(Apologies for errors or sloppiness in this post, it was written quickly and emotionally.)
Marisa committed suicide earlier this month. She suffered for years from a cruel mental illness, but that will not be her legacy–her legacy will be the enormous amount of suffering she alleviated for others. In her short life she worked with Rethink Charity, the Legal Priorities Project, co-founded EA Anywhere, and volunteered with many more impactful organizations. Looking to further scale her impact she completed most of a Master of Public Policy degree at Georgetown.
Marisa was relentless. Even among the impressive cohort of young EAs, she had a diligence and work ethic that amazed and inspired. She got things done. She was also wickedly funny. Even while suffering deeply, she could make me cry with laughter.
If you are reading this while struggling, I promise you are only one comment or IM message away from those who want to help. You are not alone, and you are never a burden. Please reach out. There are also great resources such as EA Peer Support, the EA Mental Health Navigator, and more that I hope others can list in the comments. [Edit to link].
Sometimes the mental illness wins, but that does not mean Marisa did not fight like hell, or that she did not have an incredible community of people helping her. I want to extend my sincere gratitude to these people. The reflexive selflessness, patience, and care they showed for Marisa exceeds anything I have ever seen. Over hours, days, weeks, and years they provided love and support far beyond what most can expect even from their families. They extended my understanding of what it can mean to be human.
Many of us are in a lot of pain right now. It will come in waves that slowly fade. It will mostly pass. In 26 years, Marisa had more impact than most will have in a lifetime. That is forever.
I’m devastated by this news. From the first time I worked with Marisa, 7 years ago, it was clear she had a deep compassion for others (human and animal), an ability to authentically connect with a wide range of people, a sharp mind, fantastic sense of humour, and unwavering motivation.
During these last couple of years where Marisa was desperately unwell, I always hoped that she would one day hit on some successful treatment for her agonising illness and she’d make her way back to the optimistic, future focussed, extraordinarily driven person I first got to know and love.
It is just so sad – for her, for all those who cared about her, and for those lives she was yet to touch. My heart goes out to all her friends, family, her former colleagues, and her dog Chance.
Marisa with a dog (a different dog, not Chance)
This is Chance

Marisa at an EA Anywhere meetup.