Just hours ago, my local paper reported that Robin Williams was found
dead in his home in
Tiburon, Calif. The Marin County Sheriff Coroner’s
division said it suspected Williams had committed suicide by
asphyxiation.
Many famous people live in Marin County, which is also my home,
musicians and actors most notable among them. But none is as beloved a
native son as Robin Williams, and no death has hit harder.
I met Robin Williams two years ago, only long enough for a warm
greeting and gracious handshake, but I can tell you two things: He was
kinder than he needed to be to someone he’d never met, and he had very,
very sad eyes.
Here are the details, as currently known: Williams was found dead at
noon today after a 911 call was placed from the home at 11:55 a.m. The
Marin County Sheriff’s Office, the Tiburon Fire Department and the
Southern Marin Fire Protection District sent emergency personnel to the
scene, arriving almost immediately at 12:00 p.m.
Williams lived in the home on the Tiburon peninsula with his
wife, Susan Schneider, but it isn’t clear if it was she who discovered
him; reports say
only that he was found “by family.” Williams had wed Schneider, his
third wife, in the nearby Napa Valley on October 23, 2011. ”I lost my
husband and my best friend, while the world lost one of its most beloved
artists and beautiful human beings,” Schneider said in a statement
released by his publicist. “I am utterly heartbroken.”
The Mystery of Suicide
If Williams’ death does prove to be a suicide, it would raise many
questions. How could Robin Williams, with a life as successful as anyone
could wish for, be depressed enough to take his own life? Or, put even
more simply, how could someone who made us laugh so hard be so sad?
That Williams battled alcoholism, drug addiction, and depression is
no secret. The actor gave many candid interviews describing his
struggles with these demons, and his at least temporary successes.
Williams’ publicist, Mara Buxbaum, gave a short statement saying
that Williams had been “battling severe depression” but stopped short of
calling the death a suicide.
Last year Williams returned to television for the first time since his breakout hit Mork and Mindy, with a show called The Crazy Ones, in which he starred with Sarah Michelle Gellar as a father-daughter duo who ran an advertising agency. The show was cancelled after its first season due to low ratings and mediocre reviews.
It’s always tempting to look at a person’s life and professional
situation for clues to possible “causes” of suicide. But the truth is,
there is no cause of depression – it just is. And that’s the problem –
we still look at it as something linked to logic, something a person has
control over, when in fact it’s a mental illness (emphasis on illness)
that takes control of the brain much as heart disease or cancer takes
control over the body.
SAVE (Suicide Awareness Voices of Education) has some excellent information about depression and suicide,
which admirably avoids the us-vs-them attitude that pervades much of
the reporting and research on this topic. Like this explanation of why
people who are severely depressed don’t seek — or may not respond to —
help and treatment.
“Many people who suffer from depression report feeling as though
they’ve lost the ability to imagine a happy future, or remember a happy
past. Often they don’t realize they’re suffering from a treatable
illness, and seeking help may not even enter their mind. Emotions and
even physical pain can become unbearable. They don’t want to die, but
it’s the only way they feel their pain will end.”
Local Hero Bar None
Robin Williams was not one of those celebrities who hide, or surround
themselves with acolytes, or hire security guards to keep fans at bay.
He ambled into bookstores in Marin, dropped in on fellow comics and
musician friends backstage at local theaters, and visited Redwood High
School, from which he graduated in 1969.
Like many people who live in Marin and San Francisco, where Williams
also lived, I have a how-funny-is-Robin Williams?! story. Many years
ago, a very talented woodworker friend was hired to design and build an
entertainment center for Williams’ Pacific Heights home. He asked
another friend to help him deliver the piece, which was huge and very
heavy.
When the two arrived at Williams’ house, the actor greeted them
himself, then stood at the top of the stairs calling out directions as
they attempted to maneuver the ungainly piece of furniture up the steep
Victorian staircase. Williams went straight into his famous storyteller
mode, tossing out quips, doing voices, calling out absurd suggestions.
Laughing too hard to hold onto the cabinet, they had to set it down and
order Williams into the other room in order to complete the delivery.
But his comedic spark wasn’t enough. Depression won. There were 39,518 suicides in the U.S. in 2011, according to the CDC.
#RIP Mr. Robin Williams...
Via: Forbes
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