Love Is Blind season 4 alum Marshall Glaze is opening up about his mental health struggles.
“Last year was just very tough for me mentally, and I was going to take my own life,” Marshall, 29, said on the Wednesday, June 4, episode of the “What’s the Reality?” podcast. “It just got to a point where, like, I had always been morbidly curious but never thought about how to do it.”
He added, “One day, I’m just down in the dumps [and] just crazy depressed. I feel like nothing is going right — that’s what my internal monologue is telling me. Those voices [of] that darkness just got a little bit louder, got a little bit darker and I felt, like, I was in this box and … it just felt, like, walls were just getting closer and closer, and nothing could lift me out of that.”
According to Marshall, he “knew he had a problem” after a specific conversation with his mother.
“I talked to my mom [and] I was OK with that being the last time I talked to her,” he recalled. “I was like, ‘OK, all right, you know, this is bad.’ I talk to my mom every day, multiple times throughout the day, and I was OK with that being the last time. So, I was going to do what I felt like I had to do — but I couldn’t.”
Marshall ultimately decided to “remove [himself] from that environment,” which meant leaving his home base in Seattle.
“[Sharing my struggles] helps me heal, and I hope that someone out there can resonate with that,” Marshall said. “[I hope] someone will [listen] and choose life.”
The Netflix personality has also learned that there’s power in not repressing his internal thoughts and feelings.
“It almost sounds silly, like, if I say what I was dealing with out loud. I’m like, ‘Bro, what? You good?’” Marshall added. “But, it’s just that internal monologue that drives you deeper down that hole. That’s why I feel it helps me [to] talk about it. Opening up about all things [like] suicide, depression and overall unwellness helps me realize that, ‘All right, maybe I was tripping up a little bit.’”
Marshall further said that it also helps to know that he’s “not alone.”
“When I do speak about it, there are just flooding comments of people saying, ‘I’m dealing with something too’ [and] ‘This helps me,’” Marshall said of sharing his experience via social media. “That’s why I continue with the social media content that I put out. I do fear that I am going down a dangerous route of becoming the face of that when I don’t feel, like, I have that … responsibility. That’s a weight I don’t feel I should carry because I’m not a therapist.”
Marshall is now trying to “transition a little out of” frequently sharing mental health struggles while still supporting others in similar positions.
If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis, help is available. Call or text 988 or chat at 988lifeline.org.
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