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"He was a happy kid," said Danielle, who is now a
sophomore at Miami University. "He was talkative but always shy, in the
family very loving. He was very close to Mom. "Robbie went to a speech
therapist. He was teased for his mispronunciations.
His mother recalls times when he came home from school with his pants ripped
or saying he had been hit with a rock. In fourth grade, Robbie switched from
SS. Joseph and John in Strongsville to Incarnate Word Academy in Parma
Heights.
"He put pressure on himself to fit in," said Leslie. He
never liked sports, but in seventh grade he tried soccer and basketball.
Robbie wrote to Jenine, his friend from camp, "I wish I was better at
sports. I wish I loved sports. Then I could be one of the normal assholes at
my school."
Two years ago Robbie began to change. In seventh grade, Leslie said, Robbie
came home after a basketball game and sobbed hysterically in his room.
Someone had pushed him in the snow. Leslie is not sure of all that happened
that night, but she looks back on the incident as a turning point, "some
realization [by Robbie] that he was so different.
"The summer before that, when he was 12, he wrote poems, some somber. One was called, "I'm Dying and No one Cares."
"I try to stand and walk I fall to the hard cold ground It feels as if to life I'm no longer bound. The others look and laugh at my plight...."At the end he wrote, "Note: A lot of stuff in here is weird. I'm not really like that."
"He became withdrawn," said John, whom Robbie stayed with every other weekend.
"It was tough to get him to do anything. It took a big effort to get him to watch television and have meals with us," said Danielle of the last year. "He spent a lot of time in his room alone."
Camp Christopher on Lake Marion in Bath was an idyllic
place for Robbie. He went there for two weeks in the summer for four years.
It was there that he met his friend Jenine Coffman of Akron. "I love camp,"
he once wrote to her. "There I can be popular and happy. There I know I can
be myself and not be made fun of for it."
In January 1996, the middle of eighth grade for Robbie, he wrote four
letters to Jenine about how depressed he was. "Sometimes I feel really
really alone," he wrote in the first, dated Jan. 17."Not like I am
friendless, just alone. It's not sad, just kind of scary. ... I don't like
to think of being a grown up and leaving Strongsville and leaving all my
adolescent friends behind. ... Yeah, I am sad when I think I am alone.... I
wish I was different, No I don't. I do like myself. I have this weird
feeling something big and tragic is going to happen soon. It is probably
nothing. I hope it is nothing."
Jenine, now 15, sent him pages of her diary from seventh grade when she had
been depressed. He wrote back on Jan. 22. "Thanks for writing all that stuff.
I sent it back, but I know there will be days when I will need it. I will
never do anything to hurt myself. That is a lie. Right now I might not feel
suicidal, but I am sure I will feel it again.... Last week everyone was nice
to me. No one made fun of me but today was -let's be mean to Robbie day.
Your letter made me feel better but it made me cry. ... I imagine that I am
dead usually by suicide and everyone would feel bad that they had treated me
so unjustly."
He wrote again on Jan. 29, skirting around the subject of homosexuality.
"Guess what? I'm happy.... I did good on my science project and I realized
that no one means what they say when they make fun of me. ... I'll tell you
why people made fun of me. I haven't told anyone else this and it's a
secret. You see I talk different. You know I have a slight lisp. And I'm
kind of, well, sucky at sports. So people (they don't do it often or haven't
tried it recently) sometimes (only like a few people) have called me gay.
They don't mean it cuz if they did I'd be beat-up by now. You see everyone
in our school is like homophobic (including me)."
Robbie was spiraling down. On Feb. 24 he swallowed 30 Tylenol. His mother
did not know at the time that Robbie had attempted suicide, but discovered a
note a month later. The letter said in part: "Whatever you find, I'm not
gay. I love Ashley. ... You probably want to know why I killed myself. Cuz
of all the shit I've had to go through recently. That's why! Sincerely and
with a lot of love, Robbie Kirkland, the boy who told himself to put on a
smile, shut up and pretend you're happy: It didn't work."
Two days after the
suicide attempt, he wrote to Jenine but never mailed it. The letter was
found after his death. It said in part: "Ashley is now going out with Ken
(sad face). But what I write next is serious. I tried to kill myself
Saturday night. I took like 30 of these painkiller pills and went to bed. I
was really calm. Then in the middle of the night I woke up and puked it all
up. Now I'm glad I puked, if I didn't I might be dead. Now I want to
live.... Whenever I think of it, I shudder. I even wrote a suicide letter.
The reason why I tried to kill myself was because of stuff that happened
that would take a novel to fill. I'll tell you a shortened version. 1)
everyday I now fear for my life. 2) I fear online. 3) something weird is
going down with me and God. 4) I have a lot of jumbled nightmares. ...I
still feel empty inside because I don't have any 'REAL' friends at
school.... After writing this letter the emptiness isn't so bad, so until I
write again.' He confided to Jenine, but he did not reveal his true
heartbreak. It was not that Ashley didn't "like" him. He couldn't have a
crush on her.
In February of 1996, the family got a $188 bill for Robbie's use of the
Internet in January. They canceled the account. On March 29, Robbie boarded
a Greyhound bus for Chicago. In his bag was a man's name and beeper number.
He had planned to meet a man he had met on line. The number turned out not
to be working.
"It was very scary," said his father. "Robbie was not a tough kid. I know tough kids. Robbie was not physical and not streetwise. He would not have had a clue that someone could take advantage of him."
He was found in less than 24 hours. A homeless man outside
the bus station befriended him after Robbie asked him how to get to a teen
shelter. The man flagged down a police car. John flew to Chicago and brought
him back. He began seeing a therapist. Robbie said he had tried to like a
girl, but realized he couldn't. He was gay. He said he had known since he
was 10 years old.
The therapist told Robbie's parents that he was gay. Robbie, however, was
not entirely forthcoming with them. His parents and sisters said they told
Robbie they accepted him as he was and reassured him of their love. John
recalls his son once said to him - "'You know I'm not gay.'"'I don't care,
Robbie,' John said he replied. "'You do drugs, you'll have a big problem
with me. But if you're gay, I don't care, I still love you. He was at the
age when he was trying to break free. But I felt if he needs me for
anything, he needs me for this."
Danielle said that after Robbie ran away,
his dad redoubled his efforts to get Robbie to do things with him. He would
get him to rake leaves or change the oil in the car with him.
Leslie gave Robbie articles about gay and lesbian issues. In retrospect she
feels her acceptance may have prevented her from seeing the problem Robbie
was having: "I had missed the boat. I did not realize his pain, that he was
not OK with it." The problem, indeed, was Robbie himself. "
"Kids have conviction about their sexuality," said Cleveland therapist Debra
Dunkle, who works primarily with gays and lesbians. "But accepting it is a
different thing. They may know it and hate it."
Robbie couldn't stay away from the Internet. In May, he used the password of Chris' father to sign onto America Online. He got caught and had to pay Chris' father for the on-line charges. That same month, to Leslie's horror, she found a videotape of gay pornography in Robbie's room. It had arrived in the mail from a Pennsylvania man Robbie had met on the Internet. John said the man is currently under investigation.
PRYSM, the program for gay teens, is
only a few blocks from St. Ignatius High School. Despite urging from his
therapist and mother, Robbie never went there. He feared detection by kids
at school. His shyness also may have held him back. Robbie had figured he
would not make his sexual orientation known until college. He wanted to find
a girl who was a lesbian to pose as his girlfriend through high school.
Dunkle said such a strategy is typical.
In the wake of running away, he took the first step toward coming out. He
told friends Chris Collins and Matt Metevlis that he thought he was
bisexual, a common transitional step, said Kruger. He also told Kadi. "He
told me that the real reason he ran away was he was bisexual and he swore me
to secrecy," said Matt, who called Robbie "one of my best friends if not the
best."
"It bothered me at first. I was kind of homophobic. But I got over it. It didn't make him any less of a person than before. Most don't get up and decide to be what everyone else thinks is disgusting. It is really hard. It changed my outlook. All these images of gay people being like faggots. ... It is always the insult we use against each other."
In the summer before high school, Robbie dyed his hair black and developed his own style of dress: baggy clothes. "He was really changing," Danielle said. "He was finding different avenues of expression."
"In September, Robbie began St. Ignatius. He had scored 99
percent on the admissions test and had chosen to go there. "He wanted the
best education, he wanted the name," said Leslie. "And his two best friends
- Matt and Chris - were going."
Matt describes freshman year as difficult for Robbie. "Robbie had a problem
fitting in. He was real shy and real quiet. People would say things about
him to me. He had a look in his eye, like a devil stare, to kids who didn't
know him before. They would ask if he was seriously gay. Two or three kids
made friends with him, but he didn't make friends as quickly as some."
"He told me a lot of guys were making fun of him," said Kadi. "They called him a Satan worshipper, which he wasn't at all."
"Robbie didn't know which way to go," Matt said. "He wanted to put it behind him and tell everyone the truth. But he knew what would happen to him. He would be an outcast and scorned. He was leading a double life."
His sisters had misgivings about his choice of school. "It
[being gay] was his problem, but Ignatius made it worse," said Claudia. "Gay
[there] is the biggest insult. It is a really big deal to question
masculinity."
One day in November, Claudia and Robbie went to a movie and they talked in
the car. "He told me he didn't like being gay but he couldn't control it,"
said Claudia. "And it was hard being gay at Ignatius. There was a boy he
liked and he couldn't do anything about it or tell anyone."
Leslie said the therapist told her it may have been easier for Robbie in a
coed school. She said Robbie was always more comfortable with girls. Dunkle
said that is true for a lot of gay boys.
Matt says Robbie's secret did not become known. He thought by December,
Robbie was making friends, and things were looking up.
In the late fall, Robbie asked his mother if he could stop going to church
with her. "The Catholic Church does not accept me," he told her. Leslie said she would try to find another church.
Finding trouble
Leslie felt constant worry and a sense of doom the last months of Robbie's
life. There were days when he was sick and did not want to go to school. He
was going to bed early and not eating that much. He was withdrawn and always
in his room.
In December, he saw a psychiatrist who prescribed the anti-depressant
Zoloft.
He began taking it two weeks before he died. The drug takes two to six weeks
to take effect. In addition to lifting depression, Zoloft reduces suicidal
thoughts, said Dr. Daniel Rapport, a psychiatrist and director of outpatient
services at University Hospitals' Mood Disorders program.
In November Jenine and Robbie bumped into each other in cyberspace, in a
chat room. "Jen, is that you, it's Robbie," she recalled. "We talked out of
nowhere. He said he had hacked his way on."
When she tried to contact him again, she found that his e-mail address
wasn't valid. He had managed to open a Prodigy account using a family credit
card and driver's license. The account was canceled and Robbie was in
trouble again.
It was the last contact Robbie had with Jenine, perhaps his closest
confidant.
A burden too heavy
"We had a lovely Christmas," said Leslie. New Year's Eve, she went to bed
early. The next morning, a mother of an Ignatius student phoned asking why a
call had been made to her home at 3 a.m. She had caller ID. Leslie asked
Robbie about it. He called it a prank call. It was to the boy he had a crush
on.
That afternoon, John picked Robbie up to take him to his house. Leslie went
to work. She doesn't even remember saying goodbye.
Matt and Robbie talked on New Year's Day. "He was weird. He said 'I'm insane
and I hate my life.' He talked about killing himself. He had been in this
state before.'
As an FBI agent John Kirkland keeps a gun with him at all times. After
Robbie's suicide attempt the previous year, he got a lock for it at home.
The next morning, some time after Claudia left for gymnastics practice,
Robbie took a key from his father's key chain, unlocked the gun and put the
keys back. He went through Claudia's room and climbed up to the attic, where
he lay down on a mattress. Then he shot himself in the head. His father and
Danielle were in the house at the time. Danielle found him a couple of hours
later.
The suicide note was found in a notebook at his mother's. "I am sorry for
the pain I have put everyone through. ... I hope I can find the peace I
couldn't find in life."
In this suicide note, as well as the one from his unsuccessful attempt, he
left messages for dozens of friends and acquaintances. All are trying to
understand why he killed himself.
Claudia feels that Robbie's sensitive, gentle personality did not equip him
or his situation. "He was unhappy with the way he was. He felt too much
pain. He did not let us help him. What hurt him the most was that he knew
how hard life would be and thought it would not get any better."
"He was so analytical and intelligent," said Danielle. "It was a real blow
to him that this [being gay] was not something he could stop, that it was
the reality of his life. He could not face the implications."
"His situation crushed him," his friend Matt said. "He was not insane or
crazy. He was gentle and avoided conflict. He could not deal with it.
"There is something we can all learn from Robbie. Homophobia is just as bad
as being racist or sexist. It is not easy to rise above it," Matt said.
On Feb. 22, the day Robbie would have turned 15, his parents bumped into
each other at the cemetery in Strongsville where Robbie is buried. They wept
together.
"Someone took a third of my life away," his father said. He wishes he could
have given his son a toughness, not in the macho sense, but to endure life's
knocks.