Prevention may be a matter of a caring person with the right knowledge baing available in the right place at the right time.

Dear Friends,
  Thank you for visiting.  I want you to know that you are in a safe environment.  I want to hear your story and listen to you and be there for you.  I created this site because after the loss of my father I had nowhere to turn.  I decided to create a site that had all the information and places to turn that I couldn't find in the days following my fathers death because I was to stressed and tired.  I decided to create a one stop "shop" to reach out to those going through the same pain and grief I was and still am nearly eight months later.  Suicide isn't like cancer where there are tons of foundations and support groups.  We truly are a secret society that no one wants to a member of.  Suicide isn't spoken of very much, it's branded!  But, you aren't alone...never feel alone!  I am not a doctor, not a therapist, all I am is a simple small town girl that lost her father in 2008 to suicide.  To those who have already contacted me, I think about you all often and thank you for your support and you have mine until we meet our loved ones again.
Hugs, Kelli

<a href="http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer">Flash Required</a>
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My Dad and I dancing
at my wedding to our
song, "What a Wonderful
World" by Louie
Armstrong and Kenny G.
Kelli Pedrick-Karlton

MY STORY
By Kelli Pedrick-Karlton

Late one January morning in 2008, I fell asleep on the sofa, something I rarely did and haven’t done since.  The kids and my husband were all over me and the house as I slept, but I managed to get a good nap in.  I was awaken to my house phone ringing, then my cell phone ringing, again the house, again the cell.  I thought it was my younger sister wanting me to cut my nephews hair.  I wasn’t ready to wake up completely so I didn’t answer the phone hoping she would just leave a message.  The phones kept ringing and eventually my husbands’ cell phone started to ring to.  My husband came over to me on the sofa and said, “It’s your Dad calling my cell…”  I knew something was wrong at that point.  I got up and looked at the caller ID’s and listened to voice mail after voice mail from my sisters telling me to call them there was an emergency.  I called my youngest sister back and she was hysterical, saying what sounded like to me, “I’m so mad at Dad I want to shot him!”  My sister and her nearly one year old son lived with my Dad and they often had their little disputes and she would call and vent to me – not this time.  What she was actually saying was, “Dad shot himself, he’s dead!”  No, no, no, is he dead, no, no, Ray, Ray, RAY, is he dead, no, Ray, RAY, No!  I fell to my knees in the kitchen, Ray quickly got the kids upstairs and came back down to me, he had figured it all out in his head what happened, I never had to tell my husband what had happened.  My sisters wanted me to get to his house, which was all they wanted me to do.  Ray got his father to come watch the kids and my neighbor came up to grab the kids till my father-in-law got to our house.  My neighbor didn’t’ know what was wrong, when I tried to call her she wasn’t home, her Mom answered the phone and a few minutes later she got home and her Mom told her something is wrong with your neighbor.  She couldn’t get me on the phone so she walked up, I opened the door and she knew something bad had happened, that was the first time I uttered the words, “My Dad killed himself”, I immediately got nauseous and ran into he bathroom and got sick.  My neighbor took the two oldest of our kids and we took the baby with us as I was still nursing him.  The drive to my Dads house felt like we weren’t even moving, like I was on a moving set and only the back screen was moving.  We pulled up and my sisters with their spouses, my cousins, my aunt, my Mom, my Dads cognitive therapist, and some neighbors were all outside, a state trooper guarded his front door, only the detective and coroner were aloud in and out of his house.  Neighbor’s walking their dogs walked by wondering what was going on as if they didn’t already know with a coroners truck parked out front, obviously someone had died inside that house.  It was a very warm January day for Delaware, in fact I actually remember not wearing a coat, I think it was partly because I was numb and in shock.  It seemed like everything around me was moving in slow motion and everyone was talking really slow like in a movie when the character is about the pass out. 

About 20 minutes after getting to my Dad house with my husband and the baby, our son needed to be changed and fed, so I went into my Dads neighbor/ friends house next door.  My Dad lived in a townhouse community.  Shortly after going inside, a lifelong childhood friend of mine showed up, ran in a held me, this was my first of many break downs to come!  After taking care of the baby, my friend was standing inside my Dads neighbors front door and as I started to approach the door she asked me to go sit down, I fought her and Ray ran in and asked me to go sit down that I didn’t need to see this.  They were about to bring my Dad out of his house.  I reluctantly sat back down and I am very grateful to this day I didn’t see him bring brought out of his house in a body bag on a gurney.  One less image I have in my head that is full of images I wish weren’t there.

After the coroner pulled away with my Dad, pretty much ruling it a suicide, the detective aloud us daughters and husbands in his house.  Before my Dad shut the door in his bedroom to take his life, he left his Will, funeral paperwork and a note saying, “don’t come in, call 911” which is what my sister did.  Once she called 911 – these are the details I don’t talk about, to personal what she saw and as a survivor would like certain details of one’s suicide to stay unwritten which is why I’m not going into the details of how he took his life, the bottom line is he was successful, it doesn’t matter how. Nearly 15 months later, I still cannot stomach hearing how another one’s loved one took their life.  I just think this is a very personal detail.

As we looked over the paperwork we cried, we knew he had a Will and we knew he had preplanned and prepaid for his funeral, so that wasn’t a shock.  What was a shock was the receipts that were next to his wallet for over $300 in prescription refills he just had filled three day before, finding pork chops in the refrigerator that he had taken out of the freezer that same morning for dinner that night, a case of 24 bars soap and razor blade refills, enough to last him a life time that he had just bought that week before at a wholesale store.  Nothing added up.  Did he plan this, did the depression take him over this January morning, what the hell happened!  We were so confused, in shock, unclear at what just happened.  We decided to go to my older sisters house, were my cousin ordered us some food, the sister of my childhood friend came up, my sister from New York had finally arrived.  It was like a dream or a really bad movie.  This wasn’t real, this didn’t happen, my Dad wasn’t dead, no way, my dad isn’t dead.  Why, how, what was he thinking, I don’t get it, was he thinking about us, of God I have to tell my two other children that their Pop Pop is dead, their Pop Pop who they loved dearly, they are only four and six, how will they take it, will they understand death…anger started to come over me, anger I had never felt before and I wasn’t sure what to do with it.  I couldn’t cry anymore, it hurt too much and I was dehydrated.  This isn’t real, what did he do, how could he do this to us!
The next few days are a blur; actually the next three months were a blur.  I really don’t remember to many things in 2008.  Many suicide survivors will tell you the same thing.  Two days after his death, we all met at the funeral home to make the final arrangements.  I felt like I was in a really bad episode of Six Feet Under and I did not want to be there.  The baby was still with Ray and I and we still had not told our other two kids, they just knew something was making Mommy very sad.  The funeral was the following Thursday, it was cold this January day.  We pulled up in the limo and as soon as I got out. I locked eyes on my Dads older brother who looked awful.  I ran over to him and he didn’t let me go the entire graveside service.  I remember during the funeral, looking up at my Uncle and I felt as if I was in my Dads arms, they looked alike, felt the same way and smelled the same.  It all was so unreal to me.  Ray was running around with our son trying to keep him quiet.  There were over 100 people, all in tears and in shock.  They say for everyone suicide at least 6 people are affected, in my Dads case, over 100.  Some old friends, old and new neighbors, co-workers, golf buddies, relatives, his cognitive therapist, who was very upset – told us that he has some patients that he thinks might commit suicide and others he doesn’t think will and my Dad was one of those.  He told us that he loved his four daughters, our husbands and his six grandchildren more than anything in the world and he is utterly shocked by my Dads death, not to mention countless other people from my Dads past that came to respect him and us daughters.  Some of you may be wondering where my Mom was in all this, we asked her not to come.  My parents divorced in 1996, and in that year I believe my Dad had one foot in the grave.  My Mom was his life, she came first in everything, and us daughter a very far second in his world.  She asked for the divorce.  In 2004 my Dad retired after 44 years.  He had everything, money, health, his daughters, son-in-laws, friends, a nice home, nice cars, golf and so much more – just not my Mom.  About three years before his death he became depressed, so depressed that he lived with us for three weeks while we got him help and on medications.  About 6 months later, he was fantastic, full of life, energy and just fun to be around!  He found a cognitive therapist that he really clicked with and was taking the right cocktail of medications.  He was the Dad all us daughters always wanted and our children were wreaking the benefits, it was too good to be true, I should have known.  Less than a year later, we lost him, not to death, to depression and never got him back.  It got worse and worse and worse.  He looked 10 years older each time I saw him, frail, small and tired.  I would tell my husband that I have a gut feeling I’m going to lose my Dad to depression – never thinking to suicide.  I thought he was going to give himself a heart attack or stroke from the stress of being depressed and fighting it so long and so hard.  My Dad would tell me he didn’t know why he felt depressed, he just was, he couldn’t understand it either and I certainly can’t having never been in depression, I just understand that it is a real disease after watching my Dad fight it.  And, he did just that, he fought it, fought it gallantly, he went down fighting I have to say!  He gave up beer cold turkey after years of drinking because his doctors told him he can’t drink on the medications.  He went to every appointment, took his medications as directed, got out every once in a while.  Then little by little he started losing interest in things, staying home more, giving up things, selling his Buick that he loved so much, gave up his golf club membership he had for 40 years, thus giving up golf – his hobby.  Stopped going to family events, stopped meeting up with golf buddies and more.  Knowing what happened, these were all signs that none of us knew even existed.  I wish I could say that had I known the signs and symptoms of suicide, I would have had my Dad living with us, but I can’t because we all trusted him, we all asked him once or twice, even his friends if he would ever hurt himself and he always said, “No, I wouldn’t do that to my girls the their kids.”  But he did, so I feel betrayed in a sense.  I want to say he didn’t plan it because of the pork chops being left out for dinner that night and the newly refilled anti-depressants, but I’m not sure and I will never know.  The not knowing and the whys are the hardest things to deal with when you lose a loved one to suicide.  The what if’s and the should have’s can haunt you on a daily basis and consume you if you aren’t careful.  For the last 15 months I have been walking around with a ton of bricks on my chest, that’s what a suicide survivor is left to walk around with after a loved one has taken their own life.  “Taken their own life…” this isn’t the normal process of life, you aren’t supposed to die at your own hand, this isn’t the normal circle of life…but then again, neither is getting cancer.  What the normal circle of life is you are born, your grow up, you get old, you die.  So, if my Dad had died of a heart attack or cancer, would his death be any easier to deal with, perhaps, because it wasn’t at his own hands and power.  But, I DO believe that the person that took my Dads life wasn’t my Dad.  The Dad that I know would not have left his daughters and grandchildren this way, he was SICK, he was SICK, he was SICK!

It took me 11 days to tell our other two children that Pop Pop was dead.  I tried on several occasions before that and lost it and couldn’t do it.  I was so upset at my Dad for making me do this to them.  It wasn’t till that 11th day did I even know how to tell them.  I had gotten frames for each one of them, even the baby, and printed out them each a picture of them with Pop Pop.  The morning of that 11th day, I remembered my six year old son telling my Dad not too long ago, “Pop Pop you’re old!” to which my Dad replied, “thank you very much…” with a grin on his face.  That’s what I told the kids…Pop Pop was old and he died, that is what happens in life.  This was children’s first dose of life and death.  Our six year old son squirmed around, not sure what to make of it, our four year old daughter, going on 14, cried like a teenager.  It was awful, she cried all night, then she finally fell asleep and then I cried all night.  The next day, I let their teachers know and that next night our daughter came down and said her big brother was crying in bed.  I went up to him to find him laying up in bed clutching the picture of him and Pop Pop in front of the #24 Jeff Gordon car a couple years before.  My Dad and I loved NASCAR, the only thing in common I had with my Dad.  I held my son and told him it was ok to cry and to please never cry alone, that it’s ok to miss Pop Pop and be sad, that Mommy is too.  Another night I stayed up and cried.  This was more painful than the death of my Dad itself, seeing the pain and lack of understanding for their ages in my children.  Even to this day, I get made at him for making me have to tell them Pop Pop was gone, and even to this day I catch one of them crying from time to time over him or one of them has a dream about him.  I think to think they dream about him because he is still around us, looking out for us, helping us through this.

For those left behind, like children, we wonder what our Dad (or Mom) must have been thinking at the time and the seconds leading up to their demise.  Would a picture of us girls on his bureau stopped him, why couldn’t I have called him at the minute and maybe the sound of the phone ringing would have snapped out of it, or would it have stopped him for just for that day?  All these questions that remain unanswered are part of the mystery of suicide.  Then of course there is the stigma that surrounds suicide that doesn’t make it any easier.  I have had people say the most beautiful things to me once they learned how I lost my Dad and one that went as far as to tell me where my Dad was…hell.  I have certainly learned who my true friends are over the last 15 months, but for every friend I lost (yes, I actually lost friends over this) I have met and made 2 for each one lost, most of them survivors themselves.  Each one of them more fantastic and meaningful to my life then the ones lost.  It actually felt good to “get rid” of the weeds in my life.  I believe after a tragedy like a suicide, those left behind need to have a sense of calmness to their life.  I have learned that life goes on.  I am alive, I still have three young children, a loving husband, a home and the life I dreamed of having as a little girl, there is so much life out there still left to be lived…so live on.  I will miss my Dad everyday for the rest of my life and it will hurt and sadden me the rest of my life, but again, I have to live my life!



Obituaries
JOHN PEDRICK

John F. Pedrick

Age 62, of Pike Creek, DE passed away on Sunday, January 6, 2008.

John retired from the DuPont Company Experimental Station in 2004 after 41 years of service. He was a member of the NJ Army National Guard. John was also a member of the Dupont Country Club. He was an avid golfer and Nascar fan.

He was predeceased by; his parents, Charles and Josephine Pedrick and by his brother, Charles H. Pedrick. John is survived by his daughters, Karen M. Cook and her husband Jeffrey of Bear, DE; Kellianne M. Karlton and her husband Raymond of Oxford, PA, Casey J. Pedrick and her husband Steven Jackson of Sunnyside, NY, and Cathryn W. Pedrick of Wilmington, DE; his grandchildren, Logan and Spencer Cook, Zachary, Karoline and Tanner Karlton and Caleb Pedrick, his sister, Joan Ryan of Wilmington, DE and his brother, Ronald Pedrick of West Chester, PA.

Relatives and friends are invited to attend a graveside service at Riverview Cemetery Pitman Street Penns Grove, NJ 08069 on Thursday January 10, at 11 am.

In lieu of flowers, contributions in memory of John may be sent to the Victory Junction Gang 4500 Adam's Way Randleman, NC 27317.

Arrangements by the
DOHERTY FUNERAL HOMES
To send online condolences,
please visit:
www.dohertyfh.com
302-999-8277