
Danny Baker wants to remind you that suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem.
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If you’ve read any of my previous blog posts, you in all likelihood know that in 2008, I started suffering from life-threatening bouts of depression, which led to alcoholism, drug abuse, medicine-induced psychosis and multiple hospitalizations. But worst of all was the fact that at times, I couldn’t see any way out of my ghastly misery. As anyone who’s ever suffered from clinical depression will tell you, it’s an expert at convincing you that your despair is eternal, and destined to oppress you for the rest of your days. And it was when I was in that horrifically black place, staring down the barrel of what I truly believed would only be a lifetime of wretched agony, that my thoughts turned to suicide.
In those moments, it seemed as if it was my only recourse. I was convinced that Planet Earth held nothing good in store for me, and that I would be better off no matter where the afterlife took me. But after a while, one of the multiple medications I’d tried started to work. I started benefiting immensely from therapy. I committed myself to eating well, sleeping well and exercising frequently. And over time, I began to recover. Towards the end of 2010 and throughout 2011, I also made a number of positive lifestyle changes, and by early 2012, I’d kicked my depression for good. Ever since then, I’ve been feeling great.
Looking back now, there are times I think about everything I would’ve missed out on if I’d ended my life in the throes of my depression. I had this thought last weekend while I was in Singapore visiting a good mate from high school. Below is a picture of me and my buddy at Marina Bay, feeling happy, healthy, and so glad I never ended my life on one of the countless days I felt that suicide was the only way out.

I’ve loved backpacking ever since my first trip, and every time I’m travelling, I’ll always have at least one moment where I stop and think “I’m so glad I’m here … I’m so glad I got to have this experience.” There have been so many of these grateful moments since I had my first suicidal notion way back in 2008, and I know there’ll be so many more of them in the years to come … backpacking around the Greek Islands and North & Central America later in the year, getting my first novel published, get married, having kids, having grand kids … the list goes on and on.
I have so many things to look forward to, and you do too. I know that depression is an expert at robbing you of your hope, and making you feel as if you’re destined to a life of unremitting misery and despair, but depression is a liar. Recovery is possible.
So if you’re in that horrible place I used to be in, then please remember that suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem, and make sure you reach out for help.
You’ll miss out on so much if you end it.
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Photo: Jhong Dizon/Flickr


Thank You so much for sharing this courageous, inspiring and personal story. In many ways our stories are very similar. The most important point, which you have conveyed well is that there is treatment and there is recovery. The stigma of depression / mental illness can stop when more of us who have suffered the depths of despair which lead thoughts of suicide, in my case several attempts until I sought treatment for depression. An important topic too infrequently discussed.