Moritz, M. Baugher, C. Roth, L. Balach, and J. Schweers, “Stressful Life Events, Psychopathology, and Adolescent Suicide: A Case Control Study,” Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 23 (1993): 179–187; L. Davidson, M. L. Rosenberg, J. A. Mercy, J. Franklin, and J. T. Simmons, “An Epidemiologic Study of Risk Factors in Two Teenage Suicide Clusters,” Journal of the American Medical Association, 262 (1989): 2687–2692; M. Marttunen, H. M. Aro, and J. K. Lönnqvist, “Precipitant Stressors in Adolescent Suicide,” Journal of the Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 32 (1993): 1178–1183; M. S. Gould, P. Fisher, M. Paridas, M. Flory, and D. Shaffer, “Psychosocial Risk Factors of Child and Adolescent Completed Suicide,” Archives of General Psychiatry, 53 (1996): 1155–1162.

  46 David Shaffer: D. Shaffer, “Suicide in Childhood and Adolescence,” Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 15 (1974): 275–291; M. Shafii, S. Carrigan, J. R. Whittinghill, and A. Derrick, “Psychological Autopsy of Completed Suicide in Children and Adolescents,” American Journal of Psychiatry, 142 (1985): 1061–1064; R. C. Fowler, C. L. Rich, and D. Young, “San Diego Suicide Study: II. Substance Abuse in Young Cases,” Archives of General Psychiatry, 43 (1986): 962–965; D. Shaffer, A. Garland, M. Gould, P. Fisher, and P. Trautman, “Preventing Teenage Suicide: A Critical Review,” Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 27 (1988): 675–687; D. A. Brent, J. A. Perper, C. E. Goldstein, D. J. Kolke, M. J. Allan, C. J. Allman, and J. P. Zelenak, “Risk Factors for Adolescent Suicide: A Comparison of Adolescent Suicide Victims with Suicidal Inpatients,” Archives of General Psychiatry, 45 (1988): 581–588; D. Shaffer, “The Epidemiology of Teen Suicide: An Examination of Risk Factors,” Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 49 (1988): 36–41; M. Shaffi, J. Steltz-Lenarsky, A. M. Derrick, C. Beckner, and R. Whittinghill, “Comorbidity of Mental Disorders in the Post-Mortem Diagnosis of Completed Suicide in Children and Adolescents,” Journal of Affective Disorders, 15 (1988): 227–233; B. Runeson, “Mental Disorders in Youth Suicide: DSM-III-R Axes I and I,” Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 79 (1989): 490–497; F. E. Crumley, “Substance Abuse and Adolescent Suicidal Behavior,” Journal of the American Medical Association, 263 (1990): 3051–3056; M. Kovacs, D. Goldston, and C. Gatsonis, “Suicidal Behaviors and Childhood-Onset Depressive Disorders: A Longitudinal Investigation,” Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 32 (1993): 8–20; M. J. Marttunen, H. M. Aro, M. M. Henriksson, and J. K. Lönnqvist, “Antisocial Behaviour in Adolescent Suicide,” Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 89 (1994): 167–173; D. Shaffer, M. S. Gould, P. Fisher, P. Trautman, D. Moreau, M. Kleinman, and M. Flory, “Psychiatric Diagnosis in Child and Adolescent Suicide,” Archives of General Psychiatry, 53 (1996): 339–348; B. M. Wagner, R. E. Cole, and P. Schwartzman, “Comorbidity of Symptoms Among Junior and Senior High School Suicide Attempters,” Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 26 (1996) 300–307; B. Grøholt, Ø. Ekeberg, L. Wichstrøm, and T. Haldorsen, “Youth Suicide in Norway, 1990–1992,” Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 27 (1997): 250–263.

  47 The fact that most parents: D. M. Velting, D. Shaffer, M. S. Gould, R. Garfinkel, P. Fisher, and M. Davies, “Parent-Victim Agreement in Adolescent Suicide Research,” Journal of the Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 37 (1998): 1161–1166.

  48 Recent research shows: M. M. Weissman, S. Wolk, R. B. Goldstein, D. Moreau, P. Adams, S. Greenwald, C. M. Klier, N. D. Ryan, R. E. Dahl, and P. Wickramaratne, “Depressed Adolescents Grow Up,” Journal of the American Medical Association, 281 (1999): 1707–1713.

  49 “Once … he wrote a poem”: Quoted in J. J. Norwich, Christmas Crackers (London: Penguin, 1982), p. 105.

  50 Neuropsychologists and clinicians: These studies are reviewed in “Thought Disorder, Perception, and Cognition,” in F. K. Goodwin and K. R. Jamison, Manic-Depressive Illness (New York: Oxford University Press, 1990), pp. 247–280.

  51 are less able: C. Neuringer, “Rigid Thinking in Suicidal Individuals,” Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 76 (1964): 91–100; M. Levenson and C. Neuringer, “Problem Solving Behavior in Suicidal Adolescents,” Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 37 (1971): 433–436; A. Patsiokas, G. Clum, and R. Luscomb, “Cognitive Characteristics of Suicide Attempters,” Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 3 (1979): 478–484; R. L. Bonner and A. R. Rich, “Toward a Predictive Model of Suicidal Ideation and Behavior,” Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 17 (1987): 50–63; B. C. McLeavey, R. J. Daly, C. M. Murray, J. O’Riordan, and M. Taylor, “Interpersonal Problem-Solving Deficits in Self-Poisoning Patients,” Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 17 (1987): 33–49; I. Orbach, E. Rosenheim, and E. Hary, “Some Aspects of Cognitive Functioning in Suicidal Children,” Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 26 (1987): 181–185; D. E. Schotte and G. A. Clum, “Problem-Solving Skills in Suicidal Psychiatric Patients,” Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 55 (1987): 49–54; A. Bartfai, I.-M. Winborg, P. Nordström, and M. Åsberg, “Suicidal Behavior and Cognitive Flexibility: Design and Verbal Fluency After Attempted Suicide,” Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 20 (1990): 254–266; J. Evans, J. M. G. Williams, S. O’Loughlin, and K. Howells, “Autobiographical Memory and Problem-Solving Strategies of Parasuicide Patients,” Psychological Medicine, 22 (1992): 399–405; W. Mraz and M. A. Runco, “Suicide Ideation and Creative Problem Solving,” Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 24 (1994): 38–47.

  52 Their thinking is more: V. J. Henken, “Banality Reinvestigated: A Computer-Based Content Analysis of Suicidal and Forced Death Documents,” Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 6 (1976): 36–43; Antoon A. Leenaars, Suicide Notes: Predictive Clues and Patterns (New York: Human Sciences Press, 1988); I. O’Donnell, R. Farmer, and J. Catalan, “Suicide Notes,” British Journal of Psychiatry, 163 (1993): 45–48.

  53 When suicidal patients: J. M. G. Williams and K. Broadbent, “Autobiographical Memory in Attempted Suicide,” Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 95 (1986): 144–149; J. M. G. Williams and B. Dritschel, “Emotional Disturbance and the Specificity of Autobiographical Memory,” Cognition and Emotion, 2 (1988): 221–234; J. Evans, J. M. G. Williams, S. O’Loughlin, and K. Howells, “Autobiographical Memory and Problem-Solving Strategies of Parasuicide Patients,” Psychological Medicine, 22 (1992): 399–405.

  54 When asked to think: A. K. MacLeod, G. S. Rose, and J. M. G. Williams, “Components of Hopelessness About the Future in Parasuicide,” Cognitive Therapy and Research, 17 (1993): 441–455; A. K. MacLeod, B. Pankhania, M. Lee, and D. Mitchell, “Parasuicide, Depression and the Anticipation of Positive and Negative Future Experiences,” Psychological Medicine, 27 (1997): 973–977.

  55 a sense of responsibility: M. Linehan, J. Goodstein, S. Nielsen, and J. Chiles, “Reasons for Staying Alive When You Are Thinking of Killing Yourself: The Reasons for Living Inventory,” Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 51 (1983): 276–286.

  56 “This is my last experiment”: Quoted in Ellis and Allen, Traitor Within, pp. 175–176.

  57 The drawing is taken from A. L. Berman and D. A. Jobes, Adolescent Suicide: Assessment and Intervention (Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association, 1991), pp. 133–134.

  58 Aaron Beck and his colleagues: A. T. Beck, M. Kovacs, and A. Weissman, “Hopelessness and Suicidal Behavior,” Journal of the American Medical Association, 234 (1975): 1146–1149; A. E. Kazdin, N. H. French, A. S. Unis, K. Esveldt-Dawson, and R. B. Sherick, “Hopelessness, Depression, and Suicidal Intent Among Psychiatrically Disturbed Inpatient Children,” Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 51 (1983): 504–510; A. T. Beck, R. A. Steer, M. Kovacs, and B. Garrison, “Hopelessness and Eventual Suicide: A 10-Year Prospective Study of Patients Hospitalized with Suicidal Ideation,” American Journal of Psychiatry, 142 (1985): 559–563; A. T. Beck, G. Brown, and R. A. Steer, “Prediction of Eventual Suicide in Psychiatric Inpatients by Clinical Ratings of Hopelessness,” Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 57 (1989): 309–310; A. T. Beck, G. Brown, B. J. Berchick, B. L. Stewart, and R. A. Steer, “Relationship Between Hopelessness and Ultimate Suicide: A Replication with Psychiatric Outpatients,” American Journal of Psychiatry, 147 (1990): 190–195.

  59 Jan Fawcett: J. Fawcett, W. A. Sheftner, L. Fogg, D. C. Clark, M. A. Young, D. Hedeker, and R. Gibbons, “Time-Related Predictors of Suicide in Major Affective Disorder,” American Journal of Psychiatry, 147 (1990): 1189–1194.

  60 “October 9th”: Excerpts from the journals of Dawn Renee Befano, October 1995.

  4 • THE BURDEN OF DESPAIR

  1 “One forgets emotions”: Graham Greene, A Sort of Life, p. 127. Graham Greene (1904–1991), like his grandfather, suffered from manic-depression. As a schoolboy, he carved open his leg and attempted to poison himself with deadly nightshade and aspirin; while an undergraduate, he played Russian roulette six times within a period of six months. “I have never understood,” he wrote in The End of the Affair, “why people who can swallow the enormous improbability of a personal God boggle at a personal Devil.” These events are described in Greene’s memoir, A Sort of Life (London: Penguin Books, 1962; first published 1951), pp. 64–68 and 92–96, and in Norman Sherry’s biography, The Life of Graham Greene, Volume I: 1904–1939 (London: Jonathan Cape, 1989), pp. 85–91 and 154–160. The direct quote is from The End of the Affair, p. 59.

  2 “Miserableness is like”: Graham Greene, letter to Vivien Dayrell-Browning, 1926 (quoted in Norman Sherry, The Life of Graham Greene, Volume 1, 1904–1939 [New York: Viking Penguin, 1989], p. 276).

  3 “I tried out other forms”: Graham Greene, A Sort of Life (London: Penguin, 1972; first published 1971), p. 64.

  4 “I felt nothing”: Ibid., p. 91.

  5 “I slipped a bullet”: Ibid., pp. 93–94.

  6 Study after study: E. Robins, G. E. Murphy, R. H. Wilkinson, S. Gassner, and J. Kayes, “Some Clinical Considerations in the Prevention of Suicide Based on a Study of 134 Successful Suicides,” American Journal of Public Health, 49 (1959): 888–899; T. L. Dorpat and H. S. Ripley, “A Study of Suicide in the Seattle Area,” Comprehensive Psychiatry, 1 (1960): 349–350; B. M. Barraclough, J. Bunch, B. Nelson, and P. Sainsbury, “A Hundred Cases of Suicide: Clinical Aspects,” British Journal of Psychiatry, 125 (1974): 355–373; O. Hagnell and B. Rorsman, “Suicide and Endogenous Depression with Somatic Symptoms in the Lundby Study,” Neuropsychobiology, 4 (1978): 180–187; J. Beskow, “Suicide and Mental Disorder in Swedish Men,” Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 277 (Suppl.) (1979): 1–138; O. Hagnell and B. Rorsman, “Suicide in the Lundby Study: A Comparative Investigation of Clinical Aspects,” Neuropsychobiology, 5 (1979): 61–73; R. Chynoweth, J. I. Tonge, and J. Armstrong, “Suicide in Brisbane—A Retrospective Psychosocial Study,” Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 14 (1980): 37–45; R. C. Fowler, C. L. Rich, and D. Young, “San Diego Suicide Study: II. Substance Abuse in Young Cases,” Archives of General Psychiatry, 43 (1986): 962–965; D. W. Black, “The Iowa Record-Linkage Experience,” Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 19 (1989): 78–89; B. L. Tanney, “Mental Disorders, Psychiatric Patients, and Suicide,” in R. W. Maris, A. L. Berman, J. T. Maltsberger, and R. I. Yufit, eds., Assessment and Prediction of Suicide (New York: Guilford, 1992), pp. 277–320; A. T. A. Cheng, “Mental Illness and Suicide: A Case-Control Study in East Taiwan,” Archives of General Psychiatry, 52 (1995): 594–603; T. Foster, K. Gillespie, and R. McClelland, “Mental Disorders and Suicide in Northern Ireland,” British Journal of Psychiatry, 170 (1997): 447–452; J. Angst, F. Angst, and H. H. Stassen, “Suicide Risk in Patients with Major Depressive Disorder,” Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, (Suppl. 2) (1999): 57–62.

  7 High rates of psychopathology: M. M. Weissman, “The Epidemiology of Suicide Attempts, 1960–1971,” Archives of General Psychiatry, 30 (1974): 737–746; D. J. Pallis and P. Sainsbury, “The Value of Assessing Intent in Attempted Suicide,” Psychological Medicine, 6 (1976): 487–492; J. G. B. Newson-Smith and S. R. Hirsch, “Psychiatric Symptoms in Self-Poisoning Patients,” Psychological Medicine, 9 (1979): 493–500; P. Urwin and J. L. Gibbons, “Psychiatric Diagnosis in Self-Poisoning Cases,” Psychological Medicine, 9 (1979): 501–507; R. D. Goldney, K. S. Adam, J. C. O’Brien, and P. Termansen, “Depression in Young Women Who Have Attempted Suicide: An International Replication Study,” Journal of Affective Disorders, 3 (1981): 327–337; K. Hawton and J. Catalán, Attempted Suicide: A Practical Guide to its Nature and Management (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1982); K. Michel, “Suicide Risk Factors: A Comparison of Suicide Attempters with Suicide Completers,” British Journal of Psychiatry, 150 (1987): 78–82; A. L. Beautrais, P. R. Joyce, R. T. Mulder, D. M. Fergusson, B. J. Deavoll, and S. K. Nightingale, “Prevalence and Comorbidity of Mental Disorders in Persons Making Serious Suicide Attempts: A Case-Control Study,” American Journal of Psychiatry, 153 (1996): 1009–1014; K. Suominen, M. Henriksson, J. Suokas, E. Isometsä, A. Ostamo, and J. Lönnqvist, “Mental Disorders and Comorbidity in Attempted Suicide,” Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 94 (1996): 234–240.

 

Add Fast Bookmark
Load Fast Bookmark
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Scroll Up
Turn Navi On
Scroll
Turn Navi On
183