
And I think part of the story of how I am slowly trying to liberate myself from suicidal thinking is recognizing that those two ways of thinking were both mistaken and were kind of two sides of the same coin – that I needed to learn to accept my suicidal thinking, recognize that it was there, and not to add a moral label to it, not to be ashamed of it or afraid of it.Ĭlancy Martin says, "I needed to learn to accept my suicidal thinking, recognize that it was there, and not to add a moral label to it, not to be ashamed of it or afraid of it."Ĭamus thought that you should not kill yourself out of stubbornness, that life is suffering and it is ultimately meaningless. And so these beliefs were constantly at war with each other. The desire to kill myself was extremely potent and also the feeling that this was absolutely the wrong thing to do in a moral way was also very potent. I think I always had this very conflicted view of suicide.

On how he is liberating himself from suicidal thinking That's just the number one piece of advice I can give people. If you are a person who has ever felt the least bit suicidal – or if you are a person who has someone in their life who sometimes you think might suffer depression or might go through a suicidal period – I urge you, I cannot urge you more strongly, get rid of that gun.

On his top piece of advice: Get rid of the gun It's not something I have to act on and I don't have to feel bad about it.' Suddenly it's like, 'Oh, that's just something I'm thinking.
#I want to kill myself meme full#
And when we remove the stigma, when you're in a room full of people and you realize, oh my gosh, all my friends, all these people around me, they also have thought about taking their own lives. When you stigmatize something, you give it a kind of allure.

You can also lift some of the appeal of the thought. It's not something I have to act on and I don't have to feel bad about it. Suddenly it's like, Oh, that's just something I'm thinking.
