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      "description": "A close friend of one of my colleagues committed suicide last week. It happened as so many suicides do\u2014out of the blue. A few days earlier, my colleague had spent the day hanging out with her friend, who was relaxed, upbeat, and normal. Sadly, that's not uncommon. Many people who commit suicide don't have an identifiable mental health problem, or give any hints that they are thinking about taking their lives. Every suicide, like every person, is different. Many are sparked by intense feelings of anger, despair, hopelessness, or panic. Suicide almost always raises anguished questions among family members and friends left behind: What did I miss? What could I have done? In my friend's case, the answers are nothing and nothing. When individuals suddenly take their own lives with no warning, all we can do is look to each other for support. It may be natural to ask, \"What did I miss?\" But we should remind ourselves what experts say: This kind of death defies prediction.",
      "title": "Suicide often not preceded by warnings - Harvard Health Blog",
      "type": "article",
      "updated_time": "2018-10-29T11:06:40+0000"
   },
   "id": "https://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/suicide-often-not-preceded-by-warnings-201209245331"
});