There’s a lot of good intention that comes with the “talk to someone!” mantra directed at people who are experiencing suicidal thoughts. But there’s certain specifics about it that some people, specifically people who have never experienced suicidal thoughts, don’t understand.

The act of talking to someone requires you to actually see yourself as deserving of help in the first place. This feeling of uselessness is so deeply ingrained in the majority of suicidal people that talking to someone is basically impossible. You have to actively, consciously choose to take time out of someone’s day in order for them to speak to you. 

This is not acceptable to most of us. But maybe, on the chance you do talk to them, they’re one of those people that actually does want to help. Maybe they don’t mind talking to you when you get like this. But they also might be lying to you. They’re just listening to you because they feel guilty. No matter what they tell you, no matter who they are, there’s always this feeling of doubt that eats away at you until you feel horrible for even bothering them at all.

And maybe you’re someone who experience suicidal thoughts often. So often in fact, that nothing ever comes from them and you’re suicidal more often than not. And you figure hey,

they’re probably tired of hearing the same sob story every week right? Why should I worry them over these thoughts and desires if I probably won’t go through with them anyway?

Except then, people do go through with them. And they end up dead or permanently debilitated or locked up for months in a psych hospital. And that brings us back to the “talk to someone” spiel. But no matter how much you repeat it and bang it into our heads, we’re still convinced it doesn’t matter. That we don’t matter. And any actions that come from our thoughts are just us being brave enough to finally go through with something we’ve contemplated for years.

And then we don’t have to worry about bothering anyone anymore. 

Max’s death is either the end of my suicidal tendencies and I’m going to immediately start loving life and being productive or he’s the breaking of the tether that stopped me from falling and i’m going to die very soon

someone please. talk to me maybe? lol..

lifeisthemessybit:

bakrua:

being mentally ill + suicidal at a young age (before 18) is. strange, because you grow up with this idea that one day you’ll finally snap, turn off, be brave enough to kill yourself, so you don’t really plan for the future. adulthood- further life, it isn’t for you, nor do you feel included within the future of it. it isn’t.. it isn’t part of your life plan.

and then before you know it you’re 18 and you’re an adult but you never thought you’d get this far and sure it’s great that you’re still alive you guess but also. you feel so alone + lost in a world you never expected or planned to be a part of.

YES IT’S IN WORDS

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goldvsmold: Boycott “The Forest” and watch the documentary, “Aokigahara: Suicide Forest”, instead. Aokigahara: Suicide Forest: Educates viewers about Aokigahara and the issue of suicide in Japan It’s a documentary so everything stated is based on facts. The Forest: Romanticizes and … Continue reading