I don't
remember much about the days before my fall, but then again, there
wasn't much to remember. Depression doesn't usually lead to many
exciting memories. A lot of wall/ceiling/eyelid watching I think. I
do remember the pain, vividly. If I allow myself to, I can still feel
that empty ache in my chest. How utterly exhausting it was just
rolling out of bed, getting in my car and driving to that bridge.
I don't know
why I chose that bridge or even why I chose a bridge at all. There
are obviously quicker, less terrifying and less painful ways to end a
life, but a bridge over water is just so poetic. Jumping out into
life and realizing that life is not going to support me the way it
has for billions of others. Instead, I'd been tossed in the group
that life abandons, ignores, snubs, or at least that's the way I
felt at the time. Falling through the air, trying to grab hold of
anything but nothing is there. Finally crashing into the depths of
depression. The pain is overbearing and the utter sense of
hopelessness takes over as I sink further down and drown in my own
pathetic sorrows. As with all living things, death is the end. I
chose that bridge, I suppose, because of the symbolism and I think
because subconsciously I knew the fall wasn't high enough. Deep
down, I didn't really want to die.
I remember
standing, looking over the rail, into the waters and admiring the
beauty of it all. The slow-moving water was nearly black and dimly
reflected the street lights above. Shakily, I climbed to the top of
the rail and stood there for a few moments, letting the fear subside
into a reserved calm. I closed my eyes and exhaled a sigh of release
as I leaned out into the open air in front of me.
The milliseconds
it took for my feet to disconnect from the railing seemed to last
forever.
The cool night
air softly rushed past me.
It was all so
tranquil, that is until I crashed hard into the surface of the water.
And then I sank.
The shock and
pain of the suicide dive momentarily immobilized me. The shock
started to wear off first and with that came the realization, I'm
not dead. I could tell I was injured, my right arm probably broken
and useless but I was certainly not dead.
My eyes popped
open under the water as I also realized I felt more alive than I have
in the past few months, years, maybe ever! Right as I started to
struggle for the surface for my first breath in this new life, a pair
of arms wrapped tightly around me from behind. So ecstatic I was in
my newly discovered desire to live that I relaxed, allowing my savior
to propel me to safety. There was a pause, and then a searing pain on
the right side of my neck, like something had bit me. I started to
panic. Using my left hand, I tried to push away whatever aquatic
creature that was trying to foil my rescue. But it wasn't scales,
of the fishy or reptilian nature that my hand ran into, it was hair,
attached to what could only be a human shaped head and face. The
mouth of which was firmly attached to my neck.
The
arms of my assumed savior tightened their hold, crushing the little
air out of my lungs. I tried to fight it, to inhale even at the risk
of inhaling river water. Movement was becoming so difficult. My
anti-savior still attached to my neck, and the already
midnight-watery-dim world was getting dimmer. The last thing I could
see was a small puff of blood drift away in the current which finally
triggered my last thought, A
vampire? A mermaid vampire? Thank you, Life, for this last piece of
luck. A creature that shouldn't even exist kills me right as I
decide to... Everything
went black.
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