Indiana Black Male Suicides Leave Survivors Without Closure

The American Council for Suicide Prevention said in 2022, firearms were the most common method used for suicide, followed by suffocation including hangings, and poisoning including drug overdoses. Photo from Adobe Stock.
By Terri Dee
Indiana News Service

INDIANA — June is Men’s Health Awareness Month. Mental health professionals noted suicide rates are up and can be linked to the loss of a loved one or economic pressures.

An American Psychological Association report showed suicide is higher among Black males, leaving survivors questioning if they missed signs, are to blame or could have helped prevent the suicide.

B. Randal Horton, licensed clinical psychologist and owner of Epiphany Behavioral Services in Indianapolis, said in conversations with people who have contemplated suicide, their statements reflect despair.

“There’s a strong sense of feeling helpless and hopeless,” Horton explained. “‘No matter how much I try, I’m not able to get out of this pain that I’m in,’ and ‘One of the few choices I think I have is whether I live or die.’ And then of course, there’s a misperception somehow if you die, wherever you go, or happens after, ‘There’s going to be better than what you are.'”

Childhood trauma can produce shame, guilt and a negative self-image people often carry into adulthood. Horton pointed out such feelings can interfere with the ability to self-regulate emotions and it can lead to isolation. A National Library of Medicine report of a University of Georgia study identified childhood adversity and the effects of racial discrimination as two key factors affecting Black men’s mental health.

Horton added family, work or spousal issues can factor into suicide risk. For Black males, it can also be the absence of a clear cultural definition of manhood and the expectations it carries for boys becoming men. Horton explained young men are often left with no option but to adopt someone else’s “poor representation” of masculinity.

“A lot of that has to do with controlling emotions, avoiding emotional expression, focusing on maybe more materialistic things,” Horton emphasized. “To an extent some of that could be good, but I think it could get overblown.”

Horton supports educating men on how to connect to and express their emotions. He warned against men obsessing over the stereotypes of being a provider, protector or procreator. The inability to meet stereotypes can create depression and spur thoughts of suicide to deal with the stresses.

If you are in crisis or know someone who is, call or text the National Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 988.

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