The Prince George Citizen

Depression illness, not weakness, says TSN host

- Stuart NEATBY Citizen staff sneatby@pgcitizen.ca

In front of an audience of more than 400 people, former TSN host Michael Landsberg calmly told the story of the night he came close to ending his life.

It was after a taping of a TSN broadcast on Grey Cup weekend in November of 2008 when Landsberg found himself alone in a Montreal hotel room. He had been struggling to deal with news that his daughter had developed a health condition that would leave her blind in one eye. He had been self-medicating with Ativan, which had further dropped him into a spiral of depression. And in that hotel, Landsberg explained, he realized he needed help.

“I knew at that point – I’m in real trouble here,” he told the audience gathered inside the main gymnasium at the Northern Sport Centre at UNBC. “That, for me, is the reason that I’m up here.”

Landsberg, who spoke as the keynote of the UNBC Timberwolv­es fundraisin­g breakfast on Monday morning, has since gone on to found a mental health awareness campaign #sicknotwea­k. The campaign has focused on raising awareness of mental illness among men, who often suffer many of the affliction­s of depression, anxiety and mental illness under a selfimpose­d cone of silence.

Landsberg said he hoped to challenge the perception, common amongst men, that depression and anxiety were signs of weakness as opposed to illnesses that require profession­al treatment.

“I have been so sick that I understood why people take their lives. But you know what, I’m not ashamed, I’m not embarrasse­d and I’m sure as hell not weak,” he said.

The Timberwolv­es breakfast, a yearly fundraiser for UNBC athletics programmin­g since 2015, attracted staff from various offices throughout Prince George, as well as student athletes, UNBC alumni, staff and faculty. Organizers hoped to raise $20,000 at the event, which will benefit student awards and bursaries for athletes. University president Daniel Weeks pledged to match funds raised during the event.

The UNBC athletics program has had a banner year. Both men’s and women’s basketball teams qualified for the U Sports Canada West playoffs. The men finished the season with a win-loss record of 10-10 while the women’s team finished at 9-11. Earlier in the school year, both soccer teams also made the Canada West playoffs.

 ?? CITIZEN PHOTO BY BRENT BRAATEN ?? Michael Landsberg was the keynote speaker at the fourth annual Timberwolv­es Legacy Breakfast, held Monday morning at the Northern Sport Centre.
CITIZEN PHOTO BY BRENT BRAATEN Michael Landsberg was the keynote speaker at the fourth annual Timberwolv­es Legacy Breakfast, held Monday morning at the Northern Sport Centre.
 ?? CITIZEN PHOTO BY BRENT BRAATEN ?? Christine Kennedy, a former UNBC basketball player and student, speaks during the Timberwolv­es Legacy Breakfast on Monday.
CITIZEN PHOTO BY BRENT BRAATEN Christine Kennedy, a former UNBC basketball player and student, speaks during the Timberwolv­es Legacy Breakfast on Monday.

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