Death by the Choking Game
When my best friend lost her son, she discovered the awful truth behind the "Good Kids' High."
October 12, 2013 |
It was the kind of day you’d never remember if it hadn’t ended the way it did. A mother with her two sons, 13 and 11, on a Monday
in August. Shopping for school supplies and clothes at Target and
Abercrombie. Lunch at Subway. Grocery shopping at Whole Foods. The mom
helping the younger kid with his summer Spanish homework in the family
room; the older kid upstairs in his room.
After a while,
Alex came downstairs and leaned over Susan and Zach to see what they
were working on. “I was doing homework, too,” Alex said. Then he called
out the answer to the question Zach had been working on. “Hey, don’t
give him the answers,” Susan said and poked Alex in the ribs with a Nerf
sword, pretending to stab him. Alex laughed. As Alex was walking out of
the room, Zach asked him to set up a board game, Settlers of the Stone
Age, so they could play it that night. “Sure, I’ll do it later,” Alex
said and left. That was the last time Susan and Zach saw Alex alive.
Zach
finished his homework about 10 minutes later, and Susan told him that
he could play on the computer before dinner. Zach ran to the foot of the
stairs and called up to Alex. No answer. Zach yelled again, “Alex,
Mom’s giving us screen time,” and started to walk upstairs. Later, Susan
would wonder if things might have turned out differently if she hadn’t
stopped Zach, thinking that Alex — a teenager about to start high school
in a few weeks, after all — might want some privacy. She would ask the
ER doctor who tried to revive Alex if he could have been saved if they’d
found him then. And although the doctor would assure her that no, death
came quick, no more than a few minutes after they saw him last, she
won’t be able to stop thinking of that moment, of Zach agreeing to leave
his brother alone for now. “But I’m gonna wait for Alex for screen time
because it’s not as much fun by myself,” Zach said and went back to the
family room.
Some time went by — 20 minutes, maybe 30 —
and Susan started thinking that it was funny they hadn’t heard anything
from Alex. Dinner would be soon, so she went upstairs. His door was
open, the room empty. She knocked on the bathroom door and went in.
Nothing.
She checked the other bedrooms and bathrooms
upstairs. She went up to the attic, checked the guest room. She went
back downstairs and opened the basement door and called his name. No
answer. She went outside, yelling his name now, running through the
backyard, the pool area, the garage, the driveway, the front yard. Her
heart thudded against her chest, her neck, her temples, her hands
growing cold, but she told herself that she was being silly to worry,
that he was a big boy, not a toddler. She imagined Alex laughing at her
paranoia.
She went back in the house and called his cell
phone. It went to voicemail. Zach said to text him; Alex always checks
his texts. She typed in “Where r u.” No response.
Susan
remembered that she hadn’t actually checked the basement. She walked
down the spiral staircase, scanning the room. Drumset. Ping-pong table.
Treadmill. All empty.
It wasn’t until she reached the
bottom that she saw it: Alex’s body, hanging, something green around his
neck, his toes brushing the ground. “Stop it, you’re freaking me out,”
she said and slapped him on the shoulder, thinking, hoping, praying that
he must be faking it.
Of the next moments, she
remembers only bits and pieces. Screaming “Oh my God” repeatedly,
yelling for Zach to call 911. Trying to get Alex’s body down, trying to
lift him up to give him slack, but his body being too heavy. Running up
the steps and trying to get the string — an old dog leash, a green one
she didn’t even remember having in the house — off the railing. Hearing
Zach say, “I don’t know what the emergency is. My mom told me to call,”
grabbing the phone and saying that her son hanged himself. Cutting the
leash with scissors, Alex’s body crumpling down, the leash around his
neck falling away easily. Following the instructions from the 911
operator to give CPR, flinching at the touch of Alex’s body. The police
coming, taking over CPR from her, relief flooding her that finally,
someone who could save him was here. The EMTs using the defibrillator,
her having to go upstairs, unable to watch them shock her son’s body
over and over again.
She found Zach outside, sitting on
the steps. He said, “Is Alex dead?” and she told him that there was
hope, that all these people wouldn’t be doing so much for so long if
there weren’t. Her husband Jim called to say that he was getting on the
train to come home. She said — no longer hysterical, weirdly calm now,
thinking maybe this was some elaborate hoax, trying to figure out how
Alex managed to get the police and the doctors in on it — that something
had happened to Alex. Jim asked if he was alive. She said, “I don’t
know.”
***
When the ER doctor told her
that Alex was dead, Susan asked if Alex would have known that he was
dying. The doctor looked confused. “It was an intentional act,” he said.
It occurred to her then: The doctor thought Alex committed suicide.
Everyone did. The police had searched the whole house, his computer and
phone, looking unsuccessfully for a suicide note, for some clue as to
why a seemingly happy 13-year-old kid would kill himself.
Later,
after Jim met Susan at the hospital and they saw their son’s body for
the last time, after they picked up Zach from the neighbors and told him
that his brother was gone, after they walked into their house, now a
family of three, Susan sat up in Alex’s room, trying to comprehend what
had happened, why he would want to end his own life. Alex had just come
home from summer camp; the day before, he’d excitedly shown them
pictures of his roommate and friends, challenged them to play the
computer game he’d programmed. He’d been looking forward to starting
high school. There, on his desk, neatly laid out, were the school
supplies they’d bought that day, next to the new brown desk lamp he’d
picked out. All the new clothes they’d bought that day, neatly folded
and put away in his drawers, the tags in the trash can. The novel he was
reading, “A Dance With Dragons,” on his bed, bookmark in the middle. He
was a voracious reader; he’d stayed up until 1:30
the night before to find out what happens next in this book, the latest
in the “Game of Thrones” series he’d been reading all summer — wouldn’t
he have wanted to find out how it ends before killing himself? And on
the desk, the grammar packet he’d done that afternoon on his own,
without being told. Why would he have done homework a half-hour before
committing suicide? None of it made sense.
In his
bathroom were more puzzles. On the counter, the police had laid out
something they’d found: a ligature, like a too-long shoelace, with a
small loop knot at one end and a complicated slip knot on the other.
Susan and Jim opened Alex’s bathroom drawer and found more strings and
two pieces of yarn, one green and one yellow, some with knots. Susan
remembered seeing the yarn earlier that year in the bathroom, wondering
what it was and why it was there but not thinking much of it. They
searched through the house and found more of these ligatures hidden
away—the strings from a cat’s cradle kit hidden away in his closet, one
of Susan’s soft headbands with slip knots at both ends stuffed in a box
in the powder room cabinet on the main floor. What were they, and why
were they everywhere?
The police explained the next day.
Kids sometimes asphyxiate themselves for “recreational purposes,” they
said. Based on the evidence they found, they were reclassifying Alex’s
death as an accidental death, not as a suicide.
Susan and Jim had never heard of this, and they immediately researched it online. They found out that it’s called the Choking Game,
an activity popular among 9- to 16-year-old kids in which they strangle
themselves or each other — sometimes at parties or sleepovers — to get a
high. The most common reported age of death is 13, Alex’s age. Many
kids like Alex — smart kids who do well in school and have loving
families — regard the Choking Game as a legal and safe alternative to
drugs; one popular nickname for this is the Good Kids’ High. What these
kids don’t realize is that this “game” is inherently dangerous andcan be addictive,
making it all the more likely that they — like Alex — will attempt this
on their own, experimenting with using a rope or belt as a makeshift
noose.
The thing that didn’t make sense to Susan and Jim
was how Alex could have hanged himself, knowing how easy it would be
for him to pass out before he had a chance to release. Alex was a
brilliant kid; he skipped a grade. A Science Olympian, he loved
tinkering with all types of electronic and mechanical things to modify
their design and function. Surely, he would have known that if you hang
yourself and fall unconscious while you’re alone, chances were good that
you would die.
What they discovered was that Alex had
taken precautions. He had put one end of a dog leash through the handle
to make a loop on one end, which he put around his neck. He looped the
leash around a vertical rail on the staircase, using the rail like an
overhead pulley. When he pulled down on one end (the end with the clip
for the dog collar), the loop around his neck would tighten. If he
passed out, his grip would automatically release, the leash would come
undone from around the rail, the loop around his neck would loosen and
fall away, and he would simply fall onto the padded mat around him. Alex
had apparently done this many times before, successfully; Jim found
another dog leash in the basement, a thick pink one, worn away and
ragged in the middle where it would have grated against the rail. The
problem was that there was a thin gap between the rail and the wooden
step. The green leash, unlike the pink one, was thin enough that it
could get pulled into this gap, like floss between teeth. When Alex
released, the leash could get through the gap, but the buckle clip at
the end couldn’t. The clip became jammed between the rail and the step,
making it impossible for the leash to loosen and release him as he would
have expected it to.
The thing that haunts Susan now is
realizing that if she had known about the Choking Game, she might have
realized Alex was in danger. The warning signs of the Choking Game
include bloodshot eyes; frequent headaches; marks on the neck; ropes,
scarves, and belts found knotted in kids’ rooms and bathrooms and the
unexplained presence of things like dog leashes, choke collars and
bungee cords. Susan had noticed some these things in the six months or
so prior to his death, but not knowing about the Choking Game, had
dismissed them. Alex had headaches and a bloodshot eye, but what kid
doesn’t? And during the summer, he’d had many broken blood vessels under
the skin on his face, but wasn’t that just a side effect of acne? And
she’d asked about the marks on the neck — a two-inch thin mark around
his neck back in the spring and a scab mark earlier in the summer — but
when Alex shrugged them off, she figured they must be byproducts of her
sons’ frequent roughhousing. Taken individually, each of these signs
seemed innocuous, but taken together, if she’d heard of this game
before, even in passing, she might have figured it out. She would have
confronted him. Educated him of the dangers. Become one of those
helicopter moms we all make fun of. Whatever it took to get him to stop.
Susan
and Jim don’t know how or when Alex got started. He could have learned
about it from friends; several of his middle school classmates have said
they knew about it and had heard kids talking about it at school,
although none has admitted to having tried it. Or he could have come
across one of the hundreds of YouTube videos of preteens and teenagers
playing this “game,” choking each other and laughing as their friends
pass out and fall to the ground, their arms and legs twitching in a
seizure. They’re easy to find, under knock out, passing out game, space
monkey, California high, funky chicken, airplaining or even choke out or
choke hold, search phrases kids interested in wrestling might use. If
Alex had seen one of these videos, he might have been lured by the
message they carry: This is easy, fun and safe. No big deal, totally
legal, takes less than a minute, and you get a great high for free. Just
a game.
It’s been two months since Alex died. Zach has
started middle school, and when new friends ask him if he has any
brothers or sisters, he doesn’t know how to answer. Susan can’t do
laundry because she can’t go down to the basement, can’t even look at a
spiral staircase in someone else’s house. They’re looking for a new
house — something smaller, with more kids on the neighborhood streets
for Zach to play with. Susan worries about finding the right balance
with Zach — if he’s out of eyesight, she panics about where he is, what
he could be doing, but she also worries that she might end up smothering
him if she doesn’t give him independence.
It’s hard for her to
talk about this, to email and write Facebook posts to raise awareness
over the Choking Game, to urge her friends to look up a Choking Game
video and report it as dangerous and get it taken down. But she does,
hoping that maybe she’ll reach one parent or teacher who’ll see the
warning signs before it’s too late, that maybe she’ll reach a
first-responder who won’t immediately jump to the conclusion of suicide
next time, that maybe someone will tell her story to their kids or
neighbors, that maybe she’ll be able to prevent the agony that she and
Jim felt in thinking, even for a moment, that their child was secretly
in so much anguish that he’d taken his own life.In recent weeks, Susan has gotten to know a woman who also lost her son to the Choking Game. She has a strand of beads and adds one every time someone contacts her to report a Choking Game death or a death is added to the Choking Game victims list. Each bead has a Choking Game victim’s name and age; the youngest victim is a 6-year old boy who watched his brother playing it and tried it by himself in his own room. Since January 2006, when this woman’s son died, the strand of beads has grown to 645 beads, more than 23 feet in length. She doesn’t need to add any more.
Angie
Kim lives in Northern Virginia with her husband and three sons. Her
personal essays and short stories have appeared in Slate, Glamour, and
numerous literary magazines. She is currently working on her first
novel. For more information on the Choking Game, please visit www.gaspinfo.com and www .erikscause.org.
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