Healthcare Training Institute
- Quality Education since 1979
Psychologist,
Social Worker, Counselor, & MFT!!

Section 22
Essentials
in Treating Suicide
Question
22 found at the bottom of this page
Answer
Booklet
| Table of Contents
Get PRINTABLE format of this page
In the past several years, the New York University Press has published
a series of books on various aspects of psychiatry under the general heading of
"Essential Papers." Their most recent-the 15th in this series-edited
by John T. Maltsberger and Mark J. Goldblaft-is entitled Essential Papers on Suicide.
An exact listing of the 40 items contained in that bushel basket of intellectual
goodies is given in the table of contents. For Maltsberger and Goldblatt to put
forward such a list of the 40 essential papers on this complicated, vexatious,
and contentious topic is not only a feat of high scholarship, but also an act
of considerable bravery. It takes courage for two suicidologists, no matter how
impressive their own credentials, to tell their fellow suicidologists who is "in"
and who is not; that this is the list; that, bibliographically speaking, here
is what 20th-century suicidology is. They tell us in their introduction:
Our
purpose in this collection is to offer an array of papers that are psychologically
close to the suicide experience, or else throw light on that experience If these
papers are essential, it is because they deepen our grasp of the texture and color
of the inner lives and struggles of suicidal patients and the corollary challenges
they pose for those who treat them.
In a general sense, Maltsberger
and Goldblatt's book addresses the question, What clues to suicidal events-to
their etiology and mollification-can we glean from the psychiatric and psychological
literature published in the 20th century?
Here are some
of my reactions to the contents of the book- eschewing the topics of obvious
omissions and unnecessary inclusions-about groupings of papers, implications for
therapy, views of the suicidal act, and what we are supposed to learn about suicidological
theorizing.
After making obeisance to Freud's indispensable
1917 paper on "Mourning and Melancholy" in the preface-and saying that
they did not reprint it because it is easily available elsewhere-Maltsberger and
Goldblatt then reprint, with instructive comments, the 40 selections) chronologically,
beginning with Ernest Jones's 1911 paper relating suicide to birth and death.
Then follow important papers by Karl Menninger, Gregory Zilboorg, and two score
of other worthies including Robert Litman, Aaron Beck, Marie Asberg, Herbert Hendin,
and Jan Fawcett.
At first reading I felt overwhelmed by the
plethora of intellectual richness, but then I saw that the papers might sensibly
be divided among five categories: (a) papers about affective states; (b) papers
relating to psychiatric diagnostic categories, physiological changes, or demographic
indicia; (c) papers discussing the therapist or the family; (d) papers about the
biology or possible genetics of suicide; and (e) papers concerning psychodynamic
formulations. A few words about each:
1. Affective states.
These included papers touching on such topics as hopelessness, loneliness, anxiety,
depression, despair, fear, anguish, aggression, and anhedonia-11 such pieces.
2.
Diagnostic categories, physiological measures, demographic indicia. There
are around 20 papers in this category. They include papers centered on suicide
and schizophrenia, depression, alcoholism, melancholia, borderline disorder, panic
state, affective disorder, abnormal spinal fluid values, masochism, abandonment,
somatic illness, family history of suicide, preoccupation with death, special
vulnerabilities, lack of exterior resources, death fantasies, and poor reality
testing. Many of these papers seemed to hover around the spirits of the two Emiles:
Emile Kraepelin (alive today in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders) and Emile Durkheim's Le Suicide, which explored the power of the nomothetic
approach in suicide. It is not my opinion alone that these are 19th-century masterpieces,
but it is my belief, perhaps idiosyncratic, that they are both outworn and are
being systematically misapplied, almost a century later, in clinics, hospitals,
and other health management organizations everywhere.
3. The therapist,
the family. There are fewer than one handful of papers in this category; specifically,
papers on the role of transference in psychotherapy, on countertransference hate,
on the importance of consultation in treating suicidal patients, and on the role
of death wishes within the family. The importance of significant others and of
community resources is underrepresented in the technical literature on suicide.
4. Biology of suicide. in this category, two important papers are reproduced.
They are Alec Roy's "Family History of Suicide" and "5-HIAA in
the Cerebrospinal Fluid: A Biochemical Predictor?" by Marie Asberg and her
Swedish colleagues.
5. Psychodynamic formulations. By far the largest
number of papers-about 35 of them (remembering that some papers fell into more
than one category)-were discussions of some psychodynamic constellation that,
it is asserted, underlies the commission of suicide. It is alleged in serious
venues, mostly psychoanalytic journals, that suicide can be seen as related to
homicide, as associated with birth and death, as reflected in the wish to kill
and the wish to be killed, as murderous aggression toward the selL as revenge,
as spite, as reflected in fantasies of escape, as a discharge of aggression, as
a ritual phenomenon, as related to the wish to sleep, as fusion with the other,
as reunion with the dead, as a wish to be reborn, as narcissistic exhaustion,
as abandonment, as an unconscious wish to be eaten) as confusion of self and others,
and as atonement. In addition, suicide is discussed in terms of ambivalence, rescue
fantasies, its dyadic nature, its erotic elements, and death instinct.
All
of these formulations, a priori, might be true-or none might be true. It is certainly
food for thought, and they have sometimes been the main course in banquets of
psychotherapy, but I am not yet satisfied that the enduring proteins, carbohydrates,
and vitamins of suicide prevention are contained in that menu.
It
may well be that those 40 authors were not only examining very different parts
of the beast-the trunk, the tail, a leg-but that it was not an elephant in the
first place. It may have been a unicorn, in which case they certainly missed looking
at its distinguishing horn that, in its pointed convolutions, may contain the
magical elixir of knowledge.
Here is my summary of those
40 items contained in Essential Papers on Suicide: In the 20th century, suicidologists
(mostly psychoanalytically oriented psychiatrists) seem to have written about
four psychological aspects of suicide:
1. Fight. These
are papers on suicide as murder, aggression, rage, anger, spite, rejection, revenge,
the wish to kill. This thread has been overemphasized, in my opinion. Suicide
can be other than homicide; the principal emotional state can be other than murderous
rage.
2. Flight. These are papers on suicide as escape, rescue, sleep,
rebirth, reunion, the wish to die, and as an effort to escape unbearable consciousness.
This category represents the majority of my own voices on the principal meaning
of suicide.
3. Fright. These are papers on suicide as painful loneliness,
isolation) abandonment, hopelessness, anxiety, confusion, panic, psychic pain.
In general, important opportunities for remedial action lie in this category.
4.
Freight. These are papers on a family history of suicide, hatred in the family,
scapegoating, history of abuse, mental illness in the family, genetic vulnerability.
These are the onerous psychological burdens that one carries on one's shoulders,
none conducive to running life's race in the happiest style.
The
Maltsberger and Goldblatt book is important. The book itself is essential, but
like many essential items in life, it nonetheless leaves us hungering for other
templates, radically different approaches to suicidal phenomena. Some years ago,
responding to some needs I felt-order? understanding?-and in an effort to be a
more effective therapist with suicidal persons I was then treating at the University
of California, Los Angeles, Neuropsychiatric Institute (where I was a professor
for some 20 years), I prepared, on one sheet, a list of Henry A. Murray's psychological
needs-taken from Chapter 3, "Aspects of Personality," of Murray's monumental
Explorations in Personality. After a therapy session, I would rate the patient,
distributing exactly ioo points among the 20 need categories.
I
made these ratings after each session so that I could monitor the flow of the
therapy. This simple form-admittedly a profanation of Murray's 100 pages of finely
stenciled text-gave me a new format, a fresh conceptualization, another template
for understanding my patient's dialogues with suicide-what Murray had called "the
full Congress of the mind." I have always felt that the therapist's understanding
of a concept is propaedeutic to any consistent psychotherapy. Psychotherapy is
not just a hierarchical conversation; therapy goes much better if there is a clear
conceptual template in the therapist's head. I thought then and believe today
that I had found mine in Explorations in Personality.
In
retrospect, in almost every case I have ever seen, it appears that suicide
is pushed by pain; suicidal fantasies and acts are efforts to escape or put a
stop to the pain that flows through the mind. It is a special kind of pain, psychological
pain, the pain of the negative emotions-guilt, fear, shame, defeat, humiliation,
disgrace, grief, dread, woe, loneliness, hopelessness, frustrated love, fractured
needs, rage, hostility, and the perception that the pain is unbearable. For the
suicidal person, that psychological pain, that pain in the mind, that psychache,
has an intensity that pushes it into a special qualitative state; it is deemed
unbearable, intolerable, unacceptable; it has crossed a certain critical line
somewhere in the mind (see E. S. Shneidman, The Suicidal Mind. New York: Oxford
University Press, 1996).
These are some of the reflections
I could not have had if I had not been mesmerized and catalyzed by the cornucopia
of thoughts contained in Essential Papers on Suicide. From my own experience with
this endlessly stimulating volume, I cannot believe that any thoughtful reader
can peruse these two-score papers (and read the editors' thoughtful comments)
without significant inner growth.
- Shneidman, Edwin S., Comprehending Suicide:
Landmarks in 20th~Century Suicidology, American Psychological Association: Washington
DC, 2001.
=================================
Personal
Reflection Exercise #8
The preceding section contained information
about essentials in treating suicide. Write three case study examples regarding
how you might use the content of this section in your practice.
QUESTION
22
According to Shneidman, suicide is "pushed by" what? Record
the letter of the correct answer the Answer
Booklet.
Answer
Booklet for
this course
Forward to Section
23
Back to Section 21
Table
of Contents
Top