Constable Arun Trevitt with Dan Price, whom he saved from a suicide attempt. Photo / Sam Ruttyn, News Corp Australia
It was a clear early morning in December, 2014, when Constable Arun Trevitt was called to an urgent job on the Sydney Harbour Bridge.
A security guard spotted a man balancing precariously on a beam on the wrong side of the bridge's barbed wire fence.
That man was Dan Price, then a 29-year-old associate director of an international property firm, who was minutes away from taking his own life.
Dozens of emergency services, including police negotiators, swarmed the bridge, bringing peak hour traffic to a crawl.
But it came down to Constable Trevitt, a general duties officer with just two years' experience on the beat, to convince Mr Price that life was worth living.
That moment - captured by Sunday Telegraph photographer Jeff Herbert, who just happened to be driving past on his way to work - marked the start of a unique friendship between those two men, who have shared their extraordinary story in a bid to raise awareness about suicide prevention and mental health.
The pair have become close mates since Mr Price's suicide attempt on December 4, 2014, after reconnecting late last year.
Mr Price is now a passionate advocate for mental health awareness, travelling the world to share his story with people who face similar struggles.
In a remarkable change of circumstances, Mr Price has recently been a mate to lean on for Constable Trevitt after he responded to an horrific triple fatal car crash in the CBD.
In September, Constable Trevitt pulled Joseph Bagala, the sole survivor of the high-speed crash, out of the wreckage before it went up in flames.
The officers involved in Mr Bagala's rescue that morning, including Constable Trevitt, have been nominated for a NSW Police bravery award.
Regardless, the fatal outcome weighed heavily on Constable Trevitt. It is a trauma Mr Price has been helping him process.
Constable Trevitt doesn't particularly enjoy talking about his lifesaving feats.
He prefers to look at his actions as part of a team effort, steps that police across NSW take everyday without recognition.
"I don't see myself as any better than any other police officer that goes out every day to just have a crack to try and make a difference," he explained in a candid interview with The Sunday Telegraph.
The former retained firefighter joined the cops at the age of 40, deciding a childhood ambition was worth giving a go.
"It was a big call for me at 40. I had no tertiary education, I left school in year 10," he said. "To be honest when I applied I didn't think I was going to meet the academic criteria anyway."
For the past five years he has been stationed at one of Sydney's busiest stations - Day Street in the city.
When Mr Price was on the verge of taking his own life in 2014, he remembered Constable Trevitt approached him simply as a "human being" with compassion and without judgment.
For half an hour, Constable Trevitt held onto Mr Price through the harbour bridge fence to stop him from falling or jumping.
"He talked about how his relationship with his wife had broken down, he got into some drugs and he was just fed up with everything," Constable Trevitt said.
"I said to him 'I am divorced myself, I know exactly where you are coming from, I know it's hard'.
"I said 'but there is nothing here that we can't fix or get you help for and we really want you to come back over'."
Mr Price remembered feeling as though the officer had his back.
As he was wheeled into the emergency department on a stretcher that morning, Mr Price turned to Constable Trevitt and said "I'll buy you a beer one day for saving my life". In late 2016, Constable Trevitt and Mr Price met up for the first time since that harrowing morning on the Harbour Bridge.
"It was a very special moment. I got to experience meeting the person that save my life," Mr Price said.
Last week Mr Price finally bought Constable Trevitt the beer he promised at Hotel Steyne in Manly.
WHERE TO GET HELP:
If you are worried about your or someone else's mental health, the best place to get help is your GP or local mental health provider. However, if you or someone else is in danger or endangering others, call police immediately on 111.