Getting Help For
Depression
Football Player Sadly Kills
Himself
November 12. 2009
Robert Enke and his late daughter
Some sad news from Germany this week, regarding
soccer player,
Robert Enke. He committed suicide via throwing
himself on a train track. My condolences to his family.
He was very depressed over the death of his
two-year-old daughter, who had a heart problem and feared losing his
adopted toddler as well.
To anyone reading this, struggling with
depression and or feelings of suicide, please seek immediate medical
assistance from a doctor or a medical clinic, if you cannot afford
to see a psychologist. There is medication doctors can prescribe to
help you (seek one without bad side effects) and there are also free counselors in many cities, willing
to talk with you regarding the sadness you are facing.
At times, life can get pretty ugly. Being depressed
doesn't mean you are a weakling or a loser. There are people, who
have been through terrible traumas in this world, which created
depression and sadness in their lives. There's nothing wrong with
asking for help. It can be done discreetly to protect your
privacy.
Please do not take your life. It is not what God
wants for you. Whatever it is you are facing tonight, I pray God
will help you through it. God bless you.
FREE
PRAYER AND
COUNSELING:
TBN: 1-888-731-1000
CBN: 1-800-759-0700
John Hagee Ministries: 1-210-491-5100
Billy Graham Ministries: 1-877-247-2423
Life Outreach: 1-800-777-7124
STORY SOURCE
Germany goalkeeper Enke's funeral
set for Sunday
FRANKFURT — Robert Enke, the Germany goalkeeper who was killed after throwing
himself in front of a train, will be buried Sunday in a small ceremony near his
home following a memorial service at the Hannover stadium.
Hannover spokesman Andreas Kuhnt said Thursday that the memorial service would
be held Sunday morning, with the burial to follow near Neustadt, outside
Hannover. The entire national team will attend the service, the German soccer
federation said.
In the wake of Enke's death, his club urged the sport to rethink how it deals
with the possible problems of its stars and to be more open about them.
Enke took his own life Tuesday evening when he stepped in front of a train near
his Hannover home. His widow, Teresa, went on national television a day later to
reveal that Enke had been suffering from depression for six years but did not
want it to be known.
"It was a free decision by Mrs. Enke. I think she wanted to make the public
aware of this subject," Hannover club president Martin Kind said. "We must learn
how to open ourselves."...
The suicide of the 32-year-old Enke has left the soccer-mad nation stunned and
in mourning...
Teresa Enke said her husband had kept
his depression secret from the public because he had been afraid the couple's
adopted 8-month-old daughter would be taken away from then if his illness was
known. The couple's biological daughter died of a heart ailment when she was 2
in 2006...
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