Kyle J Smith: Creating hope in a dark place; a reflection on the passing of Kate Spade

June 8, 2018  |  Kyle J Smith

Kate Spade Kyle Smith

Editor’s note: Kyle J Smith, an entrepreneurial ecosystem builder in Kansas City, reflects on fashion designer Kate Spade, 55, who died Tuesday of suicide. Born Katherine Brosnahan in Kansas City, Missouri, she went on to build a widely successful business and brand that carried her name.

My heart broke when I heard about Kate Spade’s passing. That she chose to take her own life was an incredible shock. I send my love to her friends, her family, and especially her daughter.

Kyle J Smith

Kyle J Smith

Many of us probably share this thought: Damn, it seemed like she got everything right. In her life, she did what many entrepreneurs strive to do. She had what many entrepreneurs want. And yet, she committed suicide.

If this thought weighs as heavily on your chest as it does on mine, and you’re losing hope that you can do anything to help those around you who might be at risk of committing suicide, my message is for you: Don’t lose hope. Never stop caring. You can make a difference.

Before I tell you how, let me take a moment to address those who might be in a dark place: You’re not alone. Reach out to someone or call this hotline: 1-800-273-8255. Please. The world needs more brave people like you.

I’m not a public health professional or a fancy anything, but I am a victim of suicide. My father took his own life when I was a baby. I never got to know him at all.

His death did not teach me anything that we don’t already know: We live in a broken, imperfect world. And some people struggle more deeply than others.

But from this experience, I have learned the power of choosing life and love. My father made a mistake by taking his own life. My mother could have let that decision imprison my family for all of our years. But instead, she chose life and love.

She chose to create an environment where my siblings and I could flourish and experience all the beauty and wonder this world has to offer.

And it’s that environment that I want to tell you about. Because this is where you come in. If you are exhausted by the rate of suicides in your part of the world, help to create an environment where life flourishes.

Instead of just coalescing around the problem — suicide — let’s focus on the solution: creating a better place to live.  

This sentiment is supported by a CDC report released just this week that shows suicide rates have increased in nearly every state during the past two decades, even among people without known mental health conditions. The report encourages states to use a “comprehensive evidence-based public health approach to prevent suicide risk before it occurs.”

While public health professionals and state governments figure out how to best implement these findings, you can get started today. Join hands and hearts with your community and create a better place to live built on these core values: transparency, community, hope, hard work, love, and the healing power of grace.

I don’t need to define these words for you. But I can place them each in the context of creating a better place to live:

  • Transparency: making decisions that you are proud of the whole way through.
  • Community: friends and family who surround you and lift you up.
  • Hope: a belief that our world can get better (if we’re willing to put in the effort).
  • Hard work: a meaningful life takes sweat and a relentless spirit.
  • Love: putting others before yourself.
  • The healing power of grace: because no one is perfect, you must forgive.

Some other day you and I can grab a beer and I’ll tell you about the people in my life who taught me each of these values, and you can tell me about the people who support and inspire you.

For now, I’ll close with this: If I went back in time and told Kate, or my father, about these values, I don’t know that it would change anything.

But I do know that if each of us choose to live, and together we build a world based on transparency, community, hope, hard work, love, and the healing power of grace, then that’s the world I want to live in. And you can live in it, too.   

Thank you for reading. Thank you for sharing our world with me. 

Kyle J Smith works as communications coordinator at KCSourceLink and volunteers as a community organizer with 1 Million Cups Kansas City and a Startup Huddle ambassador with the Global Entrepreneurship Network. He is the founder of Determination, Incorporated, a new nonprofit creating a “felony-friendly” path to entrepreneurship in Kansas City.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2018 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Corrigan 2 by Copaken Brooks

        Before signing the lease: Examine your startup’s culture, protect against surprises

        By Tommy Felts | November 19, 2019

        Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. Ryan Biery, SIOR, is senior vice president of brokerage at Copaken Brooks, a commercial real estate agency in Kansas City. That moment when they hand you the keys. That’s a good moment for your startup or small business. It’s a sense of excitement,…

        Wrap up: Miss FUND Conference Kansas City? Don’t forget to craft your narrative

        By Tommy Felts | November 5, 2019

        Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. Brandon Warrington is an attorney at Husch Blackwell in Omaha. This op-ed is sponsored by Husch Blackwell. Kansas City’s inaugural FUND Conference buzzed with startups and emerging companies, from social ventures still in the ideation phase to companies having just finished their Series…

        Downtown Kansas City

        The secret’s almost out: Why you should start a business in KC before it becomes cool

        By Tommy Felts | October 14, 2019

        Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. Ed Wilson and Kenyon Briggs are attorneys at Husch Blackwell in Kansas City. This op-ed is sponsored by Husch Blackwell. Silicon Valley has been known as America’s premier innovation capital for decades. Between easy access to funding, a strong entrepreneurial network, and a…

        Sofia Fund

        Fundraising, For Real: Can convertible notes kill a deal in the Midwest?  

        By Tommy Felts | September 16, 2019

        Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. Laura McCoolidge is managing partner at the Sofia Fund, which recently expanded its reach to Kansas City. Religion. Gun control. Politics. Convertible notes. Why are convertible notes so controversial? Despite the controversy, this instrument has proven popular as a means for working with…