Reader Report – I hung up after 12. I almost didn’t make it to 13.
I don’t even remember what made me pick up the phone that night.
I just knew that if I didn’t talk to someone soon, I wouldn’t be around to regret it.
I didn’t want to die.
I just couldn’t find a reason to stay.
So I called the number they plaster everywhere —
the “help is always available” number,
the one they mention after PSAs and school assemblies
and late-night commercials with soft piano music.
I pressed 1 for English.
Then waited.
There was a recording.
“Your call is very important to us.”
Then music.
Then another voice.
“Due to unusually high call volumes…”
Unusually high?
What’s the usual number of people barely holding on?
I waited.
12 minutes.
That’s how long it took for my panic to fold into numbness.
For the urgency to quiet down just enough to make space for hopelessness again.
For the part of me that wanted help to get overruled by the part that didn’t believe it existed.
I hung up.
And then…
I sat there.
Phone in my lap.
Heartbeat in my ears.
No noise in my head except one:
“You were right. No one’s coming.”
I didn’t call back.
What saved me that night?
A fluke.
My dog scratched at the bathroom door.
That’s it.
That stupid little sound pulled me back just far enough.
Not into healing. Not into hope.
Just back into the room.
That was four years ago.
I still haven’t told anyone.
I still haven’t called again.
This isn’t a complaint. It’s a receipt.
You tell people to reach out.
To ask for help.
To call the number.
But no one talks about what it’s like when you do —
and all you get is hold music and a battery warning.
The line said I was “in queue.”
What I heard was:
“You don’t matter fast enough.”
📍This isn’t a broken moment. It’s a broken system.
Because the truth is:
- I didn’t need therapy.
- I didn’t need a prescription.
- I didn’t need a diagnosis.
I needed a voice.
Just one.
That said,
“You’re not crazy. You’re not alone. Stay.”
It would’ve taken 30 seconds.
They asked me to wait 94 minutes.
I didn’t die that night.
But I still remember how close I came.
And how easy it would’ve been
to disappear
while waiting for someone
to answer the damn phone.
If the best you can offer is a recording, stop calling it a lifeline.
