Actor Kabir Bedi opened his coronary heart out concerning the demise of his son, Siddharth Bedi, who dedicated suicide in 1997, on the age of 25, after being identified with schizophrenia, in the course of the launch of his ebook Stories I Must Tell: The Emotional Journey of an Actor. He mentioned that the injuries heal, however the scars will at all times stay. He additional mentioned that it can be crucial in such conditions for the household to face by the one affected by psychological sickness. Also Read – Kabir Bedi Reveals in His Autobiography Parveen Babi Believed in Sexual Fidelity And He Fell in Love With Her Speaking with Bollywood Hungama, he mentioned, “Siddharth was a very brilliant young man… He was exceptional in his abilities, and then suddenly, one day, he couldn’t think. We tried so hard to first figure out what was wrong, and for three years, we battled these unknown ghosts, and eventually he had this extremely violent breakout in the streets of Montreal, and it took eight policemen to nail him down. And then, the doctors in Montreal finally diagnosed him as schizophrenic.” Also Read – Pooja Bedi Shares Hot Still From Controversial Condom Ad in 1991 The household tried to battle with Siddharth’s sickness however on the finish ‘he chose to go’. Kabir was quoted as saying, “I misplaced, he selected to go.’ He mentioned that in his ebook, he needed to seize what it’s like for households that undergo one thing like this, ‘because the person they are seeing is not the person they knew’. He mentioned that no matter how exhausting he tried, the ‘guilt is enormous’. Also Read – Alaya F Is Hotness Personified In Rs 8K Pinstripe Jacket And Mini Skirt, See PICS
Siddharth’s sister Pooja Bedi had additionally written about her brother in her weblog. She wrote, “I miss my brother Siddharth deeply. We were inseparable as kids. Same school, same friends, same room. We travelled together, fought, laughed and loved each other madly. His being diagnosed with schizophrenia and his suicide in 1997 left my life changed forever. He was a, sensitive, caring, gentle and witty person. He was amazingly bright too, and had graduated from Carnegie Mellon University with Honours. The void of his death and subsequently my mother’s death in 1998 is something I can never fill.”