tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-75575810044296730272024-03-08T17:12:13.709-08:00It's okay not to be okayGar Machttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02580836245925331105noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7557581004429673027.post-22038506620570054132014-04-30T13:14:00.000-07:002014-04-30T13:14:04.172-07:00An Update<div>
First thing's first - I want to say I am still overwhelmed by the response to my blog 'It's okay not to be okay'.</div>
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Anytime I'm down, I look at the thousands of comments left by well-wishers which pull me from the depths of hopelessness.</div>
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But there was a secret I could not share with you all and this is what this blog post is all about.....</div>
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For the next two weeks, over 10,000 people across Ireland are cycling against suicide in an attempt to destroy stigma and raise awareness of our nation's most silent killer.<div>
I would have given anything to join them at the starting line in Dublin but I couldn't.</div>
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Instead, I was sitting in the defendant's box in Court 14 in the Central Criminal Court in our capital.</div>
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The charge - one count of arson.</div>
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When I wrote my first blog on mental health, I wanted so much to go into the details of my own suicide attempt but I could not. I would have prejudiced my trial.</div>
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On the 30th April, 2011, I was living in the city centre with three pals.</div>
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We were college students in DIT Aungier Street.</div>
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Many Dubliners might recall a fire at my apartment. It was on Wexford Street opposite Whelan's and The Village - regular haunts for those who live for the weekend.</div>
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Eddie Rocket's restaurant was directly underneath our flat.</div>
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You might remember seeing smoke billowing out of the flat as the fire brigade rushed to the scene.</div>
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And where was I at this moment? </div>
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I was huddled in the corner of a box room crying after setting fire to the curtains and blocking the exit with my bed, a bookcase and anything I could get my hands on.</div>
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As the blaze rose to meet me, I prayed I'd black out, hoping against hope the inferno would consume me and the darkness which had enveloped my consciousness would be gone forever.</div>
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But I escaped, screamed for my neighbours to get out and called the authorities.</div>
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I collapsed nearby in a little alcove opposite Krystle Nightclub - a spot usually reserved for drunkards or over zealous couples.</div>
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An ambulance arrived, picked me up and moved me to St James' Hospital. Then I went to Vincent's and finally to St John of God's.</div>
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To this day I live with flashbacks, experience night terrors, firmly believing the same raging fire is chasing me as I go about my life.</div>
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The reason I'm writing this is not to enter into the gory details of a suicide attempt, it's what has happened since my release from hospital which is what I want to address.</div>
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A week after I left hospital, I walked into Harcourt Terrace Garda Station and told the stunned detectives what had happened. </div>
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They were, and still are, two of the most caring and sympathetic people I have ever encountered and I will be eternally grateful to them for how they handled my case.</div>
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There had been a second fire in the complex and my conscience would not allow an innocent person bite the bullet for two fires. I had to do the right thing.</div>
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Sometimes, I wish I hadn't.</div>
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For the next 30 months, I went in and out of court sittings. From the District, then onto the Circuit, from mention to hearing to arraignment and finally to a trial date.</div>
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I'd sit in the same rooms as convicted murderers, rapists and child abusers and would think: "Am I this person? I always thought I was a good person."</div>
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For those 900 days, I'd lie awake at night wondering what was to become of me.</div>
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A conviction would cripple me - I would become a criminal for trying to take my own life.</div>
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I wouldn't be able to travel - my career would be in jeopardy as I wouldn't have been able to travel.</div>
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I felt I was being punished - I couldn't understand.</div>
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The ordeal weighed heavily on my mind and still does.</div>
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But on Tuesday, April 29, I heard the two most beautiful words in the English language: Not Guilty.</div>
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Those words still echo in my mind and will remain with me for as long as I live.</div>
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I could not look at the jury when they walked back into the courtroom.</div>
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I can still hear them shuffling into their seats - a collection of 12 faces who would decide my fate.</div>
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Clutching a holy medal which had adorned my pram as a newborn, I hoped there were a God, and if he existed, he could pull me from the brink.</div>
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Then the registrar uttered those words - I looked at my father - tears in his eyes - and that's when I collapsed onto the bench in front of me.</div>
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All the stress, anguish, fear and panic flooded from my body.</div>
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I couldn't contain my emotion - the next moment I had my dad embracing me with the words: "You've done it. It's over. Now you can live your life. It's over."</div>
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Smiles from the judge followed, then nods from the jury - now safe in the knowledge they made the right decision.</div>
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In total, my court case took three hours - start to finish. It took three years for a date and less than an hour of jury deliberations to decide my innocence. A unanimous not guilty verdict took them 55 minutes.</div>
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I feel bitter towards the DPP for bringing this case against me. My statement to the gardai comprised 80% of the evidence against me.</div>
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We had stacks of medical reports detailing the genuine nature of my condition.</div>
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They accepted I had been seeing a counsellor a year before I attempted to take my own life.</div>
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They accepted I had been suffering from suicidal ideation, feelings of worthlessness and self-loathing 12 months before the attempt.</div>
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They accepted I had tried to kill myself - that was never in doubt - yet there I was charged with an offence which carries 20 years in prison.</div>
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They tried to beat me, they had me on my knees praying for justice.</div>
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But I couldn't let them win. I had to fight. I knew I was an innocent man.</div>
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I'm a suicide survivor who beat this nation's prosecutors- those who attempted to criminalise serious mental health issues.</div>
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I'm reborn, a phoenix rising from the ashes. I'm not going anywhere.</div>
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I have a second chance at life and you better believe I'm going to battle on until this country takes its head out of the sand and sees a society ravaged by depression.</div>
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What sort of humane society goes about punishing suicide?</div>
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Had I been found guilty, their message would have been clear: "If you're going to kill yourself, do it right."</div>
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But thankfully I have air in my lungs and a new perspective.</div>
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Last night was the first time I have slept in a very long time.</div>
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I want to thank all my family and friends for carrying me on this long trek.</div>
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I could not have done it without you.</div>
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There will be plenty of those out there who will disagree with me.</div>
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But the one and only fact I can see is this: I was brought before the courts for trying to kill myself.</div>
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My faith in this nation has been shaken. </div>
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Maybe this country isn't for me.</div>
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But we'll have to see. I'm going to be on this planet for a long time to come.</div>
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Take her handy,</div>
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Gar</div>
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Gar Machttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02580836245925331105noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7557581004429673027.post-13404081074866381302014-01-06T16:55:00.001-08:002014-01-06T16:57:39.499-08:00So here goes nothing....<br />
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In June 2011, I walked out of hospital after a suicide attempt and I haven't looked back.</div>
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I still remember how that day looked.</div>
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It was a beautiful June afternoon, the sun belted down on my mam's car and I took one final look at St John of God's in Stillorgan, Co Dublin - a place which had become my home for over a month.</div>
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That was a week before my 22nd birthday. </div>
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I walked back into college with my head held high, spent two more years working on my journalism degree and strutted out with one of the highest marks handed out that year.</div>
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Less than a week after finishing my studies and I was working for a national newspaper.</div>
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For the first time in my life I felt proud of myself, I was successful.</div>
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Fast forward nearly 19 months and here I am contemplating taking my own life again.</div>
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I don't know how I got here but here I am. </div>
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I have everything anyone could ask for - great friends, a wonderfully supportive family, the respect of this industry I'm in, a penthouse apartment in Dun Laoghaire, iPad, iPhone, new car and and what should look like a bright future.</div>
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But I can't see that - all I can feel is how sweet and peaceful death would be right now.</div>
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The balcony 10 feet behind me seems more tempting than taking a shower in the morning, than walking into work with an exclusive under my arm or texting the girl I'm currently seeing.</div>
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My role in life has always been to make others feel happy. I'm the joker, the friend, the pal who'd never see you stuck.</div>
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I'm that sad clown, a cliche wrapped in another fucking cliche, sitting in a living room typing in the dark.</div>
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I never thought my mental health was that bad - even when I was placed in a locked ward as psych staff took my belt, shoe strings and lighter.</div>
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Even the cold thud of a dead lock clicking into place as I watched my family tearfully walking out of my hospital room couldn't open my eyes to the reality.</div>
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But there it was in all its painful glory.</div>
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When friends came to visit me I would smile and crack a joke pretending to be oblivious to the fact I was surrounded by some of the sickest people I had ever met - and I was one of them.</div>
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It would be months later that my friends told me I was speaking complete gibberish to them.</div>
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It was only then that I copped something wasn't really right.</div>
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In a strange way, it validated me. I was confused as to why I was put in that hospital. I knew deep down there was something seriously wrong with me but I couldn't accept it.</div>
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But back to the now. </div>
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I'm writing this as someone who is ill. I'm not looking for sympathy, it's just something which needs to be out there, that it's ok to tell the world you're not ok.</div>
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I'm not going to work tomorrow, I'm going to see a counsellor. I'm going to beat this little prick in my head who's trying to tell me I'm not good enough.</div>
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There will be many of you out there who don't understand how it feels to go through something like this.</div>
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That's not to sound high and mighty or what not, it is what it is.</div>
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But then again there are those who will know exactly the excruciating pain I'm feeling right now.</div>
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There's one way I can think of explaining it.</div>
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Imagine having a negative thought about yourself, be it your appearance, intelligence, whatever.</div>
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Now imagine it sticking with you all through the day pounding you every chance it gets. It's relentless in its ferocity, its cruelty.</div>
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You can't think of anything else. </div>
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It tells you you're worthless, it mocks every positive thought you try and retaliate with, it shoots down any thought of getting better.</div>
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And you can't get rid of it.</div>
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So, in my case, I drank. I drank to try and rid myself of the constant waves of negativity crashing over me, washing out the good of the day.</div>
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But then that will stop working and you'll be left drunk and alone, hating yourself even more.</div>
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The day I tried to kill myself in April 2011, I found myself in the corner of my room with a bottle of whiskey balling my eyes out.</div>
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I began drinking socially again after six months off it. I drank not because I wanted to forget but because I enjoyed it.</div>
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But now I'm doing it for the same old reasons. The most important thing is that I've caught it in time.</div>
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The recent Donal Walsh documentary on RTE opened people up to talking about mental health.</div>
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Here was a terminally ill young man telling people to cop on and not take your own life.</div>
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To be honest, it infuriated me. </div>
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Suicidal ideation, to many, is a terminal illness and something which can't be fought with medication.</div>
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If you're set on taking your life, then you're going to do it.</div>
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But there are support structures out there designed to pull you from the brink</div>
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It's in no way black and white. </div>
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You don't see how much you're loved, you don't see the pain and hardship it would cause your family.</div>
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Even now I'm racked with guilt over my own attempt. My mum is a shell of the woman she was, constantly worrying about me.</div>
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My sister thinks I'm too ill to live a regular life and my friends are now texting me after a night out telling me 'to ring when I get in'.</div>
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Everybody's worried about me - and I guess they're right to.</div>
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The stigma of mental health in Irish society may be loosening its grip, but the guilt of having tried it will always remain.</div>
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I don't want to be known as 'that guy who tried to kill himself'.</div>
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In fact I'm that funny, intelligent and caring guy who actually wants to know how you're doing.</div>
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There's a part me that wants to just delete this entire message and go to work tomorrow and pretend everything is ok.</div>
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But I'm sick of living a half life, one that's just going to knock me on my arse as I try and plough ahead.</div>
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So this is a moment for me to take stock, lay a solid foundation, take a breather and then move forward once again.</div>
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This is not a cry for help, it's more of a success story. I've spotted the danger signs and I'm fighting back. </div>
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I'm not going to let this darkness define me and let it win.</div>
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I'm stronger than that.</div>
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So for anyone out there who's thinking similar things, I'm pleading with you to tell someone; family, friends, the Samaritans.</div>
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This is because I'm one of the lucky ones, I've survived suicide.</div>
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You only get one go around.</div>
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To be honest, I'm feeling a hell of a lot better after writing this.</div>
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Take her handy,</div>
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Garreth MacNamee</div>
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Gar Machttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02580836245925331105noreply@blogger.com53