I remember back to a time when the black dog hung around my neck like a heavy yoke, I could never be rid of the terror that it would not someday return to seek me out and strike me down again, and the knowing how close I had come to succumbing.
I remember edging closer to the crowded platform’s edge, too filled with fear to realise the probable selfishness of what I was about to do, only vaguely aware of where I actually was, but just able to register that touch on my right arm and the voice that quietly whispered, “I don’t really think you want to do that.” I remember turning to see who’d said it and seeing that there was just a crowd of people. Of the owner of the voice there was no sign, but it had been enough. It had been enough to make me realise where I was, for the moment passed and I made my way back.
Back to the arms of the woman who had always loved me, and who had carefully, lovingly, nursed me back to health over such a long time. I wept. I put my head on her gentle shoulder and I wept as I had never wept before. I wept for all I still felt, and I wept for all the selfish anguish I would have caused this woman had I let myself fall,
This experience is my own. It followed a period of severe depression after a subarachnoid haemorrhage in 1986. Thankfully the depression eventually lifted and has long gone.