So convenient a thing is it to be a reasonable creature, since it enables one to find or make a reason for every thing one has a mind to do. Benjamin Franklin
Last week, Dr. Bruce Nadler (otherwise known as The World's Strongest     Plastic Surgeon) committed suicide.  Worse, according to forensic     analysis, he shot and killed his wife point-blank before going into the next     room and killing himself.  We hear stories like these all the time,     what makes this one different is I knew the guy: we both spoke at the Fitness     Business Summit last year.  Carol and I chatted with him and his     wife and they were very nice people.  After my presentation, Dr. Nadler     made a point of shaking my hand and telling me how impressed he was.      Like most people, I never would have guessed he suffered from depression and     that, almost a year later, his depression would reach critical mass,     resulting in murder and suicide.  
My initial reaction upon learning of Dr. Nadler's suicide was shock,     then, when I heard about how he killed his wife, it turned to revulsion.      Taking your own life is one thing, but taking someone else out with you is not     your right.  That he murdered his wife is beyond disturbing. 
I've become very interested in the study of happiness over the last     several months, and thinking about the Nadler murder/suicide my brain's been     turning non-stop.  I wonder what Dr. Nadler was like at my age?      Did he suffer depression then?  Did he have any idea he'd go on to     commit suicide at the age of 61?  Further, when he and his wife married     did he have any idea he would murder her many years later?  I have no     idea and never will, yet, if I had to guess, I doubt Dr. Nadler held any of     those thoughts.  My guess is he was happy at my age and enjoyed his     married life and being a doctor.  Maybe I'm mistaken, but I doubt he     was clinically depressed for the last thirty years.  So what happened?      I have no idea, but it got me thinking:  where will I be in my sixties?      Will I still enjoy life and continue growing as a person, or will I feel     depressed with no desire to live?  The latter seems unlikely given my     current level of happiness, but none of us really know what lies ahead. 
We can spend our time planning out our lives, setting goals and creating     an illusion of control over this crazy world, but in reality we have     little--if any--control.  You can be in the best shape of your life and     on cloud nine one minute, then get hit by a car the next, ending the rest of     your days as a paraplegic.  You never know what's around the corner.      Then, every once in a while, we'll predict something that comes to pass,     feeding our ego and again reinforcing the illusion we can see our     future--yet it is just that:  illusion. 
The Buddha taught all life is suffering.  Sounds depressing—from a     superficial analysis—but the deeper meaning is our suffering is due to     attachment.  When we lose something to which we feel attachment, it can     become the tipping point over an edge.  I don't think there's any     single reason why Dr. Nadler killed his wife and then himself—I think     there was a tipping point as he stood at the edge of his life.  It's     more likely his final scene was a culmination of several concurrent     frustrations.  
From the Buddhist point of view, it's not what happens in our     life that makes us suffer, but how we interpret it.  In one of my     favorite books ever, Viktor Frankl's Man's Search For Meaning,     Frankl chronicles his time in a Nazi concentration camp, explaining how some     people survived while others lost all hope.  The people who survived     sought out whatever form of happiness was available to them:  If their     meal was edible, they experienced great happiness; if someone told a funny     joke, they enjoyed the pleasure of that moment as long as possible.      Even the warmth of the sun gave them joy.  They looked for—and     discovered—opportunities for gratitude in the least likely scenarios.      Even more impressive, the survivors sought out gratifications     wherever possible.  Helping out their fellow men was critical:  to     create purpose to make it through their immense suffering--it     wasn't enough to focus on individual survival; the survival of others     suffering the same horrors became equally important.  Bottom line:      those holding strong purpose and meaning in their lives were far more likely     to survive than those who lost all hope and thus, meaning.  
I don't know why Dr. Nadler took his wife's life, then his own, but I     think it's safe to say he lost all hope and saw no reason to go on living.      When we lack purpose and meaning in our lives, a part of us dies every day,     and it's important to understand this early, before purposelessness, like a     virus, replicates within our cells, literally taking over our lives.  
Never get comfortable and stop growing.  Once you do, you begin     dying.  My grandfather, a successful businessman, was born in a shack     in Montana and went on to become a millionaire and highly sought out     consultant to Fortune 500 companies.  When working, he was happy, but I     noticed upon his retirement he wasn't excited about life anymore, though he     still had purpose, since my grandmother had Alzheimer's Disease and was     completely dependent upon him.  Her care became his new purpose and     reason to keep going.  When she passed on, he no longer had a reason to     live--but not because he had nothing left to offer.  His brain was     sharp and he could have engaged in any number of creative projects, but he     didn't see it that way and passed on a few weeks after my grandmother.      I genuinely admired my grandfather, he taught me a lot about life and the     importance of doing what you love; however, his final lesson to me was this:      when you lack purpose, the brain and spirit despair and you eventually shut     down.  
My great grandmother was a different story:  she outlived everyone     in her life and passed on at the age of 101.  She survived breast     cancer, her husband's death, the deaths of her sisters, and even those of     her own children.  She was a simple woman and lived in Montana her     entire life—much of it lived alone on a ranch in a small town called     Arlee. I used to love talking to her—she epitomized tough. What     people consider tough today is ludicrous compared to what was tough in her     day. I remember one time she was talking about all of her loved ones dying     around her. You could tell she felt very sad, however she ended the story by     saying we have to go on no matter what. My great grandmother was many     things, but the image I hold of her is of a survivor. No matter what     happened to her, she persisted in surviving—and thriving. The purposes she     maintained throughout  her life may be things us moderns would think of     as mundane, even tedious, yet where there is purpose is also survival--and     delight in life.  It doesn't matter your achievements, or any fame you     might attain, without purpose none of it matters, like it or not. 
I'll never see anyone the same again. Meeting Dr. Nadler and his ensuing     deterioration has irrevocably changed me. Now, whenever I meet someone new     or talk to a friend, I'll always wonder if they're really happy or just     struggling to maintain appearances. Whatever the case may be, I hope you     know your purpose and are enjoying this life.
 
 
1 comment:
This comment comes WAYYYYY 2 LATE!!
I was a patient of Dr Nadler in the late 90’s. His wife Terri worked in his office and she was lovely!! I’m sad to know what happened to her!!! Tho I’m not that surprised.
Dr Nadler put me through a year of Hellish surgeries and procedures after he botched my breast augmentation. I got MRSA, nearly died, lost my home, my job n my car while under his care.He left me scarred and disfigured!! He also gave me 3-4 different anabolic steroids during my treatment, as well as GH, tamoxifen, and countless Opioids. He had all my lab results sent to his office for more than 8 months so I had no idea how close to death I was!!
I ultimately sued him and won my case. I was # 3 to win a judgement against him and was told that he was relinquishing his NY License voluntarily at that time.
I later heard he moved to Florida temporarily where he could continue to practice while fighting to reinstate his license.
After that I just stopped checking in on his status.
I am still paying physically n mentally for what Dr Nadler did to me years ago!
Back then he called himself “THE ERASER ON GODS PENCIL”
My heart goes out to Terri and her special needs Son!!
Dr Nadler was a sick n slick SOB!
Terri is still an ANGEL!!
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