Hundreds participate in Out of the Darkness Overnight Walk for suicide prevention
NEW YORK -- More than 1,000 people walked the streets of Manhattan from late Saturday night until early Sunday morning to help stop suicide.
It was for the Out of the Darkness Overnight Walk, and CBS2's own Cindy Hsu helped kick it off at the Intrepid on the West Side along with her daughter, Rosie, and members of our CBS family.
Everything started Saturday evening. Hundreds came together to support the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.
Honor beads around participants' necks were different colors, signifying how they've been affected by suicide. Some lost a parent or child or know someone who's struggling with mental illness.
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Hsu says she got a second chance.
"Seven years ago, I attempted suicide. I was suffering from depression and I got the warped idea that my family would be better off without me. Of course, that wasn't true, and fortunately, I lived," she said.
RESOURCES AND ASSISTANCE
• 24/7 National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, or call 1-800-273-TALK
• Text TALK to 741-741 to text with a trained crisis counselor for free
• Suicide Prevention Hotline: (877) 727-4747
• Suicide Prevention Live Chat
• American Foundation For Suicide Prevention
• Mental Health Conversation Guides
• NAMI (National Alliance on Mental illness) Helpline: (800) 950-6264
• American Psychological Association (APA): (800) 374-2721
• NYC Well: Text, Talk And Chat
• Board of Behavioral Sciences
"I'm walking for my twin brother, Michael," walker Isabella O'Keefe said.
"I'm walking for my sister Stephanie lost 40 years ago, my niece Emily lost eight years ago," walker Jere Sirkis said.
Dionne Monsanto lost her 15-year-old daughter, Siwe, and fights to save everyone, especially children.
"Because it is the second leading cause of death for young people. If we want to have a future, we've got to save our young people, so it's another way to save our future," Monsanto said.
READ MORE: Mental health experts offer advice on how to find help for children, teens
Participants started off together around 8:30 p.m., walking a 17-mile route all around Manhattan, from the West Side to East Side to Lower Manhattan.
"What does it feel like to be at this walk with so many people?" Hsu asked walker Kit Turner.
"It's incredible. It's the most inspiring thing, and plus having a tremendous support group with me here, too," Turner said.
"Makes you feel that you are part of something bigger, that there's a lot of other people in the same boat and there's a lot of people trying to do something about this," participant Christian O'Keefe said.
It was a celebration every time the group hit a mile marker, and after eight hours of walking, they finally finished at 4:30 Sunday morning.
It was a long night, but they walked together to help save lives.
Out of the Darkness Overnight Walk participants remember loved ones
If you or someone you know is battling depression or considering suicide, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255 for help.
Couple walks to honor son who died by suicide at 21
The parents of Raymond Matthew Burke, a U.S. Navy seaman, have walked hundreds of miles in his honor since his death in 2001, CBS2's John Elliott reports.
1,800 participants walk 17 miles at Out of the Darkness Overnight Walk
American Foundation for Suicide Prevention CEO Bob Gebbia said participants walk in memory of someone they've lost and to prevent future suicides, CBS2's John Elliott reports.
Out of the Darkness Overnight Walk raises $2.8 million for suicide prevention
CBS2's Cindy Hsu participated in the Out of the Darkness Overnight Walk and discussed the impact it can have on those who've been touched by suicide and mental illness.
Walkers exhausted, but invigorated at Out of the Darkness Overnight Walk
John Elliott caught up with Cindy Hsu around mile-marker 17 at the event supporting suicide prevention.
Out of the Darkness Overnight Walk for suicide prevention steps off from Intrepid Museum
The Out of the Darkness Overnight Walk kicked off from the Intrepid Museum on the West Side on Saturday night. As CBS2's Vanessa Murdock reported, the walk takes place in one night with one goal -- stop suicide.