After her mother’s death from cancer when she was 13, Tara Lal clung to her elder brother Adam for support. But four years later, he committed suicide. This is an edited extract from her book Standing on My Brothers Shoulders, published by Simon and Schuster.
Adam was beautiful with chocolate-brown skin, straight shiny hair and a chiselled jaw.
He was tall and there was not an ounce of surplus fat on his body.
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He was blessed with a brilliant brain but he was also highly sensitive, a deep thinker with a questioning mind. At 18 he spent his Christmas working for the homeless. He relentlessly questioned life and the essence of happiness, particularly during his travels in India on his gap year.
After Mum died I had hoped that such loss would bring our family together. Instead we fragmented in our own individual grief. I searched for a rock, anything stable to help me keep my head above water, and found Adam. I clung to him. We didn’t talk about Mum, we simply loved and cared for one another. We shared a unique bond. Only my brother understood.
As children, we used to play a game that involved one of us climbing on to the other’s shoulders. We trusted each other implicitly; not once did either of us allow the other to fall. Now it was as if, floating in our own spheres of grief, we each held on to a small branch, which connected us and prevented us floating entirely alone.
It was no surprise when Adam was made head boy at school and even less of one that he never told us.
He was a straight-A student, gifted in everything he did, but his drive and perfectionism came at a cost.
Our mother wrote a letter to each of us before she died. My brother’s letter added to his burden, something she could never have foreseen when she wrote it.