Her overdose was worsening. She was becoming less and less coherent, and the hallucinations were worsening. After a while I stopped negotiating with J1 and forced her to the hospital.
I was back on duty. My short-lived rest was over. She snatched the pen from me. My story was no longer mine.
I carried her down the stairs to the car. I let go of her to open the door and she collapsed. She was seizing and foaming at the mouth. Sh!t. She's going to die.
I called the PD and urged them to get me a patrol car fast. They arrived in an instant and I threw her in the backseat. We raced to the hospital, dragged her to a stretcher and rushed her in. I don't remember much of what happened after that. I know I cried, and I know I called her parents and said "I think she's going to die. You have to get here now."
I recall her parents showing up and walking right past me. Understandable given the circumstances. Still, the message that my nervous system heard was immediate and familiar:
This is my fault. This happened on my watch. They know the truth, but they need someone to blame. That someone will have to be me.
I don't remember this, but a nurse friend later told me: "You collapsed into a hug and said, 'This will be my fault. I know this will be my fault.'"
I had already assumed the posture without being blamed.
She was in a coma for a few days and in the ICU for a few more. And I watched the unhealthy family dynamics play out right in front of me. A team of specialists came in to confront J1. They suspected that this wasn't an accident and, given her position, they offered her a treatment program and a way to save her license. J1 stuck to her story that it was an accident. Her mother encouraged her and said she was right to lie. Her father and brothers silently disagreed. I realized:
I am standing inside a family system in which survival depends on denial and enabling. Where lying preserves stability and the truth-tellers have learned to keep quiet.
I left this ordeal with a choice: be an enabler or a truth-teller.
I married her three months later.
Why? At some level the suicide crisis clarified my purpose. It concentrated my entire life's work--proving that endurance buys safety, that loyalty stabilizes chaos, that devotion can outlast danger--and distilled it into one person. This was no longer theoretical. This was my arena.
If she was fragile, I would be strong. If she was drowning, I would be the dock. If she stumbled, I would catch her. If her family ran on denial, I would quietly hold the truth. I told myself this wasn't self-sacrifice. It was strength correctly applied.
I knew this wasn't my fault, but I believed it was my responsibility. If I couldn't be happy at least I would be indispensable.
We got married and J1 insisted on getting pregnant right away. I wanted to enjoy life as a couple, but I relented. A few years later our son was born and we moved into a bigger house. The early years weren't bad, but they weren't good either. They just were. Other than a late honeymoon we didn't go anywhere. No trips, very few date nights, sex was rare. We functioned, but we also worked opposing shifts. Two ships passing in the night, as they say. I don't recall us ever really doing anything together.
My shift ended at midnight and I'd stay awake until the kids' 2 am bottle. Then I'd go to sleep on the couch so as not to wake my wife.
I didn't know it then, but I relinquished my right to share a bed with her ever again. I slept on the couch for the rest of the marriage.
I had quietly given up something that I didn't even realize I was allowed to want.
I don't think I noticed the lack of intimacy or play or fun. That wasn't the point. That's not what I was there for. I had a job to do. The suicide attempt was a turning point. It turned us toward each other. Not out of love, but expectation. Purpose.
Love is what it feels like in the absence of chaos.
So my job became chaos-preventer. I became the protector. The infrastructure.
The goal was to keep her stable. The goal was to keep her alive.
And I did keep us stable. We functioned. We survived. We survived almost too well. Because the absence of friction also revealed the absence of intimacy. Of closeness. Of friendship.
Hell, we rarely fought for the first two-thirds of the marriage. And the lack of fighting meant we hadn't practiced the art of repair.
The stability meant space--space for hobbies, new music, or a movie I wanted to watch. Small invitations toward a shared life built around fun. Things that could bring us closer.
She refused every invitation.
"Maybe later."
"I can't right now."
"I've got to make these calls."
"I have a headache."
I loved woodworking, and I had a nice shop in the garage. Many times she'd come home and park right in front of the open door. I was so excited to show her what I was working on. Yes, she'd stop. She'd acknowledge it.
"That's nice."
But she wouldn't come in.
I don't think that I was unhappy in the marriage. I don't think happiness even made it to my rubric. But loneliness did. And I felt most lonely when I was with her.
Proximity and closeness simply aren't the same thing.



