
@article{ref1,
title="Suicide survivors: psychotherapeutic implications of egocide",
journal="Suicide and life-threatening behavior",
year="1976",
author="Rosen, D. H.",
volume="6",
number="4",
pages="209-215",
abstract="Interviews with seven of ten known survivors of jumps from the Golden Gate Bridge and San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge revealed that all of them experienced transcendence and spiritual rebirth phenomena. The psychotherapeutic implications of these findings lie in helping depressed and suicidal individuals confront death in a symbolic and meaningful way. The issue is one of &quot;egocide&quot; (symbolic suicide) and aiding individuals in the rebirth process. In this way actual suicides can be prevented. When individuals experience partial &quot;deaths&quot; (like loss, failure, rejection, depression, suicidal states, or negative parts of their egos), there is opportunity for &quot;rebirth&quot; (positive transformation, creative change, growth, and significant spiritual reawakening). The therapeutic task is to help individuals differentiate between &quot;ego death&quot; and total death and to discover through the creative process of psychotherapy that overt suicide need not be a solution.",
language="",
issn="0363-0234",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}