The Legacy Group for Suicide Awareness Crisp Co GA

The Legacy Group for Suicide Awareness Crisp Co GA The Legacy Group for Su***de Awareness is a non-profit organization established in response to the loss of my two sons to addiction and su***de.

For more information about our services, please do not hesitate to contact us.

06/12/2026

“Su***de is a permanent solution to a temporary problem.”

I need to be honest: this line doesn’t actually land the way people think it does.

It sounds like wisdom. It behaves like reassurance, but for a lot of people, it can feel like oversimplification dressed up as concern.

Here’s why: The first assumption is that problems are temporary and that’s just not true for everyone.

Some people aren’t dealing with a “rough patch.”
They’re dealing with chronic pain. Long-term mental illness. Trauma that doesn’t resolve neatly. Poverty that doesn’t magically disappear. Bodies that don’t cooperate. Minds that don’t settle. Environments they can’t just “leave” because leaving isn’t always a realistic option.

Even when things can change in theory, that doesn’t mean they feel temporary. Some suffering stretches out so long it stops feeling like an event and starts feeling like a condition.

So when someone hears “temporary problem,” it can land less like comfort and more like: you don’t really understand what I’m dealing with.

The second assumption is that suicidal ideation is mainly a misunderstanding of time.

Like if someone could just zoom out a little, they’d see the future waiting for them with open arms.

But that’s not really how it works.

When people are in that state, thinking isn’t broad and spacious. It narrows. Everything shrinks down to immediate emotional pain, exhaustion, hopelessness, and a very real sense that nothing will shift, at least not in a way they can access or survive. It’s not always a lack of information. It’s often a collapse in perceived options.

So the problem isn’t just perspective. It’s capacity.

And then there’s the part we don’t say out loud often enough:

Life itself is not a stable, guaranteed “long-term project” for everyone in the same way.

For some people, it’s fragmented. Unpredictable. Repeatedly disrupted or experienced in cycles where things don’t resolve, they just repeat. In that context, “temporary vs permanent” starts to feel like a framework that doesn’t quite fit the reality being lived. Which is why the phrase, even when well-intentioned, can feel tone-deaf.

Not because people are trying to be cruel; but because it flattens something complex into something motivational.

As someone who has had suicidal ideation before, it doesn’t really reduce suicidal thoughts because what tends to matter more is not being told the problem is temporary, but being met where you are in it. Being taken seriously without having your experience minimised into a slogan.

What actually helps is usually slower. Less clean. Less quotable.

It’s connection. It’s validation. It’s someone staying in the conversation without trying to erase what you’re feeling in order to make themselves comfortable.

So maybe the issue isn’t that the phrase is “wrong.”

It’s that it tries to compress something deeply human and often long-term into a neat contrast that doesn’t hold up under real experience ; and when you’re already struggling, anything that feels like it’s simplifying your pain can start to feel like it’s also dismissing it.

Borrow from someone else

We have some pretty awesome men on our board of directors and volunteers
06/08/2026

We have some pretty awesome men on our board of directors and volunteers


05/20/2026

The scariest part of suicidal ideation is that it doesn’t always sound dramatic or obvious.
Sometimes it sounds calm.
Logical.
Convincing.

It whispers things like:
“People would be better without me.”
“I’m just tired.”
“Nothing is going to change.”
“I’ve become a burden.”
“No one would understand anyway.”

And when someone has been carrying emotional pain for too long, those thoughts can start to feel like facts instead of symptoms of suffering.

That’s why su***de isn’t simply about “wanting to die.”
Many people are not looking for death, they are desperately looking for relief. Relief from the exhaustion, the loneliness, the pressure, the hopelessness, the silence inside their mind.

Mental pain can distort reality.
It can make temporary problems feel permanent.
It can make someone forget their value, their impact, and the people who genuinely care about them.

This is why compassion matters.
Checking in matters.
Listening without judgment matters.

And if you are someone battling these thoughts, please remember this:
Thoughts are not always truths.
Pain can be treated.
Support exists.
And even if your mind is convincing you otherwise right now, your life still matters more than you know.

April is National Organ donation month and our founder Becky Adkison Vaughn and board member Brandy Mason  are walking i...
04/09/2026

April is National Organ donation month and our founder Becky Adkison Vaughn and board member Brandy Mason are walking in the 2nd Annual walk for Heroes at Crisp Regional Hospital today in honor of Brandy's son Hunter Hayslip.

01/12/2026

I told my son to “man up” and stop making excuses. I didn’t realize I was shouting at a drowning man until I found his bed empty and the silence in his room became permanent.

My son, Leo, was twenty-three. To the outside world, and frankly, to me at the time, he looked like a failure.

I’m a simple guy. I grew up in a time when sweat equity meant something. I bought my first house at twenty-four working at a local manufacturing plant. I drove a beat-up truck, fixed it myself, and never complained. That was the American way. You work hard, you get the white picket fence. Simple math.

So, when I looked at Leo, I didn’t see a struggle. I saw laziness.

He had a college degree that was gathering dust. He spent his days glued to his phone, delivering food for one of those gig-economy apps, and sleeping until noon. He lived in my basement, wore the same oversized hoodie every day, and had a look in his eyes that I interpreted as boredom.

I was constantly on his case. "The world doesn't owe you a living, Leo," I’d say, slamming my coffee mug down. "Get a real job. Build some character."

The Tuesday that changed my life started like any other. I came home from the shop, grease on my hands, feeling the good ache of a hard day's work.

Leo was in the kitchen, staring at a bowl of cereal. It was 6:00 PM.

"You just waking up?" I asked, the irritation rising in my chest like bile.

"No, Dad," he said softly. "Just got back. Did a few deliveries."

"Deliveries," I scoffed. "That’s not a career, Leo. That’s a hobby. When I was your age, I had a mortgage and a baby on the way. You can’t even pay for your own gas."

He put the spoon down. He looked pale, thinner than I remembered.

"The market is tough right now, Dad. Nobody is hiring entry-level without three years of experience. And the rent... a studio is two thousand a month. I can’t make the math work."

"The math works if you work," I snapped. "Stop blaming the economy. Stop blaming 'the system.' It’s about grit. You think it was easy for me in the 90s? We didn’t have safe spaces. We just got it done."

Leo looked up at me. His eyes were heavy. Not sleepy—heavy. Like they were holding up the ceiling.

"I’m trying, Dad. I really am. But I’m just... so tired."

I rolled my eyes. I actually rolled my eyes.

"Tired? From what? Sitting in a car? Playing on your phone? I’ve been on my feet for ten hours. I am tired. You’re just unmotivated. You have everything handed to you—electricity, food, a roof—and you act like you’re carrying the weight of the world."

The kitchen went quiet. The refrigerator hummed. The news played softly in the background, talking about inflation rates, but I wasn't listening. I was waiting for him to argue, to fight back, to show some spark.

Instead, he just nodded.

"You're right," he whispered. "I'm sorry I'm not who you were at my age. I'm sorry the math doesn't work for me."

He stood up, walked over to me, and did something he hadn't done since he was ten. He hugged me. It wasn't a strong hug; it was a lean, a collapse of weight against my shoulder.

"I won't be a burden anymore, Dad. I promise. Get some sleep."

I stood there, feeling vindicated. Finally, I thought. Finally, I got through to him. Tough love. That’s what this generation needs.

I went to bed feeling like a good father.

The next morning, the house was silent. Too silent.

I woke up at 6:30 AM, ready to wake him up early. We were going to look for "real" jobs today. I was going to drive him to the industrial park myself.

"Leo! Up and at 'em!" I shouted, banging on the basement door.

No answer.

I pushed the door open.

The room was spotless. The piles of laundry were gone. The blinds were open. The bed was made—military tight.

And on the pillow, there was his phone and a folded piece of notebook paper.

A cold shiver, sharper than any winter wind, shot down my spine.

"Leo?"

I checked the bathroom. Empty. The backyard. Empty. The garage.

My old pickup truck was gone.

I ran back to the room and grabbed the note. My hands were shaking so hard I almost ripped the paper.

Dad,

I know you think I’m lazy. I know you think I’m weak. I wanted to be the man you are. I really did.

But the mountain you climbed doesn’t have a path anymore. I’ve applied to 400 jobs this year. I didn't tell you because I was ashamed. I drove for that delivery app for 14 hours a day just to pay the interest on my student loans, not even touching the principal.

You told me to save. I tried. But when rent is double what you paid, and wages are half of what they should be, saving feels like trying to fill a bucket with a hole in the bottom.

I stopped taking my medication three weeks ago because my insurance cut out and I didn't want to ask you for money again. That’s why I was "tired." My brain has been screaming at me, and I didn't have the volume k**b to turn it down.

You were right. The world is for the strong. And I don’t have any fight left.

I’m taking the truck to the old bridge. I’m sorry. You won’t have to pay my bills anymore.

Love, Leo.

The scream that tore out of my throat didn’t sound human. It sounded like an animal caught in a trap.

I dialed 911. I drove to the bridge. I drove so fast the world blurred into gray streaks.

I saw the flashing lights before I saw the river.

I saw the tow truck. I saw my pickup, the one I boasted about fixing, being hauled up from the water, dripping mud and weeds.

I collapsed on the asphalt. The officer who helped me up was a guy about my age. He didn't say, "It’s going to be okay." He just held me while I shattered.

It’s been six months.

People tell me, "It wasn't your fault, Jack. Depression is a silent killer."

And they are right. It is a disease.

But I can’t stop looking at the math.

I looked at his phone records later. He wasn't lying. He had applied to hundreds of jobs. He was rejected by automated emails. He was working while I slept. He was fighting a war I refused to see because I was too busy looking at the past through rose-colored glasses.

I measured his success with a ruler from 1990, and I beat him with it when he didn't measure up.

We tell our kids, "When I was your age, I had a house and a car." We forget to mention that a house cost two years' salary then, not twenty. We forget that we had pensions, not gig contracts. We forget that we had hope.

Leo didn't need a lecture on grit. He needed a dad who understood that "I'm tired" didn't mean "I need sleep." It meant "I'm running out of reasons to stay."

I visit his grave every Sunday. I tell him about the truck. I tell him I’m sorry.

But he can’t hear me.

The world is full of Leos right now. Young men and women who are working harder than we ever did, for half the reward, carrying the weight of a broken economy and a digital isolation we can't comprehend.

If your child tells you they are tired... if they seem stuck... if they are struggling to launch in a world that has clipped their wings...

Please. Put down your judgment. Throw away your "back in my day" stories.

Don’t tell them to man up. Tell them you are there. Tell them their worth isn't in their paycheck or their property.

I would give everything I own—my house, my pension, my pride—just to see my son sleeping "lazily" on that couch one more time.

A "perfect" dead son is a trophy of nothing but regret.

Listen to the silence before it becomes eternal.

Author unknown

We made the paper... Thanks to all our board members and their spouses and children... These people amaze me with their ...
12/22/2025

We made the paper... Thanks to all our board members and their spouses and children... These people amaze me with their commitment to my vision of a nonprofit on Cordele GA that nobody seems to know about..

Shout-out to the greatest board members ever. And their families... They all always show up and go above and beyond and ...
12/16/2025

Shout-out to the greatest board members ever. And their families... They all always show up and go above and beyond and I appreciate more than they will ever know

Few photos from tonights Christmas parade in cordele.. everyone worked hard on the float and then we froze our butts off...

Merry Christmas
12/15/2025

Merry Christmas

12/10/2025

Georgia schools are now required to carry Narcan, because fentanyl overdoses are happening in classrooms.

Let that sink in.

Not because kids are “bad.” Not because parents don’t care or aren't doing their job. But because one pill can kill.. and you cannot see, smell, or test fentanyl by looking at it.

This article tells the story of a Georgia student who took what looked like Percocet and never made it out of her classroom alive.

Narcan was used.

It just wasn’t fast enough.

Counterfeit pills are EVERYWHERE. Online. At school. Passed from kid to kid. And they look real.

Narcan saves lives.. but prevention, conversations, and awareness save FUTURES.

If you’re a parent, educator, coach, aunt, uncle, or neighbor: Please read this. Please talk to your kids. Please don’t assume “my child would never.”

This isn’t fear-mongering. This is reality in Georgia right now.

🖤 One pill. One moment. One life.

Address

Cordele, GA
31015

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