Europe needs to get real on defence; Britain needs to get real on Europe
13 February 2025
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5 July 2013
4 minute(s) read
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Posted by Alastair Campbell
I find it quite hard to talk about suicide, as for many including me, even the word can trigger unwanted thoughts. Those of us who have survived do need support and understanding to carry on, and to deal with what has happened. For me it still remains a horrendous continuing part of my life that I can’t really talk about. To talk to those who have been there feels triggering (possibly not even a word), but to talk to others just isn’t going to happen for me. “Why would you do it” is a question I simply can’t answer. Maybe the answer is to brave the thoughts and get on with talking but a lot of us don’t feel strong enough yet.
Lucy, there is no shame in feeling sensitive. With that said, my experience has been that in order to conquer fear one must face it first, and not let it “creep up from behind” and possibly catch you unaware.
Seek out some competent, compassionate help if that’s what’s required to beat this thing, because your “future self” deserves a chance to live, and please know that you are worthy, and you are NOT alone.
I’m not sure there can or should be consensus about this.
I’m afraid I think of suicide as legalised murder and come from a family where there have been a few attempts (one succeeded) and at least one attempt while it was still a crime.
I don’t know how anyone can be thick enough to ask how someone who’s well off or talented or successful (or all that and more) can be depressed, it’s very very easy to reach depression but heck, catharsis is good when we’re out the other side so stuff suicide!
Who is a “survivor”? The one who didn’t die? The one left behind?
There was a local “survivor” group when my SO made his attempt. I never went because he lived. I felt I didn’t qualify. I didn’t feel like a “survivor”, just a nobody who had to swallow my fury lest he do it again. This ate me up in large ways and small ways for more than a decade.
I’d been trained in prevention and intervention. That’s what saved his life. I knew of no training or counseling for the aftermath, and was only gradually able to make peace with him and myself. Reading about suicide is easier now, but writing about it even anonymously is like aggravating an old broken bone: it’s joined up again, maybe it’s crooked, but why go back in and break it again?
Good post Iris and I really empathise.
It’s a very intricate topic though isn’t it?
I’ve posted previously that I regard suicide as (self) murder although I don’t feel that way regarding assisted suicide.
I can empathise with that completely if someone has a terminal physical illness.
Soooo, another contradiction as elsewhere on another topic I’ve posted that I don’t think the separation of physical and mental illness in to differing categories is helpful.
If that’s so then I shouldn’t be so damning about someone who’s in a despair they can see no way out of – except that in so many cases these feelings do pass, sometimes slowly and sometimes jusslikethat!
The stand out of it all is, as you say, the bereaved and their double whammy; a suicide vs any other sort of death and the doubt about whether something was intentional or accidental and how could they have helped someone avoid what they’ve done …
Good luck with your situation.
as a survivor of multiple attempts over the course of my almost 50 years here, I say yes.. get it out of the closet!
The pain being kept in secret is the root of the crisis.. Truth, Honesty.. unvarnished.. unhidden.. unobscured.. How will we ever know if there ARE answers if we don’t examine our stories and find the key..? Sure, it’s painful, these experiences are.. enough to not want to be here anymore.. but even though the answers might not be obvious.. they are there.. in our stories.. somewhere.. Ms. Stage is a friend of a friend, and I am committed to participating in ANY discussion of this topic.. It needs to happen,, yesterday.
Jimmy, your points are well taken. I have been involved in this struggle for awareness for MANY years now, & I have great empathy for your words. Please be sure to remind Ms Stage, should you speak to her, that advocates MUST speak out whenever necessary, as silence equals death.
Its been a long time, so infrequent the blogs are from Alastair now, but I thought I’d say hello.
Regarding the topic, its just too damn difficult for me – I think there are some things people can understand and talk about even if they haven’t experienced them personally, but I don’t think this applies to depression and suicide, I just feel too uninformed to say much.
[…] a guest blog on Campbell’s website last year, Anna wrote: “Anonymous suicide forums were shadowy and focused on feeling bad, not feeling […]