Suicide FAQby
Graham Stoney
Last-modified: Date: 1997/04/10 04:18:12
Version: Revision: 1.24
Reposted and reformatted with permission.
The Suicide FAQ is an attempt to raise awareness about suicide,
so that we may be better able to recognize and help other people
in crisis, and also to find how to seek help or make better
choices ourselves.
Introduction
Suicide is a significant cause of death in many western
countries, in some cases exceeding deaths by motor vehicle
accidents annually. Many countries spend vast amounts of money
on safer roads, but very little on suicide awareness and
prevention, or on educating people about how to make good life
choices.
Attempts at suicide, and suicidal thoughts or feelings are
usually a symptom indicating that a person isn't coping, often
as a result of some event or series of events that they
personally find overwhelmingly traumatic or distressing. In many
cases, the events in question will pass, their impact can be
mitigated, or their overwhelming nature will gradually fade if
the person is able to make constructive choices about dealing
with the crisis when it is at its worst. Since this can be
extremely difficult, this article is an attempt to raise
awareness about suicide, so that we may be better able to
recognize and help other people in crisis, and also to find how
to seek help or make better choices ourselves.
Contents
Here are a number of frequently asked questions to help raise
awareness and dispel some of the common myths about suicide:
-
Question Four
So what sort of things can contribute to someone feeling
suicidal?
-
Question Five
How would I know if someone I care about was contemplating suicide?
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Question Six
I'm a bit uncomfortable about the topic; can't it just go away?
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Question Eight
Help? Counseling? But isn't counseling just a waste of time?
-
Question Nine
Talk, talk, talk. It's all just talk. How's that going to help?
-
Question Ten
How do telephone counseling and suicide hot-line services work?
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Question Fourteen
But don't people have the right to kill themselves if they want to?
Question One: Why do people
attempt suicide?
People usually attempt suicide to block unbearable emotional
pain, which is caused by a wide variety of problems. It is often
a cry for help. A person attempting suicide is often so
distressed that they are unable to see that they have other
options: we can help prevent a tragedy by endeavoring to
understand how they feel and helping them to look for better
choices that they could make. Suicidal people often feel
terribly isolated; because of their distress, they may not think
of anyone they can turn to, furthering this isolation.
In the vast majority of cases a suicide attempter would
choose differently if they were not in great distress and were
able to evaluate their options objectively. Most suicidal people
give warning signs in the hope that they will be rescued,
because they are intent on stopping their emotional pain, not on
dying.
Question Two: Aren't
all suicidal people crazy?
No, having suicidal thoughts does not imply that you are crazy,
or necessarily mentally ill. People who attempt suicide are
often acutely distressed and the vast majority are depressed to
some extent. This depression may be either a reactive depression
which is an entirely normal reaction to difficult circumstances,
or may be an endogenous depression which is the result of a
diagnosable mental illness with other underlying causes. It may
also be a combination of the two.
The question of mental illness is a difficult one because
both these kinds of depression may have similar symptoms and
effects. Furthermore, the exact definition of depression as a
diagnosable mental illnesses (i.e. clinical depression) tends to
be somewhat fluid and inexact, so whether a person who is
distressed enough to attempt suicide would be diagnosed as
suffering from clinical depression may vary in different peoples
opinions, and may also vary between cultures.
It's probably more helpful to distinguish between these two
types of depression and treat each accordingly than to simply
diagnose all such depression as being a form of mental illness,
even though a person suffering from a reactive depression might
match the diagnostic criteria typically used to diagnose
clinical depression. For example, Appleby and Condonis write:
The majority of individuals who commit suicide do not have a
diagnosable mental illness. They are people just like you
and I who at a particular time are feeling isolated,
desperately unhappy and alone. Suicidal thoughts and actions
may be the result of life's stresses and losses that the
individual feels they just can't cope with.
In a society where there is much stigma and ignorance regarding
mental illness, a person who feels suicidal may fear that other
people will think they are "crazy" if they tell them how they
feel, and so may be reluctant to reach out for help in a crisis.
In any case, describing someone as "crazy", which has strong
negative connotations, probably isn't helpful and is more likely
to dissuade someone from seeking help which may be very
beneficial, whether they have a diagnosable mental illness or
not.
People who are suffering from a mental illness such as
schizophrenia or clinical depression do have significantly
higher suicide rates than average, although they are still in
the minority of attempters. For these people, having their
illness correctly diagnosed can mean that an appropriate
treatment can begin to address it.
For more information about clinical depression, see the
alt.support.depression FAQ, available from
www.faqs.org/faqs/alt-support-depression/faq/.
The quote above is taken from "Hearing the cry: Suicide
Prevention", Appleby and Condonis, 1990. (ISBN 0-646-02395-0)
Question Three: Doesn't talking about suicide encourage it?It depends what aspect you talk about. Talking about the
feelings surrounding suicide promotes understanding and can
greatly reduce the immediate distress of a suicidal person. In
particular, it is OK to ask someone if they are considering
suicide, if you suspect that they are not coping. If they are
feeling suicidal, it can come as a great relief to see that
someone else has some insight into how they feel.
This can be a difficult question to ask, so here are some
possible approaches:
"Are you feeling so bad that you're considering suicide?"
"That sounds like an awful lot for one person to take; has it
made you think about killing yourself to escape?"
"Has all that pain you're going through made you think about
hurting yourself?"
"Have you ever felt like just throwing it all away?"
The most appropriate way to raise the subject will differ
according to the situation, and what the people involved feel
comfortable with. It's also important to take the persons
overall response into consideration when interpreting their
answer, since a person in distress may initially say "no", even
if they mean "yes". A person who isn't feeling suicidal will
usually be able to give a comfortable "no" answer, and will
often continue by talking about a specific reason they have for
living. It can also be helpful to ask what they would do if they
ever were in a situation where they were seriously considering
killing themselves, in case they become suicidal at some point
in the future, or they are suicidal but don't initially feel
comfortable about telling you.
Talking exclusively about how to commit suicide can give
ideas to people who feel suicidal, but haven't thought about how
they'd do it yet. Media reports that concentrate solely on the
method used and ignore the emotional backdrop behind it can tend
to encourage copy-cat suicides.
Question Four: So what
sort of things can contribute to someone feeling suicidal?
People can usually deal with isolated stressful or traumatic
events and experiences reasonably well, but when there is an
accumulation of such events over an extended period, our normal
coping strategies can be pushed to the limit.
The stress or trauma generated by a given event will vary
from person to person depending on their background and how they
deal with that particular stressor. Some people are personally
more or less vulnerable to particular stressful events, and some
people may find certain events stressful which others would see
as a positive experience. Furthermore, individuals deal with
stress and trauma in different ways; the presence of multiple
risk factors does not necessarily imply that a person will
become suicidal.
Depending on a person's individual response, risk factors
that may contribute to a person feeling suicidal include:
- Significant changes in:
- Relationships.
- Well-being of self or family member.
- Body image.
- Job, school, university, house, locality.
- Financial situation.
- World environment.
- Significant losses:
- Death of a loved one.
- Loss of a valued relationship.
- Loss of self esteem or personal expectations.
- Loss of employment.
- Perceived abuse:
- Physical.
- Emotional/Psychological.
- Sexual.
- Social.
- Neglect.
Question Five: How
would I know if someone I care about was contemplating suicide?
Often suicidal people will give warning signs, consciously or
unconsciously, indicating that they need help and often in the
hope that they will be rescued. These usually occur in clusters,
so often several warning signs will be apparent. The presence of
one or more of these warning signs is not intended as a
guarantee that the person is suicidal: the only way to know for
sure is to ask them. In other cases, a suicidal person may not
want to be rescued, and may avoid giving warning signs.
Typical warning signs which are often exhibited by people who
are feeling suicidal include:
- Withdrawing from friends and family.
- Depression, broadly speaking; not necessarily a
diagnosable mental illness such as clinical depression, but
indicated by signs such as:
- Loss of interest in usual activities.
- Showing signs of sadness, hopelessness,
irritability.
- Changes in appetite, weight, behavior, level of
activity or sleep patterns.
- Loss of energy.
- Making negative comments about self.
- Recurring suicidal thoughts or fantasies.
- Sudden change from extreme depression to being `at
peace' (may indicate that they have decided to attempt
suicide).
- Talking, Writing or Hinting about suicide.
- Previous attempts.
- Feelings of hopelessness and helplessness.
- Purposefully putting personal affairs in order:
- Giving away possessions.
- Sudden intense interest in personal wills or life
insurance.
- `Clearing the air' over personal incidents from the
past.
This list is not definitive: some people may show no signs
yet still feel suicidal, others may show many signs yet be
coping OK; the only way to know for sure is to ask. In
conjunction with the risk factors listed above, this list is
intended to help people identify others who may be in need of
support.
If a person is highly perturbed, has formed a potentially
lethal plan to kill themselves and has the means to carry it out
immediately available, they would be considered likely to
attempt suicide.
Question Six: I'm a
bit uncomfortable about the topic; can't it just go away?
Suicide has traditionally been a taboo topic in western society,
which has led to further alienation and only made the problem
worse. Even after their deaths, suicide victims have often been
alienated by not being buried near other people in the cemetery,
as though they had committed some utterly unforgivable sin.
We could go a long way to reducing our suicide rate by
accepting people as they are, removing the social taboo on
talking about feeling suicidal, and telling people that it is
OK to feel so bad that you'd think about suicide. A person
simply talking about how they feel greatly reduces their
distress; they also begin to see other options, and are much
less likely to attempt suicide.
There usually are people to whom a suicidal person can turn for
help; if you ever know someone is feeling suicidal, or feel
suicidal yourself, seek out people who could help, and keep
seeking until you find someone who will listen. Once again, the
only way to know if someone is feeling suicidal is if you ask
them and they tell you.
Suicidal people, like all of us, need love, understanding and
care. People usually don't ask "are you feeling so bad that
you're thinking about suicide?" directly. Locking themselves
away increases the isolation they feel and the likelihood that
they may attempt suicide. Asking if they are feeling suicidal
has the effect of giving them permission to feel the way they
do, which reduces their isolation; if they are feeling suicidal,
they may see that someone else is beginning to understand how
they feel.
If someone you know tells you that they feel suicidal, above
all, listen to them. Then listen some more. Tell them "I don't
want you to die". Try to make yourself available to hear about
how they feel, and try to form a "no-suicide contract": ask them
to promise you that they won't suicide, and that if they feel
that they want to hurt themselves again, they won't do anything
until they can contact either you, or someone else that can
support them. Take them seriously, and refer them to someone
equipped to help them most effectively, such as a Doctor,
Community Health Centre, Counselor, Psychologist, Social
Worker, Youth Worker, Minister, etc etc. If they appear acutely
suicidal and won't talk, you may need to get them to a hospital
emergency department.
Don't try to "rescue" them or to take their responsibilities
on board yourself, or be a hero and try to handle the situation
on your own. You can be the most help by referring them to
someone equipped to offer them the help they need, while you
continue to support them and remember that what happens is
ultimately their responsibility. Get yourself some support too,
as you try to get support for them; don't try to save the world
on your own shoulders.
If you don't know where to turn, chances are there are a
number of 24 Hour anonymous telephone counseling or suicide
prevention services in your area that you can call, listed in
your local telephone directory.
Question Eight: Help?
Counseling? But isn't counseling just a waste of time?
Certainly it is true that counseling is not a magic cure-all.
It will be effective only if it empowers a person to build the
sort of relationships they need for long-term support. It is not
a "solution" in itself, but it can be a vital, effective and
helpful step along the way.
Question Nine: Talk,
talk, talk. It's all just talk. How's that going to help?
While it's not a long-term solution in itself, asking a person
and having them talk about how they feel greatly reduces their
feelings of isolation and distress, which in turn significantly
reduces the immediate risk of suicide. People that do care may
be reluctant to be direct in talking about suicide because it's
something of a taboo subject.
In the medium and longer term, it's important to seek help to
resolve the problems as soon as possible; be they emotional or
psychological. Previous attempters are more likely to attempt
suicide again, so it's very important to get unresolved issues
sorted out with professional help or counseling as necessary.
Some issues may never be completely resolved by counseling,
but a good counselor should be able to help a person deal with
them constructively at present, and to teach them better coping
skills and better methods of dealing with problems which arise
in the future.
Question Ten: How do
telephone counseling and suicide hot-line services work?
Different services vary in what they offer, but in general you
can ring up and speak anonymously to a counselor about any sort
of problem in a no-pressure context that's less threatening than
a face-to-face session. Talking the situation over with a
caring, independent person can be of great assistance whether
you're in a crisis yourself, or worried about someone else who
is, and they usually have connections with local services to
refer you to if further help is required. You don't have to wait
until the deepest point of crisis or until you have a
life-threatening problem before you seek help.
Demand for telephone services vary, so the most important
thing to remember is that if you can't get through on one, keep
trying several until you do. You should usually get through
straight away, but don't give up or pin your life on it. Many
people that feel suicidal don't realize that help can be so
close, or don't think to call at the time because their distress
is so overwhelming.
It's quite likely that some people that read this will one day
attempt suicide, so here's a quick suicide prevention exercise:
think of a list of 5 people who you might talk to if you had
no-one else to turn to, starting with the most preferred person
at the top of the list. Form a "no-suicide contract" with
yourself promising that if you ever feel suicidal you will go to
each of the people on this list in turn and simply tell them how
you feel; and that if someone didn't listen, you'd just keep
going until you found someone that would. Many suicide
attempters are so distressed that they can't see anywhere to
turn in the midst of a crisis, so having thought beforehand of
several people to approach would help.
Question Twelve: How
does suicide affect friends and family members?
Suicide is often extremely traumatic for the friends and family
members that remain (the survivors), even though people that
attempt suicide often think that no-one cares about them. In
addition to the feelings of grief normally associated with a
person's death, there may be guilt, anger, resentment, remorse,
confusion and great distress over unresolved issues. The stigma
surrounding suicide can make it extremely difficult for
survivors to deal with their grief and can cause them also to
feel terribly isolated.
Survivors often find that people relate differently to them
after the suicide, and may be very reluctant to talk about what
has happened for fear of condemnation. They often feel like a
failure because someone they cared so much about has chosen to
suicide, and may also be fearful of forming any new
relationships because of the intense pain they have experienced
through the relationship with the person who has completed
suicide.
People who have experienced the suicide of someone they cared
deeply about can benefit from "survivor groups", where they can
relate to people who have been through a similar experience, and
know they will be accepted without being judged or condemned.
Most counseling services should be able to refer people to
groups in their local area. Survivor groups, counseling and
other appropriate help can be of tremendous assistance in easing
the intense burden of unresolved feelings that suicide survivors
often carry.
Question Thirteen:
Hang on; isn't it illegal though? Doesn't that stop people?
Whether it is legal or not makes no difference to someone who is
in such distress that they are trying to kill themselves. You
can't legislate against emotional pain so making it illegal
doesn't stop people in distress from feeling suicidal. It is
likely to merely isolate them further, particularly since the
vast majority of attempts are unsuccessful, leaving the
attempter in a worse state than before if they're now a criminal
as well. In some countries and states it is still illegal, in
other places it's not.
Question Fourteen:
But don't people have the right to kill themselves if they want
to?
Yes, and it must always remain the person's own responsibility
to choose what they wish to do. However, helping people to deal
with their problems better, see their options more clearly, make
better choices for themselves and avoid choices that they would
normally regret empowers people with their rights; it does not
take their rights away.
Copyright 1994, 1995, 1996 by
Graham Stoney.
This article may be freely redistributed for personal use or
via Usenet News provided that this copyright message remains
intact. Any other form of commercial distribution requires
explicit permission from the author.
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