Beyond “Don’t Kill Yourself… Yet”: Practical Tools for Survival with Michael McTeique
Content note: This episode discusses suicidal ideation in a non-graphic, supportive, and prevention-focused context.
What happens when depression stops being a passing feeling and becomes a constant internal state — a relentless stream of thoughts that slowly drains away your will to live? In this deeply personal and thought-provoking episode of ReThreading Madness, Bernadine Fox speaks with Michael McTagg about his own seven-year experience living with chronic suicidal depression and the unconventional system he developed to survive it. Michael discusses the difference between acute suicidal crisis and long-term suicidal thinking, the limitations and dangers of current crisis intervention systems, and why many people emerge from psychiatric intervention feeling more traumatized rather than helped. From his perspective as both someone who lived through chronic suicidality and someone who later volunteered on a suicide prevention hotline, he reflects candidly on what works, what doesn’t, and what often gets missed entirely in conversations about suicide. At the center of the conversation is Michael’s concept of “life force” — the idea that depression is not simply sadness, but the gradual erosion of vitality through constant internal attacks, self-criticism, fear, shame, and emotional exhaustion. He shares the “life hacks” he developed to interrupt those destructive thought patterns, reclaim agency over his inner world, and slowly rebuild a reason to stay alive. This is not a clinical conversation. It is a raw and exploratory discussion about consciousness, survival, emotional energy, and what it means to fight for yourself when your own mind feels unsafe.
As reviewed in the New York Times: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/26/books/how-not-to-kill-yourself-clancy-martin.html
Music by Shari Ulrich
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