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Shalom Place
HOME
ABOUT US
MEET THE TEAM
REFLECTIONS
SMALL GROUP PROGRAMS
RETREATS
SPIRITUAL DIRECTION
LENDING LIBRARY
PHOTO GALLERY
ARCHIVE OF PAST EVENTS
SUPPORT THIS MINISTRY
CONTACT US
HOME
ABOUT US
MEET THE TEAM
REFLECTIONS
SMALL GROUP PROGRAMS
RETREATS
SPIRITUAL DIRECTION
LENDING LIBRARY
PHOTO GALLERY
ARCHIVE OF PAST EVENTS
SUPPORT THIS MINISTRY
CONTACT US
LENDING LIBRARY Bruised & Wounded: Struggling to Understand Suicide (Rolheiser)
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Bruised & Wounded: Struggling to Understand Suicide (Rolheiser)

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When someone is stricken with cancer, one of three things can happen: Doctors treat the disease and cure it; professionals can’t cure the disease but can control it so that the person suffering can live with the disease for the rest of his or her life; or the cancer can be of a kind that cannot be treated and all the medicine and treatments in the world are powerless – the person dies.

Emotional depression leading to suicide can work the same way. Sometimes a person can be treated so that, in effect, they are cured; sometimes they can’t ever really be cured, but can be treated in a way that they can live with the disease for their whole life; and sometimes, just as with certain kinds of cancer, the disease is untreatable, unstoppable, and no intervention by anyone or anything can halt its advance – it eventually kills the person and there is nothing anyone can do. Thus, Ronald Rolheiser begins this small, powerful book.

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When someone is stricken with cancer, one of three things can happen: Doctors treat the disease and cure it; professionals can’t cure the disease but can control it so that the person suffering can live with the disease for the rest of his or her life; or the cancer can be of a kind that cannot be treated and all the medicine and treatments in the world are powerless – the person dies.

Emotional depression leading to suicide can work the same way. Sometimes a person can be treated so that, in effect, they are cured; sometimes they can’t ever really be cured, but can be treated in a way that they can live with the disease for their whole life; and sometimes, just as with certain kinds of cancer, the disease is untreatable, unstoppable, and no intervention by anyone or anything can halt its advance – it eventually kills the person and there is nothing anyone can do. Thus, Ronald Rolheiser begins this small, powerful book.

When someone is stricken with cancer, one of three things can happen: Doctors treat the disease and cure it; professionals can’t cure the disease but can control it so that the person suffering can live with the disease for the rest of his or her life; or the cancer can be of a kind that cannot be treated and all the medicine and treatments in the world are powerless – the person dies.

Emotional depression leading to suicide can work the same way. Sometimes a person can be treated so that, in effect, they are cured; sometimes they can’t ever really be cured, but can be treated in a way that they can live with the disease for their whole life; and sometimes, just as with certain kinds of cancer, the disease is untreatable, unstoppable, and no intervention by anyone or anything can halt its advance – it eventually kills the person and there is nothing anyone can do. Thus, Ronald Rolheiser begins this small, powerful book.

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Land Acknowledgment: As a ministry of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Sault Ste. Marie, we are privileged to live and work on the sacred traditional lands of the Anishinaabek people including the people of Ketegaunseebee (Garden River) and Batchewana First Nations. They are two of the twenty-one First Nations of northern Ontario that comprise the nations of the Robinson Huron Treaty signed with Settlers in 1850. With gratitude, we acknowledge that the Indigenous peoples have cared for the land, water, air and creatures for all that time because they saw themselves as part of the surrounding natural world, responsible for the life of the ecosystems and watersheds in which they lived. We are all treaty people. May we journey on this land gently so that no plant is broken and no creature is harmed. Let us journey together today in a good way.