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How Not to Kill Yourself : Portrait of a Suicidal Mind

Regular price $24.99
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How Not to Kill Yourself : Portrait of a Suicidal Mind
How Not to Kill Yourself : Portrait of a Suicidal Mind

How Not to Kill Yourself : Portrait of a Suicidal Mind

Regular price $24.99
Unit price
per

Description

The last time Clancy Martin tried to kill himself was in his basement with a dog leash. He didn't write a note.

How Not to Kill Yourself is an affirmation of life by someone who has tried to end it multiple times. It's about standing in your bathroom every morning, gearing yourself up to die. It's about choosing to go on living anyway.

In an unflinching account of his darkest moments, Clancy Martin makes the case against suicide, drawing on the work of philosophers from Seneca to Jean Amery. Through critical inquiry and practical steps, we might yet answer our existential despair more freely - and with a little more creativity.

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  • The last time Clancy Martin tried to kill himself was in his basement with a dog leash. He didn't write a note.

    How Not to Kill Yourself is an affirmation of life by someone who has tried to end it multiple times. It's about standing in your bathroom every morning, gearing yourself up to die. It's about choosing to go on living anyway.

    In an unflinching account of his darkest moments, Clancy Martin makes the case against suicide, drawing on the work of philosophers from Seneca to Jean Amery. Through critical inquiry and practical steps, we might yet answer our existential despair more freely - and with a little more creativity.

The last time Clancy Martin tried to kill himself was in his basement with a dog leash. He didn't write a note.

How Not to Kill Yourself is an affirmation of life by someone who has tried to end it multiple times. It's about standing in your bathroom every morning, gearing yourself up to die. It's about choosing to go on living anyway.

In an unflinching account of his darkest moments, Clancy Martin makes the case against suicide, drawing on the work of philosophers from Seneca to Jean Amery. Through critical inquiry and practical steps, we might yet answer our existential despair more freely - and with a little more creativity.