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Wednesday, August 13, 2014

How the lessons of ‘Dead Poets Society’ can help us understand suicide and depression

Source: www.washingtonpost.com - Wednesday, August 13, 2014 As we have absorbed the news that Robin Williams committed suicide at the age of 63, the conversation about his life and legacy has starfished in any number of directions, some of them outrageously ghoulish, many of them thoughtful. I have been struck by many of the pieces that focus on two ideas: the greatness of Williams’ performance in the period private school drama “Dead Poets Society” and attempts to render suicide and depression more comprehensible. (Buena Vista Pictures) “I stand upon my desk to remind myself that we must constantly look at things in a different way,” John Keating (Williams) told the boys in his high school English class in “Dead Poets Society.” But poetry does more than give us unique perspectives on familiar subjects. It can be a powerful pathway into the mind-sets of profound depression and suicidal ideation that are difficult to render rational to people who are trying to understand them from the outside, and that are flattened by all but the most incandescent prose writers . If we are to truly take Keating’s advice, we ought to examine the same medium that explains to us why we live for insight into why some people choose to die. Keating teaches his boys Alfred Lord Tennyson’s “Ulysses,” with its injunction from the Greek hero, “How dull it is to pause, to make an end, / To rust unburnish’d, not to shine in use!” He might have reached back to Ovid’s “Metamorphoses” and the story of Ajax’s suicide. InAll Related


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