In four years, I’ve come an extremely long way – both physically and mentally. But it hasn’t been easy.
Warning: This article deals with issues surrounding eating disorders and suicide and could be triggering from some readers.
On July 22, 2011, I arrived home from work to learn that my beautiful sister Alana had taken her life at the age of 23, after suffering from the effects of anorexia nervosa for almost a decade.
I remember in minute detail the painstaking ride to the police station that evening and laying flowers at the train station in the pelting rain. This was the end of Alana’s life, and life as I knew it. It was the beginning of my new life without Alana, which was, put simply – hell.
Read more: What really killed Alana Goldsmith wasn’t on her death certificate.
Since this tragedy, I have struggled immensely with the fact that I no longer have a future with Alana.
Unlike my friends, I no longer have the privilege of gallivanting around the world with my sister, watching her walk down the aisle, witnessing her journey through motherhood and selfishly knowing that she will be there for me when the going gets tough.
After Alana’s death, I felt empty inside. Absent was a sense of control of my life, which even now is often dictated by unpredictable and overbearing feelings of grief. Previously joyous occasions, for example, birthdays and Christmas, are now days of profound sadness. I no longer look forward to them, rather I dread and just hope to survive them.
Alana was receiving treatment at a specialist Eating Disorder Hospital on the day that she died. Given she was able to leave undetected twice that fateful day and her absence go unnoticed for hours, my family requested an inquest into her death.
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I do not cry. It is a barrier of mine. But sobs are resting in my throat. I lost my best friend to Cancer five years ago. We were too young for such a thing. I have also survived Anorexia Nervosa. In one piece, you have allowed me to explore my grief that I have been trying to shove down back into adolescence where it began, to remind me of the pain of Anorexia, and how it still tries in vain to tempt me. Thank you for showing me that it is okay to hurt, and that it is okay to do something beautiful with that hurt, free of guilt, in honour of our lost loved ones. Alana is a beautiful soul, as are you. Thank you for your courage, and for showing me it's okay to feel these things. That if it isn't okay, it can still be 'okay' x
Grieving Best Friend, it's more than okay, truly. <3 <3 <3 <3