Melvyn Bragg hasn't taken the Tube since suicidal urge on platform

Lord Melvyn Bragg has opened up about his struggles with depression, which almost led him to throw himself in front of a Tube train in the 1970s.
Asked if he had ever contemplated suicide by The Times, he replied: "Several times. There was one suicidal moment that scared the living daylights out of me, and I knew it was serious.
"I was with Lise [his first wife Marie-Elisabeth Roche, who killed herself in 1971] and I was getting in trouble with heights.
"I was in Shepherds Bush Tube station, going home from Lime Grove [BBC studios] and I heard the train in the tunnel and I knew I was going to throw myself in front of it. So I pressed myself against the wall as was actually ... to say pouring with sweat is wrong, but sweating very heavily, until it stopped. And I walked up the stairs and have never taken the Tube since."
The 78-year-old broadcaster, author and parliamentarian - best known for hosting The South Bank Show - has previously acknowledged that he suffered two nervous breakdowns, and in The Times' interview said he remains "halfway between tormented and depressed".
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