Some colleagues hasten to reassure the therapist that the suicide was inevitable, that nothing could have been done to prevent the patient’s death. However well-intended, such assurances serve to stop further discussion, preventing the therapist from voicing and coming to terms with feelings about treatment decisions and about the suicide. On the opposite side of the spectrum is the more harmful tendency to blame the therapist. Although we trust that this was not his intention, several of the comments made by Dr. Plutzer are illustrative of this reaction, which our studies show has been the source of considerable additional pain for many therapists who have experienced a patient’s suicide.