Self-Harm and Suicidality: First-Person Perspectives Thinking (Differently) About Suicide David Webb We must at all times remember, that the decision to take your.

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Transcript Self-Harm and Suicidality: First-Person Perspectives Thinking (Differently) About Suicide David Webb We must at all times remember, that the decision to take your.

Self-Harm and Suicidality: First-Person Perspectives
Thinking (Differently) About Suicide
David Webb
We must at all times remember, that
the decision to take your own life is
as vast and complex and mysterious
as life itself.
Al Alvarez, The Savage God
Suicidology – Survivor Perspective
• whoever these experts are talking about it is
certainly not me
• the actual suicidal person – i.e. the survivor
voice – is largely absent from suicidology
... some notable exceptions ...
Dissenting Voices 1 – Professor Edwin S. Shneidman
(1918-2009)
• Emeritus Professor of Thanatology at UCLA
• founder of American Association of Suicidology (1968)
“every case of suicide stems
from excessive psychache”
Psychache:
• psychological pain (not illness)
• ... due to thwarted or
distorted psychological needs
Dissenting Voices 2 – The Aeschi Group
http://www.aeschiconference.unibe.ch/
• group of eminent suicidologists
that meet in Aeschi, Switzerland,
every two years
• focus is on psychotherapeutic
interventions with suicidal people
The only innovative, critical,
creative thinking in mainstream
suicidology today.
Dissenting Voices 3
Preface: Let’s Talk About Suicide
1. My Suicidal Career and Other Myths
2. What Is It Like To Be Suicidal?
3. The Drug Addiction Detour
4. The ‘Mental Illness’ Circus
Interlude: Who Am I?
5. Spiritual Self-Enquiry
6. The Willingness to Surrender
7. This Is Enough
[ Epilogue: Who Are We? ]
www.thinkingaboutsuicide.org
Why is the survivor voice absent?
Suicide attempt survivors cannot help in the study
of suicide because ...
1. The only genuine suicide attempt is a
successful one
• offensive ... but also wrong ..
2. We are crazy
• suicide - by definition – is irrational
madness
Suicidology – Part of the Problem
Suicidology contributes to, rather than
reduces, the suicide toll.
Two main reasons ...
1. “Stigma” – i.e. discrimination
2. Medicalisation of suicide
... both are irrational, ideological,dogma ...
“Stigma”
Primary source of stigma – discrimination – is
mental health laws that make us second-class
citizens.
Driven by ...
• fear
• ignorance
• prejudice
Also stigma of psychiatric labels ...
Medicalisation of Suicide
European Commission
“Suicide is primarily an outcome
of untreated depressive illness”
Foreword by Dr Michael Wilks
“the fact that suicide is a
preventable outcome of mental
illness”
A consensus?
• who was included?
• who was excluded?
• a scientific consensus?
... or a political one?
Wahlbeck K. & Mäkinen M. (Eds). (2008). Prevention of depression and suicide. Consensus paper. Luxembourg: European Communities.
http://www.ec-mental-health-process.net/pdf/prevention_of_depression_and_suicide.pdf
The Politics of Suicide
• primary motivations – fear, ignorance, prejudice
• primary response - panic
• primary goal - contain and control
• medical profession willing accomplice of the
state
• ... to justify psychiatric violence under guise
medical treatment
Alternatives – Re-conceptualising Suicide
Suicidality best understood as a crisis of the self:
• ‘sui’ in suicide, both victim and perpetrator
• closer to the lived experience
• encompasses whole person – physical,
mental, relational and spiritual
• immediately raises important questions that
suicidology largely ignores, especially …
• who or what is this ‘self’ that is in crisis?
• stigma-busting – no “them-and-us”, only us
Alternatives – “Mentally Healthy” Communities
• prevention vs intervention
• to minimise suicidal feelings arising
• capable of sensible conversation on suicide
• bring suicide “out of the closet” as public
health issue – break taboo, prejudice etc
• reclaim our personal power – individually
and collectively
• suicidal people at the centre
Alternatives – Talking About Suicide
• not just as search for solutions
• talking about suicide as a suicide
prevention strategy
A safe space to tell our stories ...
I have never before read
anything relating to suicide
that speaks of suicidal feelings
as being worthy of respect.
The possibility that I may
actually be able to honour
these feelings is a totally new
concept, one which has
proven to be a catalyst for
change and personal growth.
David has provided me with a
revolutionary approach to
making sense of my own
experiences.
Josephine Williams
suicide attempt survivor, Australia
Alternatives – Summing Up – my Rose Garden
1.Stop beating us up
2.De-medicalise suicide
3.Re-conceptualise as crisis of self (psychache)
4.“Mentally healthy” communities
5.Create safe spaces for suicidal people
6.Social model of madness -> CRPD
7.Research – survivors as researchers
8.Funding – stop wasting (lots of) money on what
we know does not work
May your psychache be minimal
Professor Edwin S. Shneidman