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John MacDonald: Mike King was right. But he was wrong too

Author
John MacDonald ,
Publish Date
Thu, 31 Oct 2024, 2:06pm
Mike King with Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters and Mental Health Minister Matt Doocey after the pre-Budget announcement of a $24 million boost for Gumboot Friday. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Mike King with Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters and Mental Health Minister Matt Doocey after the pre-Budget announcement of a $24 million boost for Gumboot Friday. Photo / Mark Mitchell

John MacDonald: Mike King was right. But he was wrong too

Author
John MacDonald ,
Publish Date
Thu, 31 Oct 2024, 2:06pm

It鈥檚 Gumboot Friday tomorrow and the guy behind it, Mike King, seems to have put his foot in it. Although, I鈥檓 a little bit torn on this one.   

So what鈥檚 happened is we鈥檝e got this charity fashion show being held in Dunedin to raise money for suicide prevention and mental health awareness. And, like most events, the organisers wanted to serve alcohol as part of the hospitality offering for guests.  

The police, though, weren鈥檛 too fussed about that and they opposed the application for a special alcohol licence. They did that because they don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 appropriate to serve grog at an event that is all about trying to raise awareness and reduce suicide rates, and the reason behind that is the growing evidence linking people drinking and taking their lives.  

So yesterday, Mike King tells 九一星空无限talk ZB that alcohol isn't a problem for people with mental illness. It is a lifejacket.  

Now here's where I'm torn.  

Mike King is a guy who not only works tirelessly to raise awareness of mental health issues and raise money 鈥攚ith things like Gumboot Friday鈥 but he鈥檚 also someone who has been there and done that.   

Unlike some of the experts, he鈥檚 been there himself. And I know he鈥檚 right when he says that people turn to alcohol when they鈥檙e in mental distress, in fact, even people who you wouldn鈥檛 consider to be on the edge turn to alcohol.   

If you say you鈥檝e had a bad day, people will invariably tell you to have a drink.  

So, of course, people turn to alcohol. But the scary bit is all this research coming through that shows how people can actually decide to take their own life 鈥 but only do it after they鈥檝e been drinking.  

Whenever I read or hear about that it terrifies me, because we all know people can think they鈥檙e capable of all sorts of things once they鈥檝e got a few drinks on board.  

So the link between alcohol and suicide makes perfect sense.  

Which is why we鈥檝e got Otago University health professor Rose Crossin poo-pooing Mike King鈥檚 comments today. She says alcohol can give you temporary relief from your problems, but it can also be a depressant and it can make your problems seem worse. And I鈥檓 not going to argue with that, either.  

But I鈥檓 not going to crucify Mike King because I believe him when he says that alcohol is a lifejacket for people with mental illness. And if he thinks that alcohol does actually stop people taking their lives, then who am I to argue with him?  

But given he is the face of Gumboot Friday, a charity which, remember, received $24 million in government support this year. And given that a lot of people probably consider him to be the most credible mental health advocate in the country, should he have said what he said yesterday?  

My answer to that is 鈥渘o鈥. He didn鈥檛 need to. We know he used alcohol and drugs to get him through. We know he knows what he鈥檚 on about.   

And even though I know full well that alcohol gets a lot of people through their personal nightmares - it didn鈥檛 need saying. So I think he was right and he was wrong.  

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