In 2008, Jonny Benjamin, aged 21, was poised to leap from Waterloo Bridge. A passer-by talked him back, before departing. Jonny's search for his saviour prompted a film, a massively successful campaign to raise mental health awareness, and a charity, Speakers Collective.Johnny's remarkable journey began with a diagnosis of schizoaffective disorder (a combination of schizophrenia and bipolar) at the age of 20. A suicidal episode instigated that incident on Waterloo Bridge where his story could so easily have concluded. Instead, the incident sparked a promotional film for the charity Rethink Mental Illness entitled Finding Mike (Mike being chosen at random because Jonny didn’t get the guy’s name). Following a social media campaign, Jonny was reunited with his saviour, Neil Layburn, This prompted a multi award-winning Postcard Productions film, The Stranger on a a Bridge, aired on Channel 4, reaching an estimated global audience of 319 billion. Jonny and Neil have become prominent spokespeople on preventing suicide, while The Stranger on a Bridge has been adapted into a stage musical by Lightbox Theatre. Buoyed by the phenomenal success of his campaign to find Neil, Jonny went on to set up Speakers Collective in 2018. This social enterprise is described on Jonny's website as "mental health speakers who work together with a shared commitment to challenge stigma, facilitate important conversations, and promote learning on a variety of social issues. After contacting a colleague of Jonny's, Jo Emmerson, I was invited to contribute a blog article (reproduced below). |
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