If you’re in immediate danger or having thoughts of ending your life, please contact the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline by calling or texting 988. If you’re in immediate danger, call 911 or go to your nearest emergency room.
You’re reading this because you’ve had thoughts about ending your life, or someone you care about has. These thoughts are frightening. They may make you feel broken, ashamed, or hopeless. But having suicidal thoughts doesn’t mean you’re crazy, weak, or destined to die by suicide. It means you’re experiencing pain that feels unbearable—and there is help.
Suicidal thoughts are treatable. They pass. And countless people who have felt the way you’re feeling right now have found their way through to lives worth living. Understanding suicidal thoughts and knowing what to do when they occur is the first step.
Understanding Suicidal Thoughts
What you need to know.
What Are Suicidal Thoughts?
Definition:
- Thoughts about ending your own life
- Also called suicidal ideation
- Range from fleeting to persistent
- From vague to specific
- Having thoughts is different from acting on them
Types of Suicidal Thoughts
Different presentations:
Passive suicidal ideation:
– “I wish I wasn’t here”
– “I wouldn’t mind if I didn’t wake up”
– Not planning, but wishing for death
– Less immediate risk but still serious
Active suicidal ideation:
– Thoughts of specific methods
– Making plans
– Considering when or how
– More immediate concern
How Common Are They?
More prevalent than you think:
- Millions experience suicidal thoughts
- You’re not alone in this
- Not everyone who has thoughts acts on them
- Common during depression, crisis, or trauma
- Having them doesn’t define you
Having Thoughts Doesn’t Mean Acting
Important distinction:
- Thoughts are not actions
- Many people have thoughts and don’t act
- Thoughts are painful but manageable
- Having thoughts means you need help
- Not that you’re destined for suicide
Why Suicidal Thoughts Happen
Understanding the pain.
Overwhelming Pain
Too much to bear:
- Emotional pain exceeds coping resources
- Not that you want to die
- You want the pain to stop
- Suicide seems like only way out
- But it’s not—there are other ways
Mental Health Conditions
Often connected to:
- Depression
- Bipolar disorder
- PTSD
- Anxiety disorders
- Substance use disorders
- Schizophrenia
Life Circumstances
Triggering situations:
- Loss of loved one
- Relationship ending
- Financial crisis
- Job loss
- Serious illness
- Major life transition
Trauma
Past and present:
- History of abuse or trauma
- Ongoing traumatic stress
- Childhood adversity
- Trauma increases risk
- Healing trauma helps
Hopelessness
Cognitive state:
- Belief that nothing will improve
- Can’t see a way forward
- Future seems bleak
- Hopelessness drives suicidal thoughts
- But perspective can change
Feeling Like a Burden
Common distortion:
- “Everyone would be better off without me”
- Feeling like you’re only causing pain
- This is a symptom, not truth
- Those who love you would be devastated
- You matter to others
Isolation
Disconnection:
- Feeling alone
- No one understands
- Lack of support
- Isolation intensifies pain
- Connection is protective
Warning Signs
Recognizing when someone is struggling.
Verbal Signs
What they might say:
- “I wish I wasn’t here”
- “There’s no point anymore”
- “I’m a burden to everyone”
- “You’d be better off without me”
- “I don’t see a way out”
Behavioral Signs
Changes in behavior:
- Giving away possessions
- Saying goodbye to people
- Researching methods
- Getting affairs in order
- Withdrawal from activities and people
Emotional Signs
Mood changes:
- Sudden calm after depression
- Extreme mood swings
- Hopelessness
- Feeling trapped
- Unbearable emotional pain
Risk Factors
What increases risk:
- Previous suicide attempts
- Family history of suicide
- Access to lethal means
- Recent loss or crisis
- Mental health conditions
- Substance use
What to Do If You’re Having Suicidal Thoughts
Steps to take right now.
Reach Out for Help
Tell someone:
- Call 988 (Suicide and Crisis Lifeline)
- Text “HELLO” to 741741 (Crisis Text Line)
- Tell a trusted person
- Go to an emergency room
- Don’t keep it to yourself
Create Distance from Means
Reduce access:
- Remove firearms from home
- Give medications to someone else
- Create barriers between you and methods
- Access to means increases risk
- Distance buys time
Make Your Environment Safe
Right now:
- Remove anything you might use
- Be around other people
- Go somewhere safe
- Don’t be alone with the thoughts
- Safety first
Stay Present
One moment at a time:
- You only need to get through this moment
- Then the next
- Suicidal crises pass
- Focus on right now
- Don’t think about forever
Use Coping Strategies
Immediate techniques:
- Deep breathing
- Cold water on face
- Hold ice cubes
- Call someone
- Go for a walk
- Distract yourself
Ride Out the Wave
Thoughts pass:
- Suicidal thoughts are temporary
- They come and go
- Intensity varies
- You can survive this wave
- It will ease
Don’t Use Substances
Alcohol and drugs increase risk:
- Impaired judgment
- Lowered inhibitions
- Worsened depression
- Don’t drink or use when suicidal
- Stay sober through the crisis
Creating a Safety Plan
A tool for crisis.
What Is a Safety Plan?
Written plan for crisis:
- Steps to follow when suicidal
- Created when stable
- Available in crisis
- Personalized to you
- Life-saving tool
Components of a Safety Plan
What to include:
- Warning signs that crisis is developing
- Internal coping strategies (what you can do alone)
- People and places that distract
- People to contact for help
- Professionals and crisis lines to call
- Making environment safe
Using Your Safety Plan
How it works:
- Recognize warning signs
- Work through steps
- If one step doesn’t help, move to next
- Keep going until safe
- Having a plan saves lives
Making the Plan
Create it now:
- With therapist or counselor
- When you’re not in crisis
- Write it down
- Keep copies accessible
- Share with trusted people
Getting Professional Help
Treatment works.
Therapy
Talk to a professional:
- Understand your thoughts
- Develop coping strategies
- Address underlying conditions
- Build reasons for living
- Process pain safely
Medication
When appropriate:
- Antidepressants can help
- Addresses underlying conditions
- Works best with therapy
- Requires professional guidance
- Can reduce suicidal thoughts
Crisis Services
Immediate help:
- Emergency room
- Crisis stabilization units
- Mobile crisis teams
- Crisis hotlines
- Intensive outpatient programs
Hospitalization
When needed:
- If you’re not safe at home
- To get through acute crisis
- Stabilization and safety
- Not punishment—treatment
- Temporary and helpful
After a Suicidal Crisis
Moving forward.
Follow-Up Care
Stay connected to treatment:
- Regular therapy appointments
- Medication management
- Support groups
- Don’t stop treatment when you feel better
- Ongoing care prevents relapse
Understand Your Patterns
Learn your triggers:
- What preceded the crisis?
- Warning signs to watch for
- What helped?
- Build knowledge for prevention
- Self-awareness is protective
Build Your Life
Reasons to live:
- Connections and relationships
- Goals and dreams
- Things that bring meaning
- Reasons to stay
- Building a life worth living
Self-Compassion
After crisis:
- Don’t shame yourself
- You were suffering
- You survived
- Be gentle with yourself
- Healing continues
For Those Supporting Someone
How to help.
Take It Seriously
Always:
- Never dismiss threats
- All suicidal talk deserves attention
- Better to overreact than ignore
- Ask directly about suicide
- Don’t be afraid to engage
Ask Directly
Be direct:
- “Are you thinking about suicide?”
- Asking doesn’t plant the idea
- Opens the conversation
- Shows you can handle it
- Allows them to tell you
Listen Without Judgment
Create safety to share:
- Don’t dismiss their pain
- Don’t argue about whether life is worth living
- Just listen
- Validate their suffering
- Be present
Get Help
You can’t do this alone:
- Connect them to professional help
- Call crisis line with them
- Take them to ER if needed
- Don’t promise to keep secrets about safety
- Your job is to get them help
Stay Connected
Ongoing support:
- Check in regularly
- Don’t disappear after crisis passes
- Consistent connection matters
- Your presence helps
- Long-term support saves lives
Take Care of Yourself
You matter too:
- Supporting someone suicidal is hard
- Get your own support
- You can’t be their only support
- Set boundaries as needed
- Take care of yourself
Reasons to Stay
When it’s hard to find them.
People Who Love You
Connections:
- Family, friends, even acquaintances
- You matter to more people than you know
- Your death would devastate them
- They want you here
- Connection is reason
Things You Haven’t Done Yet
Future possibilities:
- Places you haven’t seen
- Experiences not yet had
- People you haven’t met
- Dreams not yet pursued
- The future is unwritten
It Can Get Better
Change is possible:
- Circumstances change
- Treatment works
- Pain decreases
- People do recover
- Your future self may thank you for staying
Small Things
Right now:
- A pet that needs you
- A book you want to finish
- Morning coffee
- A song you love
- Find small anchors
Others Are Living Proof
Recovery is real:
- Others have felt this way and survived
- They’re glad they stayed
- You can be one of them
- Recovery is possible
- You just need to get through today
You Are Worth Saving
The pain you’re feeling right now is real and overwhelming. But it is not the whole truth about your life or your future. Suicidal thoughts lie to you—they tell you there’s no other way, that you’re a burden, that nothing will ever change. These are symptoms of the pain, not reality.
You are worth saving. Your life has value that you may not be able to see right now. The people who love you want you here. Help exists. Treatment works. People recover from suicidal crises and go on to live full, meaningful lives.
Please reach out. Tell someone. Get help. You don’t have to face this alone, and you don’t have to make a permanent decision based on temporary pain.
This article is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional mental health treatment. If you’re having suicidal thoughts, please reach out for help immediately.
Crisis Resources:
– 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline: Call or text 988 (US)
– Crisis Text Line: Text HOME to 741741
– International Association for Suicide Prevention: https://www.iasp.info/resources/Crisis_Centres/
– Emergency services: 911 (US) or your local emergency number
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