Yesterday had a purpose and meaning, I set an intention and did it. I woke well before the alarm and knew exactly what I was going to do everything planned and set in place. Camera-ready, memory card sorted, batteries charged, flask ready. I had wanted to get a sunset from one of the local mountains for a while. One benefit of doing it at this time of year is that sunrise is not actually until around 8 am.
That said I was still on the mountain at not long after 6. I could have just driven around to Foxhunters car park and just sat in the car and waited but I had decided to park at Keepers and walk. The solitude and being on my own are not an issue and I actually enjoy it. I never actually seen any people. People arrived in Foxhunters carpark around 7.30 or so and just sat in the car park. I had walked onto the moor so I had the best viewpoint to capture the sunrise.
Dawn Chorus
As is often the case the changes in light before the actual sunrise is far more interesting. I stood watching ravens in the pre-dawn light, grouse in the heather calling. The dawn chorus always starts with the largest birds calling first, there are not many larger than the Raven. I find the whole Corvidae family fascinating and always have as a kid I kept a jackdaw in my bedroom.
The main character in the short stories that I told Ffion since she can remember involved Harry the Crow. He is still here and always will be. We now have a physical Harry as a very good friend crotched a crow for me and Ffion. I have so many stories of Harry and his friends that I know should be put to paper for others. Harry was there when Ffion had her meltdowns and would not talk to me or her mum. She would talk with Harry even though it was just my hand.
Post walk high
I got back home late morning, over 250 raw files on the memory card over 5gb of files. While the files were imported on to the laptop I made a fry up the full monty.
I actually quite enjoy editing the images in photoshop, photoshop is basically the digital photographer’s darkroom. Instead of mixing chemicals its a question of highlights, shadows, contrast, exposure and sharpening. I find the whole process very mindful and it takes my mind and focus away from all the bollocks.
After editing around 30 raw files I took a break and realised it was almost 7 pm. There are still around 200 images that need editing but I decided that was enough for the day.
Evening
In all honesty, I have absolutely no idea what was on the TV last night other than a programme on Mental Health. I did post a short rant on FaceBook regarding it. By now I had drunk about 6 cans of German beer. Watching the programme flicked a few of my triggers and I had to get out. It is not the first time in the last few months when I have found myself outdoors in just shorts and a t-shirt. Last time I sat in the shared garden I have for about 20 minutes in minus 3. At these times I do my mindful breathing exercises and earthing. Mainly due to the fact I just walk out of the flat barefoot in whatever I have on when I get the anxiety or panic attacks.
Last night it was shorts and a t-shirt and I walked around the car parking area. Not that it makes any difference as I do not notice the temperature. When I started the day on the Blorenge it was -5, it was nowhere near as cold as we had a lot of cloud cover. This is one of the few things I notice as one of my focuses when I do my walkabouts are the stars and constellations.
Insomnia
As I posted on Facebook in the middle of the night
So I have been up since 4.50 yesterday when I went up the mountain to catch the sunrise, I had 20 minutes snooze this afternoon and I am still awake. Insomnia sucks the sweat off Franks big dangly nuts. In the process of creating a recipe section on the blog, transferring the videos to youtube and talking to Lee Fash Williams who wants to do some bonkers pig grylls wild camp kill and cook stuff and you wonder why my heads fucked lol
I started this post about how I am totally different when I have a purpose as to when I just wallow in self-pity.
The post has gone off on a tangent somewhat and in all honesty. I am not totally sure what is in the post until I read back. Sometimes I will just hit the post button and read it online. Luckily my spelling and grammar are generally OK 🙂
This is one of those posts that I will read later. If it makes sense then that’s ok if not then that’s ok as well. This is my story my now and it helps me to just on occasion write total nonsense.
If any of it strikes a chord please leave a comment and if you feel it will help anyone then please share. Love to you all. Give gratitude for what you have not what you want.
MENTAL HEALTH, SUICIDAL THOUGHTS, AND THE DAY I SNAPPED OUT OF IT
I’ve lost count of the days I lost just lying in bed with the suicidal thoughts, the darkest thoughts running laps in my head, curtains closed, phone facedown, barely eating, just waiting for the day to end.
Same day. Same ceiling. Same heavy feeling. No interest in anything, no fire, no spark, just existing. Zombie mode. I was basically living for the weekends when I had my daughter and the dog, because those were the only days that felt real.
And during the lowest points, the thought that kept coming back was simple and terrifying.
What’s the point? Why am I even here?
That’s the bit people don’t understand. It isn’t always “I want to die.” A lot of the time, it’s “I can’t keep living like this.” It’s not drama. It’s not attention. It’s your internal system collapsing under load, and your brain looking for an exit sign.
There is a difference between being suicidal and dying by suicide. Both are serious and dangerous, but they are not the same thing. That gap matters because it’s where an interruption can occur. A pause. A message. A breakdown in a car park. A photo on a lock screen. One moment that drags you back into reality.
STATISTICS AND TRENDS (UPDATED)
People love to talk about “awareness” like it fixes things. The reality is the numbers are still brutal, and pretending otherwise does nobody any favours.
I’m including the figures because when I was in it, I genuinely thought I was the only one losing my mind in silence.
ONS figures for 2024 show 6,190 suicides registered in England and Wales, a rate of 11.4 per 100,000.
Wales was 436 of those, and the rate in Wales was higher, 15.7 per 100,000.
Men are still far more likely to die by suicide than women. In 2024, the male rate in England and Wales was 17.6 per 100,000, compared to 5.7 for females (ONS).
And here’s a detail that hits harder than most people expect. The highest age-specific risk in 2024 was among men aged 50-54. Not teenagers. Not “kids today.” Grown men, carrying life, carrying stress, carrying silence, and cracking.
Zoom out globally, and it’s worse. The World Health Organisation estimates more than 720,000 people die by suicide every year (WHO).
So if someone tells you “it’s not that common” or “people who talk about it won’t do it,” they’re either ignorant or terrified of looking at the truth.
HOW WOULD IT END
I used to think about how I’d do it. Not in a dramatic way. More like planning a route out of a burning building.
How do I end the darkest thoughts? How do I end the pain?
And the truth I can say now, with a clear head, is this. The pain does not end. It just gets transferred to the people who love you. It lands on your kids, your family, your mates, and it doesn’t go away for them. It becomes their lifelong injury.
I hate taking pills, so that was never an option.
My mind did that horrible scanning thing, looking for exits, running scenarios, trying to find the quickest way to switch the pain off.
And because water has always pulled at me, that’s where my brain kept landing.
Water has always pulled at me. I swam in rivers as a kid. I’m drawn to being in or on water. Paddleboard, kayak, wild swimming. Most of my walks are near water, canals, the coast, rivers, and waterfalls in the mountains. It’s always been my reset button, which is exactly why it became my darkest idea.
ONE DAY
One day, I found myself in the car heading for the sea. I’d decided today was the day. In my head, it made sense because the weather was atrocious and there wouldn’t be many people around on a secluded beach.
Music on. I knew exactly where I was going.
I drove down towards Newport, down Malpas Road and onto the M4, heading west. The whole time, my mind was locked in a loop. Not sadness, not tears, just tunnel vision and that cold “this ends today” feeling.
Then, as I approached Tredegar House, a song came on that jolted me. It snapped my mind out of the thought process.
That moment was the first break in the loop, like something in my head finally shifted.
I pulled off the motorway, drove around to Tredegar Park, parked up, turned the engine off, and I cried like a baby. Proper ugly cry. The kind that empties you.
Then I picked up my phone, and my screen saver opened. A picture of Ffion and me.
That was the second jolt, and that one hit me right in the chest.
It brought me back to my senses. Not with logic, not with “positive thinking,” but with reality. With love. With consequence. With the simplest truth in the world: my daughter needs her dad.
As I do every day, I felt gratitude for her being in my life. I tell her in one way or another that I love her every day. I used to do the same with Lewis.
Sitting there, I sent her a message. Nothing dramatic, nothing heavy, just this:
I love you, Tinker x
And that message wasn’t for her. Not really.
It was the rope I threw to myself.
FEAR, AND WHY IT CAN SAVE YOU
Fear is supposed to keep us alive. At a basic level, it guides fight-or-flight responses, heightens your senses, and sharpens your awareness.
The downside is when fear becomes a cage, and you stop living.
But that day, my fear saved me.
Because my fear wasn’t “what if I keep feeling like this.”
My fear was never holding my Tinker again. Never having a pint with my boy. Never hearing their voices. Never being there.
That fear didn’t destroy me. It interrupted me.
And once I was interrupted, I could think again. I could breathe again. I could step back from the edge and see the bigger picture: the brain lies when it’s exhausted and overloaded.
When fear is used properly, it forces the right things: focus and concentration, heightened awareness, acknowledgement, preparation and planning, dissecting extremes, removing barriers, and breaking routine.
And that’s what happened. Not because I’m special. Because a song jolted me, the photo of me and Ffion hit me, and that one message, “I love you, Tinker x”, dragged me back into the room.
WHY I CHOSE TO UPDATE THIS NOW | SUICIDAL THOUGHTS
This post has been in draft for a while, and I’ve hovered over publish more times than I can count.
But I’m updating it now because I don’t want to pretend this is a neat before-and-after story.
The thoughts still show up sometimes. The difference is I know they’re thoughts. I know it’s my brain trying to dump pressure. And I’ve got the tools and the awareness to make sure I don’t act on the darkest ones.
But I also know what silence does.
We keep saying we need to have the conversation, but we treat mental health like a calendar event. One awareness week. A couple of hashtags. A few posts. Then back to normal.
This has to be an everyday conversation. Because people are not falling apart on a schedule.
I’m writing this to raise awareness and to say this clearly: if you’re in that place, you’re not alone. Other people are carrying the same thoughts, even if they look fine on the outside.
If this reaches one person who is quietly planning an ending and buys them even ten minutes of interruption, then it’s worth every ounce of discomfort of posting it.
Please share this if you think it might land in the right place.
And if you need somewhere private to reach out, I’ve now got a thriving online community. It’s not a public comment section dogpile. It’s a private space where you can speak up, ask for support, or just read and realise you’re not the only one.
Check in on the people you have not seen in a while, the ones who have strangely gone quiet. Message them. Call them. Go for a brew. Don’t do the lazy “u ok hun” and disappear. Be a human.
And yeah, I’m thinking of setting up a group where we get together, go for walks, maybe even cook, and just talk bollocks together. No therapy voices. No forced sharing circles. Just people being people, with enough honesty to stop anyone slipping through the cracks.
I’ve got a lot of thoughts at the moment on direction and purpose, but I know this for sure.
They’re positive.
Not the darkest thoughts I used to have.
And the only time I’ll be walking into the sea now is for fun.
I’m trying to get in there soon, I have to time it between the seasonal storms. Cold water has loads of benefits, contrast showers, wild swimming, the whole lot, but that’s another post.
Love to you all x
IF YOU’RE IN IMMEDIATE DANGER RIGHT NOW AND HAVING SUICIDAL THOUGHTS
UK: Call 999. Samaritans: 116 123 (free, 24/7).
USA Call or text 988, or chat via the 988 Lifeline.
CANADA Call or text 988 (Suicide Crisis Helpline).
AUSTRALIA Lifeline: 13 11 14 (24/7).
AOTEAROA NEW ZEALAND Text or call 1737 (free, 24/7).
Figures used: ONS suicides in the UK (2024 registrations) and WHO suicide fact sheet.
Stop chasing symptoms. Fix the machine.Rewiring The Mind is not a memoir—it is a mechanic’s manual for your brain. Written by Ian Callaghan (Army Veteran, 45-year drinker), this guide combines Stoic Philosophy, Evolutionary Biology, and Nervous System Regulation to help you break the loop of anxiety, drinking, and survival mode. You don’t need more willpower. You need a new identity. (Instant PDF Download)
Over the last few years, there has been a lot of research into the gut-brain axis, studies and work on a healthy gut healthy mind link. One of the best ways to improve your mental health is through your gut. We have all heard of changing your eating habits for improving certain health issues such as high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes and certain cancers. How many of us have ever considered doing so for our mental health?
A few simple dietary changes may boost cognitive function and reduce symptoms of depression, anxiety, and other mental health disorders.
When most people think of boosting their brainpower, they think of learning something new or engaging in thought-provoking debate. As it turns out, one of the best ways to improve your mental health is through your gut. Like your brain, the gut has its own nervous system, which sends information to the brain via the vagus nerve. This helps explain why you might feel queasy when you’re nervous or stressed. Just as the brain impacts the gut, what we put in our gut can impact the functioning of the brain.
Gut Microbes Make Other Chemicals That Affect the Brain
The trillions of microbes that live in your gut also make other chemicals that affect how your brain works.
Your gut microbes produce lots of short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) such as butyrate, propionate and acetate.
They make SCFA by digesting fiber. SCFA affect brain function in a number of ways, such as reducing appetite.
Gut Microbes Affect Inflammation
Your gut-brain axis is also connected through the immune system.
Gut and gut microbes play an important role in your immune system and inflammation by controlling what is passed into the body and what is excreted.
If your immune system is switched on for too long, it can lead to inflammation, which is associated with a number of brain disorders like depression and Alzheimer’s disease.
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is an inflammatory toxin made by certain bacteria. It can cause inflammation if too much of it passes from the gut into the blood.
This can happen when the gut barrier becomes leaky, which allows bacteria and LPS to cross over into the blood.
Inflammation and high LPS in the blood have been associated with a number of brain disorders including severe depression, dementia and schizophrenia.
Your gut and brain are connected through millions of nerves. Most importantly the vagus nerve. The gut and its microbes also control inflammation and make many different compounds that can affect brain health.
What is the vagus nerve and what does it do?
What is the vagus nerve?
The vagus nerve is one of the cranial nerves that connect the brain to the body. The most important function of the vagus nerve is afferent, bringing information of the inner organs, such as gut, liver, heart, and lungs to the brain. This suggests that the inner organs are major sources of sensory information to the brain.
The vagus nerve has two bunches of sensory nerve cell bodies, and it connects the brainstem to the body. It allows the brain to monitor and receive information.
Foods for a healthy gut healthy mind.
Gut health refers to the balance of microorganisms that live in the digestive tract. Looking after the health of the gut and maintaining the right balance of these microorganisms is vital for physical and mental health, immunity, and more.
These bacteria, yeasts, and viruses — of which there are around 100 trillion — are also called the “gut microbiome” or “gut flora.”
The following boost gut microbiome.
fermented vegetables
kefir
kimchi
kombucha
miso
sauerkraut
tempeh
To enhance your gut health you may wish to include more of the following prebiotic-rich foods in their diet:
asparagus
bananas
chicory
garlic
Jerusalem artichoke
onions
whole grains
Other things to consider.
Eat less sugar and sweeteners.
Reduce Stress.
Avoid taking antibiotics unnecessarily.
Exercise Regularly.
Get Enough Sleep.
Change your cleaning products. We live in a far to sanitised world with all the antibacterial products, these not only kill harmful bacteria they kill the healthy as well.
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