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Robin Williams’ wife explains why he committed su!cide.

On Thursday, it will have been eight years since the renowned actor died.

On August 11, 2014, the dev*stating news that Robin Williams had committed su!cide rocked the entire world.

The actor, who is best remembered for his work in Mrs. Doubtfire and Good Will Hunting, was a household name in the entertainment industry and was renowned throughout the world for his wit and humor.

But due to an unidentified ailment, he had battled a lot of health problems in the year before his de*th.

The actor experienced stomach cramps, heartburn, and digestive problems after expressing “gut discomfort” at a celebration for him and his wife Susan Schneider’s two-year wedding anniversary.

He later went on to develop a resting tremor in his left hand, which was thought to be brought on by a prior shoulder !njury.

He subsequently began to experience problems with his vision and sense of smell, which made him more worried and disrupted his sleep.

He eventually had motor disturbances that occasionally caused him to freeze in mid-motion.

For his biography Robin, Schneider told New York Times cultural reporter Dave Itzkoff that managing the symptoms was like “playing whack-a-mole.”

She uttered: “Not all of the symptoms will appear at once, like a continuous procession of them.

It was similar to a game of whack-a-mole. This month, which symptom is it? Was my husband a hypochondriac, I wondered. We have tried everything as we chase it, but there are no solutions.”

Billy Crystal, a friend and fellow actor, claimed that Williams’ appearance drastically transformed in a matter of months.

He was “taken aback by how he appeared” when they went to see a play in the fall of 2013 since he was “thinner and looks fragile,” according to Crystal.

Williams started crying as they said their goodbyes and the evening came to a close.

He did, however, film scenes for the third entry in the Night at the Museum series, in which he played Theodore Roosevelt, before an explanation for his symptoms could be determined.

He admitted to his makeup artist Cheri Minns that he no longer “knew how to be amusing” after having a pan!c episode and crying on set.

Schneider reported that he was “losing his mind and he was aware of it” to the medical journal Neurology after being prescribed antipsych0tic dr*gs that only made matters worse.

In May 2014, doctors finally informed the couple that Williams had Parkinson’s d!sease. The comic, though, didn’t accept the d!agnosis, and despite treatment, medicine, and testing, his condition continued to deteriorate.

He committed su!cide on August 11 of that same year at the age of 63.

At first, depre&sion was believed to be to fault. However, a postmortem examination indicated that he had Lewy body dementia.

This severe, untreatable brain condition can lead to hallucinations, disorientation, exhaustion, and issues with comprehension, memory, and judgment.

According to medical experts, it was one of the worst cases they had ever encountered.

It is frequently misinterpreted as this because Parkinson’s d!sease shares many symptoms with it.

Williams was scheduled to have more brain exams the week before he passed away. Schneider, however, claims that his anxiety of the results of the tests was what ultimately led him to commit himself.

Last year, she stated in an interview with the Guardian: “He might not have wanted to leave. He probably believed he would be impris0ned and never be released.”

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