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L'appel du vide

[la.pɛl dy vid] · lah-PEL doo VEED · French · noun phrase
mixedintensity: mediumfearsurprise

A sudden, baffling urge to jump or do something self-destructive, with no intent to act on it..

Definition

“The call of the void” — the sudden, fleeting, inexplicable urge to do something self-destructive when able to, classically the impulse to jump while at a height, despite having no desire or intention to act on it.

Connotation & usage

Not aversive dread but an intrusive pull toward the danger, usually felt with surprise and unease rather than terror. The specific height-linked subtype of intrusive thought, which psychology names the “high place phenomenon.” Crucially distinct from suicidal ideation — the urge does not necessarily reflect a wish to die.

Literal sense

“the call of the void” (appel “call” + du vide “of the void/emptiness”).

Related words

Etymology

A transparent French phrase: appel “call” (from appeler, Latin appellāre) + du vide “of the void” (vide, Latin vacuus/viduus “empty”).

How it has changed

Entered English-language psychology as the “high place phenomenon” after Hames, Ribeiro, Smith & Joiner (2012), who reframed it as a possibly misinterpreted survival/safety signal rather than a death wish.

Dispute & caveat

Frequently romanticized online as a poetic “death wish.” This is contested: research finds the urge is common, often arises in people who have never been suicidal (~50% in one study), and may reflect the brain's avoidance/survival response — it is NOT inherently suicidal.

Sources

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From The Lexicon of Feeling — a carefully sourced dictionary & thesaurus of emotions across 60 languages. Definitions are verified against the cited sources; emotion-family, valence, and intensity tags are editorial. This is a learning tool for emotional vocabulary, not therapy or a substitute for professional care. © 2026 The Lexicon of Feeling.