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Why we choose suicide | Mark Henick | TEDxToronto

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    I was barely a teenager
    the first time I tried to kill myself.
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    If I knew then what I know now,
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    well, it probably wouldn't
    have changed very much.
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    And it probably
    wouldn't have changed very much
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    because sometimes
    it doesn't matter what you know,
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    what you feel just takes over.
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    And there's so many ways like this,
    that our perception becomes limited.
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    In fact, our perception is its limits.
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    And these limits are created
    by our biology,
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    by our psychology, by our society.
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    These are the factors which create
    that bubble which surrounds us
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    that is our perceptual field,
    our world as we know it.
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    Now, this bubble, our perceptual field,
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    has this incredible ability
    to expand and to contract
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    based on changes in any of those factors
    which create and inform it.
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    Most of us have experienced
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    the challenges of the contraction
    of our perception from time to time.
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    Think about that time
    when you got cut off in traffic.
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    In the city, it was
    probably today, let's face it.
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    When it happened,
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    maybe you felt your heart rate
    start to quicken, your face flush.
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    You jammed on your brakes
    in order to avoid a collision.
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    And when you did, you focused in
    on that one license plate as it sped by.
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    Maybe the only thing to go
    through your mind at that time
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    was how creative you could be
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    in the words you were about to hurl
    out the window at that guy.
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    Eventually, your perception
    would have returned to normal.
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    You would have relaxed,
    you would have gone on with your day.
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    You probably would have
    even forgotten about it.
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    But imagine you didn't.
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    Imagine you stayed there, stuck there,
    in that narrow, dark place.
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    Well, that's what it can be like
    to live with a mental illness.
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    At least, that's what it was like for me,
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    at the depth of my own
    mental illness as a teenager.
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    My perception had become constricted,
    and darkened, and collapsed.
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    I felt like an asthmatic who had
    lost his glasses in a hurricane.
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    So, when I was sitting in that chair,
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    across from my eighth-grade
    guidance counselor,
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    the only thing that I could think
    was, "You're not good enough."
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    "You're not smart enough."
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    "You're not enough."
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    And it didn't matter if I was
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    because these were
    the constricted limits of my perception.
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    So, when I held that eight-inch
    chef's knife in my hand,
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    and I raised it to my throat,
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    and I pressed it there and I felt
    the blood begin to trickle down my hand,
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    the only thing I could think
    in that moment,
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    "Nobody would even know you' were gone."
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    I heard the guidance counselor
    ask from across the room,
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    miles away, it seemed like,
    he said, "Mark! Please don't."
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    I heard him, but I wasn't listening.
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    I just took a deep breath.
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    "I don't have a choice."
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    Had the guidance counselor
    not reached for me from across the room,
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    tackled me to the floor,
    wrestled that knife from my hand,
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    maybe I wouldn't be here today.
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    I think about that a lot.
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    Now, not all days were that traumatic.
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    In fact, most days I probably
    seemed just like any other normal kid,
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    if not a little quiet.
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    And because the truth is, I was.
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    In fact I was so normal, most people
    would have never guessed.
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    They probably would have even been
    surprised to find out
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    how I would hate the way
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    the sunlight came
    into my window every morning
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    when I would wake up.
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    And I know that some of you
    know that feeling, too.
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    I was so normal that a few years later,
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    after not getting the help
    that I so clearly needed,
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    most people would have never known
    that I was the one
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    that had caused so much
    commotion late one night
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    when I tried to jump from an overpass.
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    Then again, if they did know, I would
    have been the last to find out anyway
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    because that's how
    these types of things go.
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    People seem plenty eager to talk
    about mental illness and about suicide
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    just as long as it's behind closed doors
    and in hushed voices.
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    Well, this is the part that I'm doing
    differently with you today
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    by sharing with you my experiences,
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    I hope to raise my voice,
    and I hope to open those doors.
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    And this is how I do it: I remember.
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    I remember I was wandering
    the empty streets of my hometown.
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    I was alone this time,
    unlike that other time,
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    and it's because I wanted to die alone.
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    My mind was running, screaming,
    shaking, collapsing in on itself again.
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    When you're in that place,
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    and your perception
    is collapsing like that,
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    those old thoughts kept coming
    back again, "You're not good enough,"
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    "You're not smart enough,"
    "You're not enough."
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    So, I walked up, and I approached
    the railing to the overpass.
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    I walked along it, I looked over,
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    I came to a light post
    on my left-hand side, and I stopped.
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    "Should I hang in there
    for just one more day?"
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    That's a phrase
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    people always seem to ask themselves
    when they're suicidal, I have found,
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    I asked it to myself
    and others with whom I've worked,
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    young people today,
    they've asked it, too.
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    It's this instinctual word of hope,
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    "Should I hang on there
    for just one more day?"
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    For what?
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    To be that crazy kid?
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    I've already held on for this long,
    and things haven't gotten any better.
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    Why would I keep trying
    what hasn't been working?
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    I'm not crazy.
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    My perception was collapsing.
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    It was squeezing out
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    that instinctual hope
    that everybody has inside of them.
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    So, I climbed the railing in three parts,
    like rungs on a ladder.
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    I was being very careful not to slip.
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    I climbed back down the other side again.
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    I had very few choices in my life.
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    But this, this was certainly one.
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    And I needed something, anything,
    that I could be certain about.
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    So I turned around.
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    I felt the railing
    pressing against my back,
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    just below my shoulder blades,
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    I stretched my arms out
    on its cool metal surface.
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    I remember feeling raindrops
    under my fingers.
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    I looked down at my shoes.
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    My running shoes were old,
    worn out, tired.
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    My heels were on the concrete,
    my toes were on nothing.
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    I looked past my toes to the ground,
    50 or so feet below,
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    and on the ground, I saw
    a rusted out chain linked fence
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    topped by three strings of barbed wire.
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    As I was standing there in that moment,
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    the only thing that I could think
    from my collapsed perception was
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    "How far out would I need
    to jump from this bridge
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    so I wouldn't land on that fence?"
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    Because I just didn't want it to--
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    I just didn't want it to hurt anymore.
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    In that moment, my entire life
    was completely in my control.
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    And when you're living
    in a hurricane like this, all the time,
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    that's a really unfamiliar,
    but really satisfying feeling.
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    To feel like you have control
    over your whole life.
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    So I stayed like that for a while.
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    I just stood there in that feeling,
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    experiencing that feeling of having agency
    over my life for a change.
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    Eventually, I was brought back
    into the present
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    by a man's voice over my right shoulder.
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    I talked to him for a while,
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    but, even today,
    I don't remember about what.
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    He was wearing a light brown jacket,
    but I don't remember his face.
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    I didn't look back long enough,
    and I never saw him again.
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    Before I knew it, I could see flashing
    lights from the corner of my eyes.
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    I looked to my right and to my left,
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    and there were three police cars
    on either side blocking off the street.
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    There were crowds of late night gatherers,
    gawking at me from either side.
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    This was two or three
    in the morning, I guess.
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    Either they came home from the bars
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    or they just walked up
    to see what was going on.
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    A male voice from my right side, I heard
    him scream to me, "Jump, you coward!"
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    OK, that's enough.
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    Again, I took a deep breath in
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    and as I did, my arms
    seemed to rise from the railing
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    like they'd suddenly
    become weightless and unburdened.
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    I could feel the edge of the concrete
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    under the arches of my feet
    begin to shift.
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    I started to pitch forward.
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    And as I did,
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    I felt the wind blow around my body,
    and on my face, and through my hair,
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    and it felt free.
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    Then, an arm reached around my chest,
    a hand grabbed the back of my shirt.
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    The man in the light brown
    jacket later told police
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    that my body was completely
    limp when he grabbed me,
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    and he dragged me
    backward over the railing.
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    Can suicide really be a choice
    if it's the only choice available?
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    We ask ourselves,
    "How can it be the only choice?"
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    "How can it even be a rational choice?"
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    And hopefully we wonder,
    and we ask ourselves how we can help.
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    Well, we can start to help
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    by better appreciating
    that our mental health is contingent
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    on the state and the flexibility
    of our perceptions.
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    Whether we have a mental illness or not,
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    how expanded or how contracted
    our perception becomes
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    impacts the choices that we make.
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    When I was standing on that bridge,
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    my perception was so collapsed
    that I only had that one choice.
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    When we encounter
    the suicide of somebody else,
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    we always seem to try to rationalize it.
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    I hear it all the time.
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    And I think that's
    because we're uncomfortable
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    with feeling helpless
    and with not understanding.
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    But since we know that our perceptions
    are created and continually informed
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    by our biology, by our psychology,
    and by our society,
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    we actually have many entry points
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    for potentially helping
    and better understanding suicide.
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    One way that we can help is to stop
    saying that people "commit" suicide.
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    People commit rape, they commit murder,
    but nobody has committed suicide
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    in this country since the early 1970s
    when suicide was decriminalized.
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    And that's because suicide is a public
    health concern, not a criminal one.
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    And it's a health concern, we know that.
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    90% of people who die by suicide have
    a diagnosable and treatable mental illness
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    at the time of their death.
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    And we know that, with medication,
    with psychotherapy, these treatments work,
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    so we need to make these treatments
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    more available
    and in an informed way, to everybody.
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    And we can be a part of that change,
    whether we have a mental illness or not
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    by taking charge of our own mental health
    when we go in for our annual physical,
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    we make a point of doing
    an annual psychological, too.
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    At both the individual and the societal
    levels, we can challenge our old ideas
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    like that old idea of saying
    that people "commit" suicide.
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    When I first started out doing this,
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    I used to beg for somebody to do
    something about suicide and stigma.
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    Well, that's not acceptable anymore.
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    So instead, I've started doing something.
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    When a leading cause of death
    among new mothers
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    in the first year after childbirth
    is suicide, that's not acceptable either.
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    When our First Nations Inuit
    and Mantis communities are being ravaged
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    by a suicide rate 5-6 times higher
    than the national average,
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    that's not acceptable.
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    When almost a quarter
    of 15 to 25-year-olds
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    who die by suicide,
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    that is not acceptable.
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    So, like I said, when I used
    to plead for people to do something,
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    and that's not acceptable either,
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    well, you're here
    and you're doing something already,
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    because you're changing
    the way you think,
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    and that's what changes the world.
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    So, for those of you who might be thinking
    about suicide today, good.
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    Keep thinking about it.
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    And then, start talking about it.
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    And then, start doing
    something about it, too.
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    And for those of you who might
    be contemplating suicide,
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    I know that there's a hope
    somewhere deep inside you.
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    I've felt it, too.
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    Keep that hope alive.
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    We need you.
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    We need you to be leaders
    in this conversation,
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    whether we are ready to have it or not.
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    And trust me, if you're anything like me,
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    it's this conversation
    that's going to keep you alive,
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    every single day,
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    as though you've got just one more day.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Why we choose suicide | Mark Henick | TEDxToronto
Description:

This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences.

Mark Henick is a mental health advocate. Informed by his direct experience with this aspect of the health care system, Mark has authored commentaries on issues relating to mental health for major newspapers across Canada and the U.S. His undergraduate degree is in Psychology and Philosophy, with a graduate degree in Child Development. At 22, he served as the youngest President of a provincial Canadian Mental Health Association division in history. He is the youngest member of the board of directors for the Mental Health Commission of Canada.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
15:27

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