Showing posts with label suicide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label suicide. Show all posts

Saturday, March 25, 2017

"The Discovery"-Afterlife Proven, People Rush To Get There




‘The Discovery’ Review: Netflix Sci-Fi Film Is a Dark, Twisty Spin on the Afterlife | Sundance 2017

     January 21, 2017

the-discovery-review-netflix
Filmmaker Charlie McDowell’s directorial debut, The One I Love, was a delightful, devilishly dark, and funny spin on the sci-fi genre. The grounded tale of a couple who discover that “perfect” versions of each other exist was a wonderful way to examine the ins and outs of relationships, and it was fun! McDowell’s follow-up film, The Discovery, is very much not that. It’s still a very grounded sci-fi story mind you, but it’s much darker, at times terrifying, and purposefully obtuse. Of course, the tone is fitting given the subject matter: mass suicides are running rampant following proof of the existence of the afterlife. Ultimately, the film’s ambition proves to be larger than its reach, but it’s an admirable and oftentimes effective drama about mortality, regret, and, well, the value of living.
The film opens with a prologue of sorts, in which scientist Dr. Thomas Harber (Robert Redford) is giving his first substantial interview six months after he announced his findings to the world: that the afterlife exists, and he has proof. Through extensive research he’s found the existence of significant brainwaves leaving the body shortly after death. But this “discovery” had unintended consequences as mass suicides shook the world. At the time of the interview, 1 million people have taken their lives in the six months since the announcement. The interview is ended abruptly with a bang, and then the film flashes forward two years later, at which point the suicide toll has reached 4 million.
It’s here where we’re introduced to our main protagonist, Will (Jason Segel). On a ferry to a foggy island, he comes across a young woman named Isla (Rooney Mara). The two strike up conversation and Will expresses his skepticism about the discovery, noting that evidence shouldn’t “overwhelming”, it should be definitive. They part, only to meet again later on when Will rescues Isla from trying to commit suicide herself.
Will, it turns out, is the son of Dr. Harber, and he’s on the ferry in order to meet his father and younger brother—played to delightful perfection by Jesse Plemons—after having fallen out with the family following a tragedy. I’ll leave it there as there are many more plot twists and turns that follow, and it’s best to experience the film as cold as possible.
the-discovery-rooney-mara
Image via Netflix
The Discovery juggles a lot of balls in the air at once, and as it progressed I found myself wondering where it was going—was this a movie about a cult? A father-son drama? A romance? It’s a little of everything, but it doesn’t entirely pull these threads together into a cohesive or satisfying manner by the film’s end. Its ambition proves to be too hefty, but while it doesn’t knock everything out of the park, it is consistently compelling. You never really know exactly where it’s going, which is both its strength and weakness.
Segel is solid as the film’s protagonist, continuing his path of choosing more dramatic roles. It doesn’t touch the greatness of his underrated turn in The End of the Tour, but that’s partly due to the fact that the plot of the film hinges on keeping secrets, so it’s not until well into the movie that you fully understand the emotions at play. Redford is swell as well in a role that’s probably more substantial than you think, but it’s Plemons and Mara who really shine. I don’t entirely know what Plemons was doing with this character—the younger brother everyone assumes is an idiot, but is smarter than he looks/acts despite his devotion to his father’s cause—but he is endlessly watchable. He takes what could have been a throwaway role and makes it entirely unique.
Mara, meanwhile, is playing another somewhat aloof outsider, but she’s so good that the familiarity isn’t much of a bother. Isla, like Will, is a bit of a mystery for most of the movie, but the talent of Mara shines through, making the role compelling even if you’re not entirely sure what she’s all about.
As with The One I Love, The Discovery offers a twist in its third act that I predict will be divisive. I wouldn’t dare spoil it here, but it simultaneously offers more shading to the film overall while also taking your head for a spin. Where The Discovery really shines is in its focus on mortality. Just because we know for certain the afterlife is real, does that mean it’s ethical to call it quits on our mortal life? Isn’t struggle and the bettering of oneself in the face of adversity what makes us the most human? These are big questions and the film doesn’t shy away from them. Indeed, I couldn’t help but feel a pit in my stomach for most of the movie’s runtime. Aside from the fact that the terrific score by Danny Bensi and Saunder Jurriaans is ominous as all get-out, the constant presence of suicide and death forces us to confront our own mortality, however uncomfortable it may be.
the-discovery-jason-segel
Image via Netflix
There are shades of humor here and there, but this is by and large a very dark kind of sci-fi. Its ultimate message may be one of hope, but the stark photography, sterile production design, and somewhat stoic performances give this thing a significant air of seriousness throughout. The grounded approach to sci-fi is welcome in a landscape filled with four-quadrant, bubble gum blockbusters, and even if the film doesn’t entirely come together as a cohesive piece, its admirable ambition and top-notch craftsmanship make it worthwhile nonetheless.
Rating: B-
The Discovery will be available on Netflix starting March 31st.

Monday, November 4, 2013

"Lessons of Loss: Melissa d'Arabian Reflects on What She Learned From Her Mother's Suicide"

PARADE Magazine, Sunday, November 3, 2013:



(Courtesy of Melissa D'Arabian)
Food Network’s Melissa d’Arabian reflects on the ways her mother’s suicide taught her how to live.
One spring evening in 1989, I called home from college with a simple request: I needed my mom’s credit card number for a GMAT prep course. But I didn’t get it. I didn’t even get my mom.
Instead, an unfamiliar male voice answered: “Hello?” He was an officer with the Montgomery County, Md., Police Department. We had a short conversation, but I still remember it vividly 25 years later. My mother had died by suicide.
Losing my mom crushed me logistically, financially, and emotionally. But losing my mom to suicide almost crushed my spirit. I was 20 when she died, and it plunged me into a decade-long crisis of faith.
My 20s were a mess. But the only way out is through, and sometimes the other side is so glorious you’re grateful for whatever got you there. That’s how I feel about that season of my life.
Here are some of the lessons that decade taught me:
Happiness is an inside job. Of course, that’s both good and bad news. Good news: I don’t need a new car to make me happy. Bad news: A new car won’t make me happier. Second, I believe I have more value than I can always see. I remind myself not to compare my insides with others’ outsides, or, as a friend puts it, my blooper reel with others’ sizzle reels.
Mostly, I emerged empathetic. My anger at my mom for leaving me morphed into imperfect understanding. For years, I’d seen her as the perpetrator, but I grew to see her as her suicide’s victim.
Those years of reflection gave me another gift. Mom was found on April 13, but she had died on April 12. The death certificate said April 12, while the police report and tombstone said April 13. So the anniversary of her death always lingered over 48 difficult hours—a black hole of loss, a sense that the world was diminished without my mom’s warm hugs, goofy wit, and wise advice.
One year, I decided to start commemorating the two-day anniversary by creating something to contribute to the world. It takes surprisingly little effort to comfort me on these days. Making brownies for a neighbor or writing an overdue note to a relative soothes my sense of imbalance.
In 2004, my husband and I were struggling to get pregnant. When I finally got the coveted two lines on the pregnancy test, I met with my doctor, and he told me what I already knew: I had become a mom sometime between April 12 and April 13.
The most important job I have today is being a mentor to my four young daughters. My children know that my mother died, but they don’t know the details; someday soon, I will have that conversation.
Being a mom doesn’t make me miss my own any less—it makes me wish she were here even more. She would have adored her many grandchildren. I live a few houses away from my sister and her five kids, so I imagine Mom might have moved here, too, and been a part of our never-ending cycle of birthday gatherings. And my Food Network career? She would have been so jazzed, probably asking weekly if I ever run into Brad Pitt. (Nope.)
Without my suicide season, I wouldn’t be the mom I am today—or the wife, the woman, the friend. Most days, I like who I see in the mirror. I am pretty sure my mom does, too.
How to Help
Nov. 23 is the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (afsp.org)’s International Survivors of Suicide Day. Click here to find out the warning signs of suicide and how to help a loved one or get help for yourself. And on Nov. 4 at 2 p.m. ET, join Melissa and an expert from AFSP atfacebook.com/parademag to share your stories and ask questions about depression and suicide.

Thursday, August 15, 2013

U.S. Youth At Risk For Suicide & Guns

Harper's Index in Harper's Magazine, August 2013:


"Chance a U.S. youth considered at risk for suicide lives in a home with a gun:  1 in 5

 Portion of young people attempting suicide without a gun who die from the attempt:  1/10

 Of those attempting suicide with a gun who do:  9/10"

Friday, August 2, 2013

"See What You Miss By Being Dead? Elegy For A Suicide In Matt Rasmussen's Black Aperture."

Poetry  Foundation Newsletter August 2, 2013:



See What You Miss by Being Dead?

Elegy for a suicide in Matt Rasmussen’s Black Aperture.

BY KATHLEEN ROONEY
See What You Miss by Being Dead?<strong> </strong>
Stephanie Colgan
In the fall of 2002, I took a workshop at Emerson College run by the poet Bill Knott. So did Matt Rasmussen. For much of the semester, Matt turned in laconic poems with a Minnesota nature-lover bent: fields, trees with fiery foliage, waterfowl, thousands of lakes, snow, deer, deer in the snow. Most of them felt detached, and many of them felt as though they were not just choosing not to use the pronoun “I,” but were assiduously avoiding it for reasons the reader stood no chance of understanding.
One day, after Matt had turned in a poem about geese laughing at the narrator, Bill finally burst out: “Why are you writing these distant, impersonal poems? Write a poem with some personal investment.”
That night, Matt went home and wrote a poem called “After Suicide.” The suicide being referred to was that of his brother in 1991, more than 10 years before the workshop. The poem went on to become the first of the series of elegies that would constitute his debut collection, Black Aperture, published this past May. Reading the poem again more than a decade later in published form, I still find the piece as vivid and stunning as the day Matt handed it out to the class. “A hole is nothing / but what remains around it,” the poem begins, continuing:
My brother stood
in the refrigerator light
drinking milk that poured
out of his head
through thick black curls
down his back into a puddle
growing larger around him.
It ends with the image of the milk floating upward and outward, “filling every shadow / blowing the dark open.”
His brother’s death is what fills the resulting book’s every shadow—a book that would go on to win the 2012 Walt Whitman Award from the Academy of American Poets. The book itself is remarkable, one of the best of 2013, but even more remarkable is that when I asked Matt about it in an email interview, he said that even though his brother’s death is essentially what “made” him a poet—that “it informed all of my poetry” and “I started writing poetry after his suicide, in response to it, I guess”—he had never written directly about it until that critique from Bill.
“I’ve always remembered that comment, ‘Write a poem with some personal investment,’ and look at it as the moment that my book began,” Matt emailed. “It took me about 10 more years to finish the book (yikes), but that was where it started.”
Matt writes, in the poem “Burial,” “You have been dead // half of my life,” and this book gives the feeling of material that has been contemplated and crafted over a relatively great length of time. It feels perfected. So too does it feel like a representative example of how to deal honestly and effectively with personal tragedy in poems. Black Aperture differs significantly from other classic and contemporary elegies in that it pointedly does not make much of an effort to express the universal human experience of grief, but rather it insists on the strange and provocative aspects of the circumstances of Matt’s brother’s death. Its eschewal of the universal and insistence on the specific actually makes it more affecting for the reader and better able to achieve surprising empathy.
At its simplest, an elegy is a lamentation for one who is dead. Traditionally, an elegy traces the emotional arc of an expression of sorrow followed by praise and commemoration of the life and work of the deceased, eventually winding up with a sense of solace. At its simplest, Black Aperture is an elegy. But it is not simple and it is not traditional, and its complexity and its breaking of tradition speak to why it works so well. It defies the genre’s conventions and refuses relief—there are grace notes of peace, but there are no easy answers.
People have been writing elegies for their dead brothers since Catullus’s “Carmen 101” and even before. Catullus, quite movingly, adheres in his poem to the standard elegy format, completing the requisite arc in a mere 10 lines before concluding: “Now and forever, brother, Hail and farewell.” A much more recent, and also wonderful, fraternal elegy, Anne Carson’s Nox, takes this piece by Catullus as a jumping-off point.
Matt’s book is striking, though, for being less of a generally relatable “I salute you and goodbye” and more of a “Why did you—how could you—do that to yourself and to us?” If Catullus—and many traditional elegies—are essentially saying, “See you later, and I hope maybe to have a death as noble or as universally human as yours,” Matt is refusing to say either of these things, just as he refuses to end in a place of relief.
His elegies are noteworthy for the way they are angry and funny in addition to plaintive. Matt’s poems are not without their melancholic moments, but they gain their power by venturing into a voice that is comic and bitter—accusatory, even, as in the title poem “Aperture”:
The fall after
you murdered you,
I burned your letter
in a mound of leaves
on our lawn.
The word “aperture” suggests a camera, its focus and speed, as well as the bore of a rifle, its precision and intensity. Like a camera, Matt takes shots from multiple perspectives of the same event, suggesting an effort at capture or mastery. But “aperture” also suggests something that is either always opening, or that might close and then reopen—something like grief, especially like the grief that follows death from suicide.
In his email, Matt said that here and elsewhere, he was “working against” the usual movement of an elegy because “I saw death by suicide as not really something to get over as much as something to live with” and that “I didn’t feel like I could say the final word about my brother’s suicide. So I wrote the opposite of a closure poem.”
This is not to say that elegies should not strive for closure or universality. Many do, and many do it well. They aim at these targets and hit them—as, historically, W.H. Auden does, both in his highly specific “In Memory of W.B. Yeats” and his more general “Funeral Blues,” and as, more recently, Tracy K. Smith does throughout her book Life on Mars. At their broadest, these kinds of elegies run along the lines of: “This is an experience of the death of a loved one which sits heavy upon my heart, but which unites me with the rest of humanity, which either has suffered already or will eventually suffer a similar loss, so when I speak my grief, I am in some sense speaking everyone’s.”
Smith’s elegizing of her father is a project in which she—using the tropes of space (her father worked on the Hubble telescope)—literally universalizes (as in: situates colossally in the scope of the universe) his death. She uses the vastness of the cosmos to offer hope, too, to herself and to the reader, that her father and others who have died might not be merely dead but changed. In “My God, It’s Full of Stars,” she writes that “Maybe the dead know, their eyes widening at last, / Seeing the high beams of a million galaxies flick on / At twilight.” And at the end of “The Speed of Belief,” she says, “I pray you are what waits / To break back into the world // Through me.” This is an accomplished collection and a valid approach.
But Matt is doing something else. He focuses not merely on how the experience of his brother’s suicide is, as the reader could probably imagine, really sad and fairly relatable, but also on how the experience is—unexpectedly, to him, and unimaginably, to the reader—incredibly weird. He does this to an even greater extent than other poets who have traversed similar terrain, most famously Ted Hughes’s 1998 collection Birthday Letters, a poetic memoir of Sylvia Plath.
Many poets, Hughes included, even through their bewilderment, attempt sympathy for the suicide, to understand the suicide’s decision. Maxine Kumin, in her poem “How It Is” on Anne Sexton’s 1974 suicide, writes: “Shall I say how it is in your clothes? / A month after your death I wear your blue jacket.” And Matthew Dickman, in his 2012 book Mayakovsky’s Revolver, writes of his beloved, suicided older sibling: “[S]o I put on my black-white / checkered Vans, the exact pair of shoes / my older brother wore when he was still a citizen of the world,” actually placing himself in the suicide’s shoes.
Matt, instead, insists on the inaccessibility of what the suicide has done. In this regard he’s more like Mary Karr, who wrote, “[E]very suicide’s an asshole,” of David Foster Wallace—“There is a good reason I am not / God, for I would cruelly smite the self-smitten”—although for Matt the strangeness of the experience puts the suicide even beyond the reach of his judgment and the judgment of all those left living. His is not a hopeful collection.
If elegies such as Smith’s seem to say that everyone will have the same death, basically, Matt’s seem to say that some people’s deaths are just different and that his brother’s death is not one that he wants—that it is unique in comparison to everyone else’s. It is presented as singular. “There is a strange anger toward the person who’s committed suicide that might not be present when someone similarly dies unexpectedly,” he said in our email interview. “Certainly there is anger and disbelief when someone tragically dies, but with suicide it’s directed at the person who has died. This anger, however, is tempered with a feeling of remorse or intense sorrow for the person who took his or her own life because no longer are they the person you knew. […] When someone dies of suicide there is a reluctance to talk about them, or remember them, because they are no longer who you thought they were, so I think there tends to be an immense silence that surrounds a suicide.”
In this regard, his elegies are more like those of Ruth Stone, also a frequent elegizer of a suicide: that of her husband Walter. Her poems, too, possess a silence—a suppression of the dead loved one—but also a loudness that happens when the loved one appears again, unbidden, running as an undercurrent through every other activity those left behind have to do just because they’re still alive.
Stone’s poem “Curtains“ evokes this ever-present absence, this loud silence, with humor and anger similar to Matt’s. The poem begins:
Putting up new curtains,
other windows intrude.
As though it is that first winter in Cambridge
when you and I had just moved in.
Now cold borscht alone in a bare kitchen. 
She then moves to the question “What does it mean if I say this years later?” Years for her—her husband took his own life in 1959, and this poem appears in her 1987 collection Second-Hand Coat—seem to be a key factor in the way she too will never achieve closure because of what her husband did. The poem ends with a funny-sad, accusatory question that its recipient can never answer: “See what you miss by being dead?”
Matt, too, seems to want readers to feel the matchlessness of his experience and for them to find his pain through the experience’s strangeness, as in the poem “Outgoing,” which begins:
Our answering machine still played your message,
and on the day you died Dad asked me to replace it.
I was chosen to save us the shame of dead you
answering calls. Hello, I have just shot myself.
To leave a message for me, call hell.
None of this should suggest that poets need to have an inscrutable tragedy in their past to achieve a poetry of great personal investment. Most everyone can think of poems that come from a place of deep individual significance and that have been worked on for years, but that still are terrible for being maudlin or vague. If poets are going to write about something that matters, they need to consider ways they might do so that are not exhausted, expected, or kitsch.
Matt was able to follow Bill’s advice, which appears straightforward but is deceptively difficult. Black Aperture succeeds by accessing its great personal subject through the concrete textures of a day-to-day life rendered suddenly surreal; it locates a vibrant middle ground between, as Matt emailed me, “the dark recesses of your grief and the bright world of life, the world that forces you to live and eat and do stupid, mundane everyday things,” a state of sophisticated dividedness evoked in one of his favorite elegies, “Little Elegy” by Keith Althaus, which ends:
You hear it underground.
Where the worms live
that can be cut in half
and start over
again and again.
Their heart must be
in two places at once, like mine.
Originally Published: July 30, 2013

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AUDIO ARTICLE AUTHORS EVENTS
 Kathleen  Rooney

BIOGRAPHY

Kathleen Rooney is a founding editor of Rose Metal Press. She is the author of the essay collection For You, For You I Am Trilling These Songs (Counterpoint, 2010) and the poetry collection, Robinson Alone (Gold Wake Press, 2012). With Elisa Gabbert, she co-wrote That Tiny Insane Voluptuousness(Otoliths, 2008).

Saturday, April 27, 2013

To Be Or Not To Be

Suicide was basically forbidden and illegal when this was written.  This thought of suicide was revolutionary and traumatic for Hamlet's audiences during Shakespeare's day. -deathternity

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To be, or not to be, that is the question

Meaning

Is it better to live or to die?

Origin

To be or not to be is probably the best-known line from all drama or literature. Certainly, if anyone is asked to quote a line of Shakespeare this is the one that first comes to mind for most people. It is, of course, from Shakespeare's play Hamlet, 1602 (Shakespeare's actual title is - The tragedie of Hamlet, prince of Denmarke):
HAMLET:
To be, or not to be: that is the question:
Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,
Or to take arms against a sea of troubles,
And by opposing end them? To die: to sleep;
No more; and by a sleep to say we end
The heart-ache and the thousand natural shocks
That flesh is heir to, 'tis a consummation
Devoutly to be wish'd. To die, to sleep;
To sleep: perchance to dream: ay, there's the rub;
For in that sleep of death what dreams may come
When we have shuffled off this mortal coil,
Must give us pause: there's the respect
That makes calamity of so long life;
For who would bear the whips and scorns of time,
The oppressor's wrong, the proud man's contumely,
The pangs of despised love, the law's delay,
The insolence of office and the spurns
That patient merit of the unworthy takes,
When he himself might his quietus make
With a bare bodkin? who would fardels bear,
To grunt and sweat under a weary life,
But that the dread of something after death,
The undiscover'd country from whose bourn
No traveller returns, puzzles the will
And makes us rather bear those ills we have
Than fly to others that we know not of?
Thus conscience does make cowards of us all;
And thus the native hue of resolution
Is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought,
And enterprises of great pith and moment
With this regard their currents turn awry,
And lose the name of action.--Soft you now!
The fair Ophelia! Nymph, in thy orisons
Be all my sins remember'd.

Gary Martin:

What Hamlet is musing on is the comparison between the pain of life, which he sees as inevitable (the sea of troubles - the slings and arrows - the heart-ache - the thousand natural shocks) and the fear of the uncertainty of death and of possible damnation of suicide.
Hamlet's dilemma is that although he is dissatisfied with life and lists its many torments, he is unsure what death may bring (the dread of something after death). He can't be sure what death has in store; it may be sleep but in perchance to dream he is speculating that it is perhaps an experience worse than life. Death is called the undiscover'd country from which no traveller returns. In saying that Hamlet is acknowledging that, not only does each living person discover death for themselves, as no one can return from it to describe it, but also that suicide os a one-way ticket. If you get the judgment call wrong, there's no way back.
The whole speech is tinged with the Christian prohibition of suicide, although it isn't mentioned explicitly. The dread of something after death would have been well understood by a Tudor audience to mean the fires of Hell.



The speech is a subtle and profound examining of what is more crudely expressed in the phrase out of the frying pan into the fire. - in essence 'life is bad, but death might be worse'.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

SAD!!-GWB Jumper's Frenemy Torment


DRAMA: Erratic Ashley Riggitano, shown here on her Facebook page, ripped many girls for being “in it for gossip.”
DRAMA: Erratic Ashley Riggitano, shown here on her Facebook page, ripped many girls for being “in it for gossip.”
HAD WORDS:Ashley (left) and biz partner Victoria Van Thunen (right) fought on Facebook.
HAD WORDS:Ashley (left) and biz partner Victoria Van Thunen (right) fought on Facebook.
WHY? Classmate Teresa Castaldo (left) and publicist Beth Bassil (right) are on enemy list.
WHY? Classmate Teresa Castaldo (left) and publicist Beth Bassil (right) are on enemy list.
FURY: Ashley ripped Alison Tinari (left) for hanging with hunk Drew Heissenbuttel (right).
FURY: Ashley ripped Alison Tinari (left) for hanging with hunk Drew Heissenbuttel (right).

GWB jumper’s 'frenemies’ say she was unstable and started online feuds

Last Updated:3:01 PM, February 8, 2013
Posted:2:58 AM, February 8, 2013
The fashionista who jumped to her death from the George Washington Bridge felt under siege by five frenemies she barred from her funeral via suicide note — including one who told her to overdose, The Post has learned.
“Go try to kill yourself on Xanax again, you unstable loser. Go f--k yourself and never speak to me again,” Alison Tinari wrote in a Facebook exchange with troubled Ashley Riggitano, who killed herself Wednesday, her 22nd birthday.
The blond beauty left behind a multipage, handwritten note in a Louis Vuitton bag that excluded Tinari and four other women from the funeral because of their contentious relationships through the years.
A source identified the others as Teresa Castaldo, Beth Bassil, Victoria Van Thunen and Samantha Horneff.
Van Thunen was Riggitano’s business partner at Missfits, a jewelry-design business. Castaldo and Bassil were classmates at Midtown’s Laboratory Institute of Merchandising, and Horneff was a friend from New Jersey.
Riggitano placed her handbag on a walkway at about 4:40 p.m. Wednesday before leaping from a midway point in the Jersey-bound lanes of the upper level, authorities said.
Prescription drugs, including Adderall, which is used to treat ADHD, and Klonopin, an anti-panic drug, were found in her bag.
Riggitano’s suicide notes — written in girlish cursive on lined, loose-leaf paper — revealed the depths of her despair.
“To any funeral, these people should not be allowed based upon words and actions,” she wrote about the five women.
She also mentioned three others by first name only — calling them “only people I love & always there to tell sorry.”
She blasted her other pals, writing, “All my other ‘friends’ are in it for gossip, never there just 1/4 for gossip.”
Hours before the suicide, Van Thunen ripped Riggitano in a Facebook post.
“Those who incessantly blame others as the cause of their issues should perhaps take a step back and re-evaluate these situations,” Van Thunen, 21, wrote.
“The common thread may be that ‘they’ aren’t the problem, but rather that YOU are.”
About a month earlier, Riggitano initiated an ugly, two-day exchange with Tinari that led to the Xanax suicide comment.
The fight stemmed from Tinari’s ongoing friendship with Riggitano’s boyfriend, aspiring race-car driver Drew Heissenbuttel.
“It’s really horrible what happened. I feel really bad for her family. It’s crazy. I feel really bad for her. I never went after her; she went after me,” a remorseful Tinari told The Post yesterday, adding that she didn’t even know Riggitano before the exchange.
“She harassed me on Facebook,” Tinari said. “I’m not her friend. She private- messaged me. She sent me messages on January 8 and 9, and I said some things. I told her she needs to leave me alone.
“The only thing I’m ashamed of is what I said about her overdosing on Xanax. I shouldn’t have said that.”
That comment was part of a post in which Tinari also said Heissenbuttel had told her about Riggitano’s mental-health issues and a previous suicide attempt.
Riggitano responded to the suicide comment by writing, “thats called a threat, and a suicidal threat the police dont take that lightly since the boy in ridgewood killed because of someones words” — referring to Tyler Clementi, the Rutgers student who jumped from the same bridge in 2010 after his college roommate secretly taped him with another man.
“There are now bullying laws against suicidal threats and words u should of checked that out before sending that,” she wrote.
Riggitano started the argument in a wild Facebook rant to Tinari, 23.
“Since drew cannot take care of the issue at hand, I will. You have been nothing but a bitch to me every time you walked in the door ignoring my existence maybe because you were so concerned with picking up your drugs . . . Everyone who has spoken to me when i came into the picture told me all about you and his friends had nothing good to say except you used Drew for his money, “ she rambled.
Tinari flatly denied the allegations to The Post in a text message: “I wasn’t involved in drugs at all.”
The Facebook posting from Riggitano continued: “I dont respect you because of your actions and in general what i’ve heard of you and what you do, if you want him to be ‘happy’ because hes your ‘best friend’ stay away from me and him because all your doing is making him pissed off and stressed out. Thanks xxxxxxo.”
Tinari fired off an angry response. “If you think I have time for your bulls--t think again. I don’t give two s--ts about you. I did not post anything of facebook or instagram for you to see. I cannot believe you think I give a f--k, i have better things to do with my time than to stir the pot with some bitch i dont even know . . . Leave me the f--k alone. I’m not playing these childish games with you. F--k off you pathetic loser,” she snarled.
The New Jersey friend, Horneff, who said she has known Riggitano for eight years, was stunned to be mentioned in her suicide note as a persona non grata for the funeral.
“Right now, my friends, family and I are just trying to understand what happened and to deal with it,” she said.
“It’s heartbreaking, and we’re trying to let her family grieve in peace.”
LIM classmate Castaldo’s mother told The Post that the two were not close and that they’d known each other only from school.
Bassil, a publicist for Halston, could not be reached.
Sources said investigators are looking into whether bullying played a role in the suicide.
“Was it bullying in her mind? We don’t know,” a source said. “The detectives are going to investigate it, but right now we don’t know whether it was something that just happened in her mind or something that really happened. We really don’t know.”
Riggitano interned for jewelry designer Alex Woo, who remembered her fondly but noted that her behavior was at times erratic.
“She was only here for a few weeks, since the beginning of January,” Woo said at her Midtown studio.
“It was unusual when she left so early. It took us by surprise. We didn’t know what was going on in her personal life. Usually interns stay with us for three months,” said Woo, adding that Riggitano was often out sick. “She definitely didn’t have perfect attendance. She called out sick the day of a big trade event, accessory circuit. It was such a great opportunity, but she called out sick.”
But Woo remained impressed with the ambitious fashion designer.
“She always looked polished,” she said. “When she came to the interview, she was wearing one of my pieces. I think her parents gave it to her. It was really touching for me. I have a special place in my heart for her.”
Riggitano’s parents were interviewed by investigators but declined comment.
Her college said in a statement: “The entire LIM College community is saddened by the loss of Ashley. Our thoughts and prayers are with her family during this difficult time.”
Paramus, NJ, neighbor Theresa Zotto called her a promising young woman.
“She was a sweetheart,” Zotto said. “She grew up on this block. She was always friendly and had a very promising future.”
Additional reporting by Pedro Oliveira Jr., Josh Margolin, Amber Sutherland and Rebecca Rosenberg


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